Thesis Defence: Victoria Suen

Thursday, May 11, 2017 3:00 pm - 3:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

Of the thesis entitled:Spaces of Production: From the Industrial tothe Virtual City

Abstract:

Inthe industrial city, capitalist ownership over the means of production: land,buildings, tools, technology and knowledge, enabled the centralization, controland exploitation of the working class. Monetary exchange, property relations,and the dominance of productionfor the sole purpose of capital accumulationdeveloped alienating social relations in the life of the city. In the post-industrialcity, the liberation of information through digital networks has democratizedthe intellectual means of production creating dramatic shifts inlabour,exchange, and social relations. These shifts have the potential to create theconditions for an even greater gap of inequality, a return to an economydominated by inherited wealth[1],and where capitalism seeks to capture economic value in all aspects of work,lifeand the city.[2]The thesis seeks toexplore how design and architectural practice can be used as a means tocollectively organize and mobilize the emerging precariat class toreappropriate fixed capital and transform labour power into a cooperative spaceof production.

The thesis focuses on thecity of Kitchener, drawing from its history as a city built by artisans and therecent re-emergence of a new creative working class that has propelled themaker movement. Using the city as a place for prototyping community and space,newspaces of production are emerging through grassroots communities to testthe material, social and financial platforms of a post-capitalist system.Interviews with makers, artists, and creative entrepreneurs will explore theemerging spatial models in the productiveeconomy. The thesis will usestrategies of the maker-movement, the process of learning through doing, andlean thinking to prototype spatial programming, the organization of thecollective and the feasibility of operating a productive workspace. Through thedocumentation of the process, the thesis seeks to develop a process guide forthe precariat worker to collectively organize a community lab workspace, ownthe means of production, and develop a networked production infrastructure inthe city.

[1]Thomas Piketty,Capitalin the Twenty-First Century, trans. Arthur Goldhammer (Cambridge, MA:Harvard University Press, 2014).

[2]Maurizio Lazzarato. “ImmaterialLabour.” InRadical Thought in Italy: APotential Politics, edited by Paolo Virno, by Michael Hardt. (Minneapolis,MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1996), 133.; Jeremy Rifkin,The Age of Access: The NewCulture ofHypercapitalism, Where All of Life Is a Paid-for Experience,New York: J.P.Tarcher/Putnam, 2000, 100.

The examining committee is as follows:

Supervisor:

Rick Haldenby,University of ݮƵ

CommitteeMembers:

Adrian Blackwell, University of ݮƵ

David Correa, University of ݮƵ

External Reader:

EmilyRobson, City of Kitchener


The committee has been approved as authorized by the Graduate Studies Committee.

The Defence Examination will take place:

Thursday May 11, 2017
3:00 PM
Main Lecture Theatre


A copy of the thesis is available for perusal in ARC 2106A.