{"id":2484,"date":"2021-11-14T10:58:22","date_gmt":"2021-11-14T10:58:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/?p=2484"},"modified":"2025-01-16T10:10:56","modified_gmt":"2025-01-16T10:10:56","slug":"urban-cultures-lunch-seminars-21-22","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/2021\/11\/14\/urban-cultures-lunch-seminars-21-22\/","title":{"rendered":"Video: Urban Cultures Lunch Seminars Winter 2021\/22"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Everyone is welcome to join the webinars organised in the frame of the Faculty of Architecture\u2019s \u2018Urban Cultures\u2019 engagement. Coordination by <a href=\"https:\/\/www.kuleuven.be\/wieiswie\/en\/person\/00084521\" data-cke-saved-href=\"https:\/\/www.kuleuven.be\/wieiswie\/en\/person\/00084521\">Martino Tattara.<\/a><\/p>\n<p>All lectures via Zoom. Please find the links below.<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>11th October 2020, 13h30<br \/>\n<strong>SANTIAGO DEL HIERRO<\/strong> (ETH Zurich) and <strong>GUILLERMO PRESSIANI<\/strong> (Universidad de Piura, Per\u00fa)<br \/>\n<em>Transnational\u00a0corridors and local conditions in the Andes and the Amazonas<\/em><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p><strong>Presentation Santiago del Hierro (Future rural-urban Amazonas)<\/strong>: This presentation forecasts a research focused on development initiatives in the Andean Amazon, exploring how design can alternatively engage issues related to resource extraction, the expansion of agricultural frontiers, the encroachment of indigenous territories and contemporary narratives on what a post-development landscape could hopefully look like. Santiago del Hierro is an Ecuadorian architect and urbanist based in The Hague. Santiago holds a Master in Architecture from Yale University, where he attended as a Fulbright scholar, and between 2009 and 2010 was a resident researcher at the Design Department of the Jan van Eyck Academie in Maastricht. Until 2017, prior to moving to The Netherlands, he taught at Pontificia Universidad Cat\u00f3lica del Ecuador, where he developed and coordinated the Urban Design Masters program. He has also been a guest professor at the Berlage Institute in Rotterdam, the Escuela T\u00e9cnica Superior de Aquitectura de Valencia, TU Delft and Fontys University of Applied Sciences. He is currently involved with different teams in research and design projects for Colombia, Ecuador, Ethiopia and Suriname.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Presentation Guillermo Pressiani (Future rural-urban Per\u00fa)<\/strong>: The theme of this presentation is life in urban environments, from the basic perspective of the inhabitant\u2019s health, and starting from the current available technologies (most of them addressed at Koolhaas\u2019 exhibition \u201cCountryside\u201d). From here, it explores the possibility of slowing down urban sprawl by reinforcing rural settlements, and with this, focusing on the territorial planning of those rural settlements. The presentation will elaborate on a case-study tacked at PR8 (Proyectos 8) design studio at the Universidad de Piura: a rural settlement in the Peruvian Andes that is precarious at first sight, but very powerful when analysed in detail. With references to the territorial dynamics, the focus will be on the impact of social, cultural and economic dynamics on the spatial differentiation at an architectonic scale. Guillermo Pressiani is a Professor at the Department of Architecture, Universidad de Piura, Per\u00fa, where he teaches design studio, theory and building. He graduated as an Architect at Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Santa Fe, Argentina (2008); and as a Master of Architectural Design at Universidad de Navarra, Pamplona, Spain (2013), and since 2015 leads his private professional practice, [g+]. Between 2016 y 2018, he worked as a teacher at Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Argentina. He has worked as a designer at renowned international offices such as Machado &amp; Silvetti Associates (USA) and Sasaki (USA). Pressiani has also participated in numerous competitions gaining national and international recognition.<\/p>\n<p><iframe loading=\"lazy\" id=\"kaltura_player\" title=\"Kaltura Player\" src=\"https:\/\/cdnapisec.kaltura.com\/p\/2375821\/sp\/237582100\/embedIframeJs\/uiconf_id\/43066731\/partner_id\/2375821?iframeembed=true&amp;playerId=kaltura_player&amp;entry_id=1_m6u83b6y&amp;flashvars[streamerType]=auto&amp;flashvars[localizationCode]=en&amp;flashvars[leadWithHTML5]=true&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.position]=left&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.clickToClose]=true&amp;flashvars[chapters.