reCOGNIZING Pobra do Caramiñal

reCOGNIZING Pobra do Caramiñal

pobra do caramiñal

changing the village through protagonist participation

reCOGNIZING Pobra do Caramiñal

“A good urban acupuncture would be one that enables everyone to know their city. How many people, in reality, truly know their own city? It’s hard to respect what you don’t know. But how can you respect your city if you don’t understand it? Draw your city. […] But how can you improve your city if you don’t even know it well? What do you do for it, if you’re not even able to draw it? That’s the crux of the matter.”

Jaime Lerner

To understand how the inhabitants, both current and future, perceive their village, we will use the following strategy: we set off ‘adrift’ with a large golden frame, so that during our wandering, we frame those urban elements that are important to them (an experience based on the work of O’Grady). Who have been the protagonists of this ‘A Vila do Mañá’ experience? On this occasion, during their wandering, they have reDISCOVERED places in their village, perhaps forgotten ones.
With ‘A Vila do Mañá’, the village in which they live is not an abstract idea, nor a series of small partial images; it begins to be understood as a much more complex and expansive environment, bringing us closer to the notion of habitat: the space that transcends its physical location in a territory where we fulfil our needs, establishing relationships with others and with the environment, both natural and built; involving processes in which it transforms, but in which we are also transformed.

Colour your village

The village or city in which we are working, transformed into a game board, a laboratory of experimentation where children and teenagers can act from a new point of view.

What is your village like? What elements would you highlight?

What is your village like? What elements would you highlight?

Verín

changing the village through protagonist participation

What is your village like? Which elements would you highlight?

“A good urban acupuncture would be one that enables everyone to know their city. How many people, in reality, truly know their own city? It’s hard to respect what you don’t know. But how can you respect your city if you don’t understand it? Draw your city. […] But how can you improve your city if you don’t even know it well? What do you do for it, if you’re not even able to draw it? That’s the crux of the matter.”

Jaime Lerner

Work begins with PERCEPTION. How do the future inhabitants of the place perceive their village or city? To explore this, participants are invited to use simple drawings to show us which elements they consider fundamental or particularly interesting in their village or city. In this way, we can understand their individual views of the place they live in and begin to build a collective vision shared by all participants.

Colour your village

The village or city in which we are working, transformed into a game board, a laboratory of experimentation where children and teenagers can act from a new point of view.

reCOGNIZING Verín

reCOGNIZING Verín

Verín

changing the village through protagonist participation

reCOGNIZING Verín

“A good urban acupuncture would be one that enables everyone to know their city. How many people, in reality, truly know their own city? It’s hard to respect what you don’t know. But how can you respect your city if you don’t understand it? Draw your city. […] But how can you improve your city if you don’t even know it well? What do you do for it, if you’re not even able to draw it? That’s the crux of the matter.”

Jaime Lerner

To understand how the inhabitants, both current and future, perceive their village, we will use the following strategy: we set off ‘adrift’ with a large golden frame, so that during our wandering, we frame those urban elements that are important to them (an experience based on the work of O’Grady). Who have been the protagonists of this ‘A Vila do Mañá’ experience? On this occasion, during their wandering, they have reDISCOVERED places in their village, perhaps forgotten ones.
With ‘A Vila do Mañá’, the village in which they live is not an abstract idea, nor a series of small partial images; it begins to be understood as a much more complex and expansive environment, bringing us closer to the notion of habitat: the space that transcends its physical location in a territory where we fulfil our needs, establishing relationships with others and with the environment, both natural and built; involving processes in which it transforms, but in which we are also transformed.

Colour your village

The village or city in which we are working, transformed into a game board, a laboratory of experimentation where children and teenagers can act from a new point of view.

What is your village like? What elements would you highlight?

What is your village like? What elements would you highlight?

Bertamiráns

changing the village through protagonist participation

What is your village like? Which elements would you highlight?

“A good urban acupuncture would be one that enables everyone to know their city. How many people, in reality, truly know their own city? It’s hard to respect what you don’t know. But how can you respect your city if you don’t understand it? Draw your city. […] But how can you improve your city if you don’t even know it well? What do you do for it, if you’re not even able to draw it? That’s the crux of the matter.”

Jaime Lerner

Work begins with PERCEPTION. How do the future inhabitants of the place perceive their village or city? To explore this, participants are invited to use simple drawings to show us which elements they consider fundamental or particularly interesting in their village or city. In this way, we can understand their individual views of the place they live in and begin to build a collective vision shared by all participants.

