@conference { , title = {Live community architecture — a transformative feminist practice? a critical exploration of the experiences of students involved in live community-based architecture projects}, abstract = {Internationally, universities have introduced live projects as an increasingly common component of architecture education. In these projects students are typically taken out of the classroom or studio, and prompted to work with clients and/or real-life sit- uations ‘as a way of learning the theory and practice of architec- ture.’ (SSOA, 5) The range of project types that are considered ‘live’ is varied: from hands-on 1:1 construction to client-initiat- ed and participatory community-based design projects. Both approaches offer a distinctively different pedagogic approach that challenge normative approaches to architectural education (which have been critiqued as fundamentally masculinist, indi- vidualist and exclusive). However I argue that it is involvement in live, community-based and co-creative architecture projects that offers the most powerfully feminist alternative. This paper reflects on the experiences of over 60 students involved in live community-based architecture projects run at the School of Architecture, uWE, Bristol, uK over two academ- ic years. These projects have involved students in creating a series of community pocket parks; feasibility and detailed design for a farm run by people with disabilities; portable recycled architecture, etc. The research investigates how their experiences affect their perceptions of the architectural design process and explores the pedagogical implications (using a structure drawn from radical transformative feminist pedago- gies, in particular bell hooks and Paolo Friere). Initial findings suggest that in community-based projects, col- laboration can generate space in which architecture students, academics and community clients work together to co-define the aspirations for their part of the city and design responses to transform their particular situation. As such these projects chal- lenge the inherent power relations — not only between tutors and students, but also between professionals and amateurs. They begin to suggest a model of activist transformative fem- inist pedagogy that empowers participants, builds community and challenges traditional notions of architectural pedagogic practice.}, conference = {Architecture and Feminisms Conference}, publicationstatus = {Unpublished}, url = {https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/906002}, keyword = {Centre for Architecture and Built Environment Research, live community architecture, transformative feminist pedagogy}, year = {2016}, author = {Sara, Rachel} }