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[chapters.layout]=vertical&amp;flashvars[chapters.thumbnailRotator]=false&amp;flashvars[streamSelector.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[EmbedPlayer.SpinnerTarget]=videoHolder&amp;flashvars[dualScreen.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[Kaltura.addCrossoriginToIframe]=true&amp;&amp;wid=1_uytc7cbi\" width=\"640\" height=\"360\" frameborder=\"0\" sandbox=\"allow-forms allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-top-navigation allow-pointer-lock allow-popups allow-modals allow-orientation-lock allow-popups-to-escape-sandbox allow-presentation allow-top-navigation-by-user-activation\" allowfullscreen=\"allowfullscreen\"><\/iframe><\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>12 October 2021, 13h00<br \/>\n<strong>JULIO ARROYO<\/strong> (Universidad Nacional del Litoral in Santa Fe, Argentina)<br \/>\n<em>Continental Traces, Everyday Cities and World Processes: Transnational Corridors, and the Relationships to Contemporary Urban Processes in South America<\/em><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Latin America and the Caribbean define their contemporaneity as territories of deep traces. Their spaces have been conquered, colonized and worded along history, and as a result, one could draw different maps. These maps are made of varied lines and points that represent tensions of displacement and settlement in space and time. Its vast territory is inhabited by more than 650 million people, where living conditions are marked by economic disbalances and cultural diversity. This is strongly expressed in urban life at every imaginable level. In cities, we can experience the multiplicity, and contingency of contemporaneity. Here, certain urban-architectonic processes become crucial to understand architecture, as a crossing point of the micro-experiences of the close everyday life, and the macro-processes of the distant and structural. In this lecture, Prof. Julio Arroyo will address three cases and processes of cities in Argentina. First, Buenos Aires, the capital and header of the waterway Paran\u00e1-Paraguay. Then, Rosario, and Santa Fe, the latest, materialising the intersection point between the waterway and the interoceanic corridor between Porto Alegre (Brazil) on the Atlantic Ocean and Coquimbo (Chile) on the Pacific Ocean.<\/p>\n<p>Julio Arroyo is full professor at Facultad de Arquitectura, Dise\u00f1o y Urbanismo, Universidad Nacional del Litoral in\u00a0Santa Fe, Argentina.\u00a0He teaches architectural design in\u00a0the graduate\u00a0programme in Architecture and Urbanism (BA+MA). Parallel to his interest in the theory and criticisms of architecture, he currently leads seminars on contemporary urban processes, architecture and\u00a0public spaces in Argentinean cities. He is the director of Arquisur Revista and\u00a0he is\u00a0constantly invited to give lectures and evaluate projects in Latin America, Spain and\u00a0Portugal. Arroyo holds also his private practice and has worked in the public sector, at Municipality of Santa\u00a0Fe, for many years equipping him with a multidimensional understanding of urban issues.<\/p>\n<p><iframe loading=\"lazy\" id=\"kaltura_player\" title=\"Kaltura Player\" src=\"https:\/\/cdnapisec.kaltura.com\/p\/2375821\/sp\/237582100\/embedIframeJs\/uiconf_id\/43066731\/partner_id\/2375821?iframeembed=true&amp;playerId=kaltura_player&amp;entry_id=1_2ts1f2vb&amp;flashvars[streamerType]=auto&amp;flashvars[localizationCode]=en&amp;flashvars[leadWithHTML5]=true&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.position]=left&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.clickToClose]=true&amp;flashvars[chapters.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[chapters.layout]=vertical&amp;flashvars[chapters.thumbnailRotator]=false&amp;flashvars[streamSelector.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[EmbedPlayer.SpinnerTarget]=videoHolder&amp;flashvars[dualScreen.