Colour your village

The village or city in which we are working, transformed into a game board, a laboratory of experimentation where children and teenagers can act from a new point of view.

reCOGNIZING Bertamiráns

reCOGNIZING Bertamiráns

Bertamiráns

changing the village through protagonist participation

reCOGNIZING Bertamiráns

“A good urban acupuncture would be one that enables everyone to know their city. How many people, in reality, truly know their own city? It’s hard to respect what you don’t know. But how can you respect your city if you don’t understand it? Draw your city. […] But how can you improve your city if you don’t even know it well? What do you do for it, if you’re not even able to draw it? That’s the crux of the matter.”

Jaime Lerner

To understand how the inhabitants, both current and future, perceive their village, we will use the following strategy: we set off ‘adrift’ with a large golden frame, so that during our wandering, we frame those urban elements that are important to them (an experience based on the work of O’Grady). Who have been the protagonists of this ‘A Vila do Mañá’ experience? On this occasion, during their wandering, they have reDISCOVERED places in their village, perhaps forgotten ones.
With ‘A Vila do Mañá’, the village in which they live is not an abstract idea, nor a series of small partial images; it begins to be understood as a much more complex and expansive environment, bringing us closer to the notion of habitat: the space that transcends its physical location in a territory where we fulfil our needs, establishing relationships with others and with the environment, both natural and built; involving processes in which it transforms, but in which we are also transformed.

colour your village

The village or city in which we are working, transformed into a game board, a laboratory of experimentation where children and teenagers can act from a new point of view.

reCOGNIZING Milladoiro

reCOGNIZING Milladoiro

Milladoiro

changing the village through protagonist participation

reCOGNIZING Milladoiro

“A good urban acupuncture would be one that enables everyone to know their city. How many people, in reality, truly know their own city? It’s hard to respect what you don’t know. But how can you respect your city if you don’t understand it? Draw your city. […] But how can you improve your city if you don’t even know it well? What do you do for it, if you’re not even able to draw it? That’s the crux of the matter.”

Jaime Lerner

To understand how the inhabitants, both current and future, perceive their village, we will use the following strategy: we set off ‘adrift’ with a large golden frame, so that during our wandering, we frame those urban elements that are important to them (an experience based on the work of O’Grady). Who have been the protagonists of this ‘A Vila do Mañá’ experience? On this occasion, during their wandering, they have reDISCOVERED places in their village, perhaps forgotten ones.
With ‘A Vila do Mañá’, the village in which they live is not an abstract idea, nor a series of small partial images; it begins to be understood as a much more complex and expansive environment, bringing us closer to the notion of habitat: the space that transcends its physical location in a territory where we fulfil our needs, establishing relationships with others and with the environment, both natural and built; involving processes in which it transforms, but in which we are also transformed.

Colour your village

The village or city in which we are working, transformed into a game board, a laboratory of experimentation where children and teenagers can act from a new point of view.

A day in Vilagarcía de Arousa

A day in Vilagarcía de Arousa

Vilagarcía

 

 

Changing the village through protagonist participation

shadow theater’s actors and actresses

The right of children and adolescents to PARTICIPATE in the CONSTRUCTION of their TOWN or CITY as part of an ACTIVE CITIZENSHIP, in such a way that they are participants and executors of the changes in their surroundings.

For this protagonist to exist, CHILDREN and ADOLESCENTS must reflect on their surroundings (the space in which they develop their lives), their context and propose solutions for change become aware of what it means to be a legal entitlement and the importance that their participation can have as a driving force for change in the rest of society.

“Plaza de Galicia is the first place we usually go. It’s a cozy place, but there are a lot of people. There is a beautiful fountain in front of Zara where a lot of people fall in, I would have put a glass wall behind the benches […] Then to eat we go in the car to Mercadona ”.

“I leave home and meet my two friends. As we like Miguel Hernández park we go there. Then we arrived there but there were no children. We like it because there are many slides, swings, cobwebs… but also because there are two parks and it is close to Compostela beach […] Then we go to Plaza Galicia, there are many shops and there is a chestnut tree, there are usually many people, but today it is empty because there are black clouds and it seems that it is going to rain ”.

“Independence Square seems like a cozy place to go for a snack. Then I go to play football passing by Cavadelo Park. Then I go to music lessons passing by Con’s river, which is a little dirty but it is pleasant […] Then I go home passing by the Fexdega pavilion, a good place to play sport. This is our day in Vilagarcia de Arousa ”.

