Projects
Radice: A Multi-Use Public Space
Location: Abbasyeh, Jordan
Partners: AVSI
Area: 500m2
Year Completed: 2021
The project presents rounded elements build with two different techniques, SuperAdobe and Earth Bricks, that the community built together with our partner AVSI.
This multi-use public space aims to be appropriated by the community not only through use of the infrastructure, but by counting on their participation in the development and building processes, and by having flexible features which can be used and adapted to the discretion of the users. It will be a space of education but also a space to learn from each other, to share stories and traditions, feeding the future with expectations and hopes.
The Radice Project is not just about settling roots, but about a community which grows and strengthens itself around a common sense of belonging.
Read More
Nowadays, Bedouin communities are not impervious to the advancement of other hegemonic social and cultural practices, most of them abandoning their traditional nomadic lifestyle, but keeping and celebrating -in several occasions a year- the rich Bedouin culture and spreading millennia of knowledge and traditions to the newer generations. The village of Abasyeh -southern Jordan- is one of the many settlements where Bedouin communities dwell, where their everyday unravels now far from the nomadic lifestyle, but still deeply and inherently connected to the desert. Bedouins and their history of thriving where no one else could, does not only show the strength and resilience of this communities, but also the possibility for the desert to be a canvas for growth, change and development. What seems barren is actually full of movement, colour and potential. In this potential for growth is where the project Radice finds its space. Radice aims to give life to an empty lot in Abasyeh, through the creation of a multi-use public space, guided by the idea of learning through play and incorporating contemporary takes on Bedouin traditions and the multiple shades of the Jordanian desert. “A landscape is pleasant when, in relation to the arrangement of the objects, it simultaneously ensures the sensations of free visual and the possibility of refuge ” wrote Jay Appleton describing his idea of landscape intended as public space such as parks and green areas. The “Radice” project -through a shaded area, together with space where the kids can play, adults can relax, and a green area – seeks to create a sense of community and a space for learning, where different generations can share and generate a joint feeling of placeness.