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[Kaltura.addCrossoriginToIframe]=true&amp;&amp;wid=1_aojqn1bg\" width=\"640\" height=\"360\" frameborder=\"0\" sandbox=\"allow-forms allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-top-navigation allow-pointer-lock allow-popups allow-modals allow-orientation-lock allow-popups-to-escape-sandbox allow-presentation allow-top-navigation-by-user-activation\" allowfullscreen=\"allowfullscreen\"><\/iframe><\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>22 October 2021, 12.00<br \/>\n<strong>RORY HYDE<\/strong>\u00a0(University of Melbourne)<br \/>\n<em>Architects after Architecture<\/em><br \/>\n(introduction and course run by Rebecca Carrai and Martino Tattara)<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Part of the elective course\u00a0Exploring Architecture. Who Does Architecture, in this lecture Rory Hyde will present research into new models of architectural\u00a0practice, reimagining the potential of architecture to address major challenges\u00a0of today.\u00a0Drawing\u00a0upon his books\u00a0Future Practice\u00a0(2012), and the recently released\u00a0Architects\u00a0After Architecture (2021), he will look at inventive organisations from\u00a0across the world, representing a broad horizon of possibilities beyond the\u00a0private\u00a0practice. Ultimately,\u00a0it\u2019s about asking \u2018what is architecture?\u2019 What sits at the centre of what we\u00a0do? Are we defined by our products \u2013 buildings? Or can we\u00a0reimagine\u00a0architecture as a versatile way of thinking and acting on the world? Once we\u00a0redefine our work in this way, where might it take us? What new questions\u00a0could\u00a0we address? This\u00a0lecture will argue that by reframing architecture around our methodology and\u00a0values, not only can we discover whole new territories of\u00a0action, we can also\u00a0reclaim our social purpose.<\/p>\n<p>Rory Hyde\u00a0is an architect,\u00a0curator and writer based in Melbourne. His work is focused on new forms of\u00a0design practice for the public good, and redefining the role\u00a0of the designer\u00a0today.\u00a0He\u00a0is Associate Professor in Architecture (Curatorial Design and Practice) at the\u00a0Melbourne School of Design, University of Melbourne; and\u00a0a Design Advocate for\u00a0the Mayor of London. From 2013 to 2020 he was the Curator of Contemporary\u00a0Architecture and Urbanism at the Victoria and Albert\u00a0Museum.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>28 October 2021, 12.00<br \/>\n<strong>JAN VAN HOOF<\/strong> (KU Leuven)<br \/>\n<em>Absolute Space \/ Relational Space<\/em><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>The seminar focuses on the research that Jan van Hoof is conducting at the Faculty of Architecture, KU Leuven. In his research, he makes explicitly the differentiation between the physical city as infrastructure and the urban life that takes place inside this infrastructure. From this perspective, he investigates approaches to theorize the city based on its urban life and in relation to the process of urban renewal. His research is currently focused on the urban renewal project \u201cMuide-Meulestede Morgen\u201d, located in the city of Ghent, in which he collaborates with various city services part of the city. In this role he conducted research on the spatial use of children, youngsters and the elderly living in this neighbourhood. The results of this research were used to develop an age-friendly recreational structure for this district. In his lecture, as part of the urban culture lunch seminar, he will give an overview of this project and he will discuss his approach in relation to the daily practice of the spatial professional.<\/p>\n<p>JAN VAN HOOF studied Industrial design at the TU Delft (2004), graduated at the Design Academy Eindhoven (2008) and graduated in 2014 as an Architect (Tilburg). Between and after his studies he worked as a freelance designer\/architect on projects differentiated in scale between a chair and the city and in collaborations with theatre makers, choreographers, artists, architects, and urban designers. He worked as a researcher\/designer the T.O.P office (2008-2009), as an architect for several small scale architectural offices and as a researcher at Endeavour (2016-2019). As part of the Stadsacademie he is coordinating a transdisciplinary project aiming at rethinking urban renewal in Ghent (2020-\u2026). Jan was a visiting teacher at the Academy for Architecture Rotterdam (2018), was leading a design studio at the Academy for Architecture Tilburg (2019-2020) and was assistant teacher in a design studio at the faculty of architecture at KU Leuven (2020-2021). Within the research group Urban projects, Collective spaces &amp; Urban identities (KU Leuven) he organized several electives related to his research.