Designing Disorder: Experiments and Disruptions in the City
by Pablo Sendra and Richard Sennett
A manifesto for the Open City: vibrant, disordered, adaptable
In 1970, Richard Sennett published the groundbreaking The Uses of Disorder, arguing that the ideal of a planned and ordered city was flawed. Fifty years later, Sennett returns to these still fertile ideas and, alongside campaigner and architect Pablo Sendra, sets out an agenda for the design and ethics of the Open City.
The public spaces of our cities are under siege from planners, privatisation and increased surveillance. Our streets are becoming ever more lifeless and ordered. What is to be done? Can disorder be designed? In this provocative essay Sendra and Sennett propose a reorganisation of how we think and plan the social life of our cities. “Infrastructures of disorder” combine architecture, politics, urban planning and activism in order to develop places that nurture rather than stifle, bring together rather than divide up, remain open to change rather than closed off.
Reviews
“In this very readable essay, Sennett pushes on the ideas he developed in his ‘Uses of Disorder’. The upshot seems to be the ‘open city’; the antithesis of places like New York’s Hudson Yards; a pre-determined, real-estate driven ‘community’ that can only degrade over time. Given contingent times, a necessary critical view of the modern urban realm.”
— RIBA Journal
“The promotion of this sense of impotence, and the resulting inertia, are encouraged by a patronising capitalist “nanny state” on behalf of corporations for whom profits, not people, matter. The only antidote to that inertia is surely to start planning the “disorder” promulgated by Sendra and Sennett.’”
— Morning Star