Mapping the Margin
This thesis explores how architectural practice engages with the socio-
political realities of displacement through methods of subjective storytelling
and spatial observation. Set within the broader frameworks of
temporality and marginality, the focus lies on two reception centres for
asylum seekers in Flanders: Opvangcentrum Westakkers – Rode Kruis
and Rode Kruisopvangcentrum Beveren. It does so by mapping how individuals
negotiate homemaking practices within these temporary and
institutionalised contexts.
By adopting a position of critical proximity, the analysis draws on sketching,
informal interviews, and on-site presence as tools to map space in
both a physical and emotional sense. Through this approach, personal
subjectivity is not masked, but embraced as a lens through which to reveal
hidden spatial narratives and to question the traditional role of the
architect.
This socio-spatial reflection is grounded in intersectional theory, building
on the work of researchers such as Luce Beeckmans, Huda Tayob and
Seethaler-Wari. It seeks to reframe the architectural gaze towards the
margin, as defined by bell hooks, not as a zone of lack or exclusion, but
as a space of resilience, improvisation, and agency. Rather than offering
a design solution, this thesis proposes a method of architectural engagement
that centres listening, mapping, and the empowering of voices that
are often left unheard.
Ultimately, this thesis aims to challenge dominant architectural modes by
foregrounding the potential of alternative, slower, and more humane ways
of reading and working with space, particularly in contexts where uncertainty
and hope coexist.
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