It is a conventional approach to believe that humans are the most important entities when it comes to making impactful change. However, non-human participants play an equally – if not more so – significant role in the introduction of change in our cities.
This project develops the subversive concept of destructive construction to regenerate post-industrial sites across Sheffield. When trees fall, their trunks and branches decay, providing nutrients to the earth, supporting and accelerating the growth of the forest itself. Is it also possible to make our built artefacts support their ecologies, like the fallen tree?
With guided citizen actions through destructive guerrilla greening and the participation of nature’s force acting on the imperfect relics, this proposal is an opportunity for citizens to engage in the city-making process for their well-being and sense of belonging. It is also a way to acknowledge and encourage an understanding of our entangled existence with nature, to build up a collaborative effort to develop a biodiverse and climate-resilient city.
Eventually, these abandoned spaces with different temporalities will resurrect to make the city bloom with greenery on the skeletons of industrialisation, celebrating the unique history of this Steel City.
An alternative, futuristic approach with strategically designed interventions allows both humans and nature to participate and support each other in the building of their home.
The city has been tied to rivers from its founding to industrialisation. Nowadays, derelict spaces in Kelham Island offer plentiful urban exploration opportunities.
Rather than completion, the (intended) unfinished landscape offers long-term opportunities for spontaneous actions and interventions.
This project challenges the conventional ‘high tech’ construction solutions with ‘low tech’ rebellious destruction methods: destruct to construct, vandalise to liberate, demolish to inhabit.
An illustration showing a possible journey of how citizens meet and come to care about taking everyday actions, or extraordinary ones, to interact with the city.