Cultural Infrastructure in London & Hamburg
What should new cultural spaces do for art and performance in cities? What can they do for the politics of civic life? How should they be designed?
This symposium brought together figures involved in the creation of art and its infrastructure at a time when the future of culture in cities is under question. In London, the legacy of the 2012 Olympics has created the opportunity to carve out a new cultural precinct from ex-industrial land on the fringe of the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. In Hamburg, grass-roots work at Oberhafen has seeded a cluster of creative activity in warehouses in the city’s port, now being re-imagined as a cultural quarter for the redevelopment of the area.
The two cases present vastly different conditions: one in which an appointed authority creates newly formed spaces for culture from a tabula rasa condition but linked to adjacent cultural sites, and another in which artists find and transform existing spaces because of a need to produce, protecting those spaces in doing so. To begin a comparative conversation, we asked what might occur if their conditions were switched. That is, could the qualities of Oberhafen or Gangeviertel be built from scratch, and could the Olympicopolis be created in found spaces? If not, what are the qualities of found space that might inform the way Olympicopolis is designed?