<\/p>\n<p><iframe loading=\"lazy\" id=\"kaltura_player\" title=\"Kaltura Player\" src=\"https:\/\/cdnapisec.kaltura.com\/p\/2375821\/sp\/237582100\/embedIframeJs\/uiconf_id\/43066731\/partner_id\/2375821?iframeembed=true&amp;playerId=kaltura_player&amp;entry_id=1_gtrv9q4h&amp;flashvars[streamerType]=auto&amp;flashvars[localizationCode]=en&amp;flashvars[leadWithHTML5]=true&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.position]=left&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.clickToClose]=true&amp;flashvars[chapters.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[chapters.layout]=vertical&amp;flashvars[chapters.thumbnailRotator]=false&amp;flashvars[streamSelector.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[EmbedPlayer.SpinnerTarget]=videoHolder&amp;flashvars[dualScreen.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[Kaltura.addCrossoriginToIframe]=true&amp;&amp;wid=1_7dawfssh\" width=\"640\" height=\"360\" frameborder=\"0\" sandbox=\"allow-forms allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-top-navigation allow-pointer-lock allow-popups allow-modals allow-orientation-lock allow-popups-to-escape-sandbox allow-presentation allow-top-navigation-by-user-activation\" allowfullscreen=\"allowfullscreen\"><\/iframe><\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>04 November 2021, 12.00<br \/>\n<strong>CECILIA CHIAPPINI<\/strong> (KU Leuven)<br \/>\n<em>Infrastructure and Collectivity<\/em><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Gl\u00f2ries is\u00a0an area under constant\u00a0transformation in Barcelona, Spain. Over the last decades, several car-oriented\u00a0infrastructure conforming to a variety of spatial conditions have been built\u00a0and later demolished. Today, it is being\u00a0converted into a park.\u00a0Interestingly, Gl\u00f2ries (wich is a shortening from\u00a0Gl\u00f2ries Square or\u00a0Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes)\u00a0is originally\u00a0conceived as a square at the centre of the city, the crossing point of the three\u00a0axes of the Extension Plan (1859). But this square\u00a0is never completed, and has\u00a0since been a constant part of the ongoing discussions on infrastructure and\u00a0urban centrality. These\u00a0discussions are strongly embedded in changing\u00a0expectations, and pending implementations. Moreover, they trigger conflictive\u00a0appropriations of spaces dominated by infrastructure that can be enquired to\u00a0reveal complex spatial dynamics.\u00a0The presentation emanates from a recently completed\u00a0PhD-research that adopts an holistic, multiscale,\u00a0multidimensional approach,\u00a0mapping the origins and implications of the infrastructure around Gl\u00f2ries over\u00a0150 years. The\u00a0conceptual framework crosses \u2018infrastructure\u2019 with the category\u00a0of \u2018collective spaces\u2019 coined by Manuel de Sol\u00e0 Morales in 1992,\u00a0and extends\u00a0its meaning by enquiring the intermediate conditions of inter-temporality,\u00a0spatiality and territoriality. These are\u00a0recognised to trigger new kind of\u00a0symbolic, spatial and territorial dynamics, generating what is here referred to\u00a0as \u2018spaces of\u00a0collectivities\u2019. The methodological strategy is to investigate\u00a0this through the dimensions of \u2018expectation\u2019, \u2018materialisations\u2019 and\u00a0\u2018appropriations\u2019 as notions\u00a0in\u00a0tension\u00a0deriving from the triad of\u00a0polis, urbs, civitas\u00a0as proposed by Arroyo (2015).<\/p>\n<p>Mar\u00eda\u00a0Cecilia Chiappini is a Postdoctoral Researcher and Docent at KU Leuven.\u00a0Architect from\u00a0Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Argentina (2007); MAS in Urban\u00a0Design from ETH (2012); and\u00a0Doctor in Architecture from KU Leuven (2021). She\u00a0is an active member of the Research Group Urban\u00a0Projects, Collective Spaces and\u00a0Local Identities directed by Kris Scheerlinck and Yves Schoonjans.<\/p>\n<p><iframe loading=\"lazy\" id=\"kaltura_player\" title=\"Kaltura Player\" src=\"https:\/\/cdnapisec.kaltura.com\/p\/2375821\/sp\/237582100\/embedIframeJs\/uiconf_id\/43066731\/partner_id\/2375821?iframeembed=true&amp;playerId=kaltura_player&amp;entry_id=1_ytk74zfy&amp;flashvars[streamerType]=auto&amp;flashvars[localizationCode]=en&amp;flashvars[leadWithHTML5]=true&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.position]=left&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.clickToClose]=true&amp;flashvars[chapters.