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Homing social housing in Brussels: engagements in architectural anthropology through three visualisations

Author

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  • Claire Bosmans
  • Jingjing Li
  • Ching Lin Pang
  • Viviana d’Auria

Abstract

Architectural anthropology offers a way to critically analyse spaces through the social life that happens around them. It is a qualitative approach that relies on ethnography to connect larger systems and subjective dimensions, self-reflexivity, and the use of visualisations as a key analytical tool. This paper reflects on the possible contribution of architectural anthropology to housing studies. More specifically, it looks at homing processes in social housing, interrogating how non-domestic spaces perform through tenants’ inhabitation practices. It tests ways to visualise ethnographic data gathered during immersive fieldwork that involved participant observation and informal interactions in a high-rise estate in Brussels. Three types of visualisations (subjective map, annotated photograph, lived-in axonometry) are presented to articulate the paper’s discussion of homing, un-homing and de-homing processes at the level of a district, urban interstices, and beyond social housing. Ultimately, the paper concludes that architectural anthropology may contribute further to housing studies by exploring the relationship between home(making) and urban contexts.

Suggested Citation

  • Claire Bosmans & Jingjing Li & Ching Lin Pang & Viviana d’Auria, 2024. "Homing social housing in Brussels: engagements in architectural anthropology through three visualisations," Housing Studies, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 39(7), pages 1739-1762, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:chosxx:v:39:y:2024:i:7:p:1739-1762
    DOI: 10.1080/02673037.2022.2146063
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