Landscape Architects in the Conversation of; Adaptive Jakarta

Author

Kenya Endo

Video of 鈥淣US & UI joint workshop鈥 (created by Ervine Lin, NUS) summarizes student鈥檚 activities and process of field survey in West Jakarta, Kampung Keduang Kali Angke.
Video of 鈥淣US & UI joint workshop鈥 (created by Ervine Lin, NUS) summarizes student鈥檚 activities and process of field survey in West Jakarta, Kampung Keduang Kali Angke.听https://youtu.be/HfgvpKwLmII鈥嬧嬧

19 landscape architectural master鈥檚 degree students from the National University of Singapore visited Jakarta for their semester long-studio鈥檚 field survey in early February 2020. This design studio aims to understand the complexity and drivers of the city, and provide adaptive landscape schemes to reimagine issues into opportunities, strength into strategies. In the course of site investigation, we collaborated with students from the University of Indonesia (department of Architecture), local architect, community members, and NPOs to gain inputs and insights. 5 days long process of site analysis ended up with a fruitful interactive dialogue session with all, to recap the socio-cultural uniqueness of Kampung living, and the dynamism of political, environmental and infrastructural situations revolving around the site. (To view the video on the thumbnail above - )

Img 1: Student鈥檚 visit to Kampung for introduction and interviews (photo credit; Ervine Lin)
Img 1: Student鈥檚 visit to Kampung for introduction and interviews (photo credit; Ervine Lin)

Due to time constraints, students were split into 3 groups according to their focused scale: City Scale to understand the overall infrastructural networks and development patterns; Neighborhood Scale to analyze typologies of waterways, streets, and land-uses in West Jakarta; and Site Scale to unfold resident鈥檚 lifestyle, waste management and immediate issues through interviews. Additionally, drones, 360-degree cameras, and GoPros were intensely used for recording and measurement purposes.

Img 2: Student鈥檚 presentation at the final day wrap-up session (photo credit; Ervine Lin)
Img 2: Student鈥檚 presentation at the final day wrap-up session (photo credit; Ervine Lin)

According to Christophe Girot鈥檚 4 principals of site investigation; landing, grounding, finding, and founding, student鈥檚 experience has just enough to complete the first part; To step outside their comfort zone into the complexities of metropolitan Jakarta to experience the ground conditions for themselves. Remaining 10 weeks will be dedicated to 鈥渦nfold鈥 the intricate characteristics, 鈥渄iscover鈥 the potential areas in which landscape architecture can be leveraged on, and 鈥減ropose鈥 ways to restructure elements of the city into a series of resilient outcomes.

From the nature of the site condition, I don鈥檛 anticipate the outcomes to be solely a static spatial design. The design ideas should be heavily rooted the socio-cultural dynamics of the city, and in the form of bespoke spatial and social frameworks.

Source; Girot, C. (1999) 鈥楥hapter 3: Four Trace Concepts in Landscape Architecture鈥, in Corner, J. (ed.) Recovering landscape: essays in contemporary landscape architecture, New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 58鈥67.