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[chapters.layout]=vertical&amp;flashvars[chapters.thumbnailRotator]=false&amp;flashvars[streamSelector.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[EmbedPlayer.SpinnerTarget]=videoHolder&amp;flashvars[dualScreen.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[Kaltura.addCrossoriginToIframe]=true&amp;&amp;wid=1_ul7vfn15\" width=\"640\" height=\"360\" frameborder=\"0\" sandbox=\"allow-forms allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-top-navigation allow-pointer-lock allow-popups allow-modals allow-orientation-lock allow-popups-to-escape-sandbox allow-presentation allow-top-navigation-by-user-activation\" allowfullscreen=\"allowfullscreen\"><\/iframe><\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>23 November 2021, 12.00<br \/>\n<strong>BEATRIZ TOSCANO<\/strong> (University of Applied Sciences D\u00fcsseldorf).<br \/>\n<em>From spectators to actors: conflicting urbanscapes and the shifting narratives of the smart city utopia<\/em><br \/>\n(Students and personnel can join on-campus in A2.02 \u2013 LUCA building &#8211; Paleizenstraat 70)<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>This presentation proposes a critical assessment of the project of the smart city on the premises of it its plight for a future of perfectly attuned networks of actors and material\/informational inputs. Coined sometime in the mid-2000s the term smart city describes urban centres as self-generating systems of logistics, information and resources where nothing is wasted. Overcoming the city of the state- sponsored society, where citizens stand as the recipients of an urban project that is not theirs, in the nearest future, urban inhabitants will no longer see themselves as spectators but as actors: ever involved in smooth and effortless flows of supplies and opportunities for self-improvement, organization and decision-making.<br \/>\nThe practices of architecture and urban planning have been prompt in catching up this paradigm. By catering to concepts of so-called autopoiesis and parametricism, they seem to have understood their role in facilitating such interactions. The envelopes and the cores of buildings appear less differentiated. Former car friendly orthogonality gives way to open views and curved plazas. Transparency, cloth and membrane like structures convey the same deregulation and lack of resistance these societies appraise for themselves.<br \/>\nIn the face of these predictions for an all-engaging urbanism one question begets. Especially when taking a look at the recent proposal for the transformation of the Karl Marx Alle in Berlin, from former built-in backdrop for ideologically driven parades, into an urban experience of total immersion; how will the actor-network urbanism of the future truly promote a fair share in the territorialities of environmental and social wellbeing? How different is the smart city\u2019s promise to operate as a trans-ideological self-organizing and self-sufficient organism from the programmatic living of former functionalistic state machines?<br \/>\nFocusing on the specific case of Santiago de Chile, this will be an examination of architecture and urban design as the renditions of societal utopias on historical and sociological terms. Followed by a debate with students.<\/p>\n<p>Beatriz V. Toscano, PhD is a Spanish scholar based at the Institute for Sustainable Urban Development at Hochschule D\u00fcsseldorf \u2013 University of Applied Sciences, where her research focuses on the intersection between urban planning and biopolitics.<br \/>\nWith degrees from the University of Seville, the University of Pennsylvania and Heinrich Heine University D\u00fcsseldorf, she has taught as a guest lecturer at the University of Texas at Dallas, the Higher Technical School of Architecture of Seville and the University of S\u00e3o Paulo\u2019s School of Architecture and Urbanism. Her recent publications centre on neoliberal urban planning (published by SoftPower in 2017), the city at the \u2018end of history\u2019 (Astr\u00e1galo, 2018), gender and urban planning (La Invisible, 2017), precarity (Kadmos, 2017), urban tourism and gentrification in Spain (sub\\urban, 2019) and the militarization of urban space (Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung 2021).