Clossick, Jane, Khonsari, Torange and Stevens, Ulrika (2025) Living labs: epistemic modelling, temporariness and land value. Building and Cities, 6 (1). pp. 841-861. ISSN 2632-6655
Epistemic modelling is advanced in this paper as a civic design method within community-led living labs. Two long-term projects were examined to demonstrate how temporary architectural artefacts (thresholds, rooms, workshops, urban rooms) can operate as knowledge-producing instruments through which communities contest and reframe land value. Within the context of acute urban land scarcity and ongoing privatisation in London, UK, land access is directly connected to methods of strong community engagement, including embedded presence, co-making, and care-based governance. A collaborative autoethnographic process recorded and analysed conversations between the two architect-authors and an interlocutor for recurring themes. The analysis shows how provisional spatial interventions generate situated knowledge, negotiate power, and translate temporariness into pathways towards permanence. Findings highlight: a) the potential of living labs to treat land as a commons rather than a financial asset; b) the role of temporary architectures as epistemic artefacts that surface values, conflicts, and governance arrangements; c) the expansion of the architect’s role from designer to host, organiser and carer. A contribution is made to the living labs literature by foregrounding land as a core resource and by offering a transferable framework for practice that connects temporary architecture, epistemic modelling and the revaluation of urban land.
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution 4.0.
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