Color your village

The village or city in which we are working has been turned into a game board, a laboratory of experimentation where girls, boys and teenagers can act from a new point of view.

ReCOGNIZING Rianxo

ReCOGNIZING Rianxo

RIANXO

changing the village through protagonist participation

ReCOGNIZING rianxo

“A good urban acupuncture would be one that enables everyone to know their city. How many people, in reality, truly know their own city? It’s hard to respect what you don’t know. But how can you respect your city if you don’t understand it? Draw your city. […] But how can you improve your city if you don’t even know it well? What do you do for it, if you’re not even able to draw it? That’s the crux of the matter.”

Jaime Lerner

To understand how the inhabitants, both current and future, perceive their town, we will use the following strategy: we set off ‘adrift’ with a large golden frame, so that during our wandering, we frame those urban elements that are important to them (an experience based on the work of O’Grady). Who have been the protagonists of this ‘A Vila do Mañá’ experience? On this occasion, during their wandering, they have reDISCOVERED places in their town, perhaps forgotten ones.
With ‘A Vila do Mañá’, the village in which they live is not an abstract idea, nor a series of small partial images; it begins to be understood as a much more complex and expansive environment, bringing us closer to the notion of habitat: the space that transcends its physical location in a territory where we fulfil our needs, establishing relationships with others and with the environment, both natural and built; involving processes in which it transforms, but in which we are also transformed.

Colour your village

The village or city in which we are working, transformed into a game board, a laboratory of experimentation where children and teenagers can act from a new point of view.

reCOGNIZING Mondoñedo

reCOGNIZING Mondoñedo

Mondoñedo

changing the village through protagonist participation

reCOGNIZING Mondoñedo

“A good urban acupuncture would be one that enables everyone to know their city. How many people, in reality, truly know their own city? It’s hard to respect what you don’t know. But how can you respect your city if you don’t understand it? Draw your city. […] But how can you improve your city if you don’t even know it well? What do you do for it, if you’re not even able to draw it? That’s the crux of the matter.”

Jaime Lerner

To understand how the inhabitants, both current and future, perceive their village, we will use the following strategy: we set off ‘adrift’ with a large golden frame, so that during our wandering, we frame those urban elements that are important to them (an experience based on the work of O’Grady). Who have been the protagonists of this ‘A Vila do Mañá’ experience? On this occasion, during their wandering, they have reDISCOVERED places in their village, perhaps forgotten ones.
With ‘A Vila do Mañá’, the village in which they live is not an abstract idea, nor a series of small partial images; it begins to be understood as a much more complex and expansive environment, bringing us closer to the notion of habitat: the space that transcends its physical location in a territory where we fulfil our needs, establishing relationships with others and with the environment, both natural and built; involving processes in which it transforms, but in which we are also transformed.

Colour your village

The village or city in which we are working, transformed into a game board, a laboratory of experimentation where children and teenagers can act from a new point of view.

ReCOGNIZING Carballo

ReCOGNIZING Carballo

Carballo

changing the village through protagonist participation

ReCOGNIZING Carballo

“A good urban acupuncture would be one that enables everyone to know their city. How many people, in reality, truly know their own city? It’s hard to respect what you don’t know. But how can you respect your city if you don’t understand it? Draw your city. […] But how can you improve your city if you don’t even know it well? What do you do for it, if you’re not even able to draw it? That’s the crux of the matter.”

Jaime Lerner

To understand how the inhabitants, both current and future, perceive their town, we will use the following strategy: we set off ‘adrift’ with a large golden frame, so that during our wandering, we frame those urban elements that are important to them (an experience based on the work of O’Grady). Who have been the protagonists of this ‘A Vila do Mañá’ experience? On this occasion, during their wandering, they have reDISCOVERED places in their town, perhaps forgotten ones.
With ‘A Vila do Mañá’, the city in which they live is not an abstract idea, nor a series of small partial images; it begins to be understood as a much more complex and expansive environment, bringing us closer to the notion of habitat: the space that transcends its physical location in a territory where we fulfil our needs, establishing relationships with others and with the environment, both natural and built; involving processes in which it transforms, but in which we are also transformed.

Colour your village

The village or city in which we are working, transformed into a game board, a laboratory of experimentation where children and teenagers can act from a new point of view.

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Logo A Vila do Mañá

Proxecto financiado por:

Proxecto financiado pola Deputación da Coruña

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