Constructing New Narratives to Reveal Diverse Identities in Richmond, BC
Date
2022-07-07T17:55:02Z
Authors
Wang, Rita
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Abstract
With the capitalist expansion of urban cities today, different physical and social forces exist, collaborate and challenge each other on the land we call home. In Richmond, British Columbia, Canada, where multi-ideologies and diverse ethnicities live, work, play and grow together, different layers of physical and social landscape encapsulate the disjuncture of people and land, shifting identity through time. Using mapping and tracing as lenses to reveal the city’s diverse layers and living experiences, this thesis aims to uncover the landscape, urban form, individual identity, and collective identity layers embedded in the city’s formality and provide architectural interventions to respond to the disconnection between them. The design proposal implements landscape and architecture as a mediator to reconnect the dispersed landscape and identity in Richmond and construct new narratives to respond to the current identity and spirit of the people and the land.
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Keywords
Architecture, Collective Identity, Landscape, Diversity, Mapping, Everyday Urbanism, Richmond (B.C.)