<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>25 November 2021, 12.00<br \/>\n<strong>MAARTEN GHEYSEN<\/strong> (KU Leuven)<br \/>\n<em>Where are the people?<\/em><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Maarten Gheysen (1975) is Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Architecture, KU Leuven. He graduated as an architect in 1999. In 2000 he got a degree in urban design and spatial planning. During the years 2001 and 2002 he worked in the office of Xaveer Degeyter architects (B) where collaborated on After-Sprawl, a research project on the contemporary Flemish condition. Since 2002 he is a collaborator of the inter-municipal development agency Leiedal (Kortrijk, Belgium). As urban designer he is dealing with a wide range of projects including planning, European interreg-projects, policy making, urban projects and public spaces. Since 2006 Maarten has been teaching in the architecture studios at the Faculty of Architecture KU Leuven (campus Ghent). Confronting the students with the daily-reality of the peri-urban condition and noticing the paradigm shift in the dichotomous relation between the urban and rural gave motivation to formulate a PhD-research under the supervision of prof. dr. Kris Scheerlinck and dr. Erik Van Daele.In this research the meaning and role of collective spaces within the peri-urban condition is questioned, leading to a framework to define the notion of collective spaces in peri-urban conditions, focusing on the relation between public and private properties, models of accessibility and permeability, the level of programming and resulting adjacencies, the level of integration and spatial qualities of the peri-urban landscape. This framework is operationalized by the exploration of case studies using the method of \u201ceclectic atlases\u201d, focusing on the peri-urban fabric of South-West Flanders. The exploration reveals the mechanisms of influence between the peri-urban condition and its collective spaces and it included new strategies of intervention.<\/p>\n<p><iframe loading=\"lazy\" id=\"kaltura_player\" title=\"Kaltura Player\" src=\"https:\/\/cdnapisec.kaltura.com\/p\/2375821\/sp\/237582100\/embedIframeJs\/uiconf_id\/43066731\/partner_id\/2375821?iframeembed=true&amp;playerId=kaltura_player&amp;entry_id=1_9n6lopfs&amp;flashvars[streamerType]=auto&amp;flashvars[localizationCode]=en&amp;flashvars[leadWithHTML5]=true&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.position]=left&amp;flashvars[sideBarContainer.clickToClose]=true&amp;flashvars[chapters.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[chapters.layout]=vertical&amp;flashvars[chapters.thumbnailRotator]=false&amp;flashvars[streamSelector.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[EmbedPlayer.SpinnerTarget]=videoHolder&amp;flashvars[dualScreen.plugin]=true&amp;flashvars[Kaltura.addCrossoriginToIframe]=true&amp;&amp;wid=1_0kxd26k6\" width=\"640\" height=\"360\" frameborder=\"0\" sandbox=\"allow-forms allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-top-navigation allow-pointer-lock allow-popups allow-modals allow-orientation-lock allow-popups-to-escape-sandbox allow-presentation allow-top-navigation-by-user-activation\" allowfullscreen=\"allowfullscreen\"><\/iframe><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Everyone is welcome to join the webinars organised in the frame of the Faculty of Architecture\u2019s \u2018Urban Cultures\u2019 engagement. Coordination by Martino Tattara. All lectures via Zoom. Please find the links below. 11th October 2020, 13h30 SANTIAGO DEL HIERRO (ETH Zurich) and GUILLERMO PRESSIANI (Universidad de Piura, Per\u00fa) Transnational\u00a0corridors and local conditions in the Andes [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":2560,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[188,50,1,298,198,293,359],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2484"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2484"}],"version-history":[{"count":87,"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2484\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":6235,"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2484\/revisions\/6235"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/2560"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2484"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2484"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.blog-archkuleuven.be\/architecture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2484"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}