This paper examines an intensive 9-month project of knowledge exchange between an academic researcher and the urban design practice Rick Mather Architects, focused around their long-term masterplan for London's South Bank Centre. This kind of project is still quite new within the design disciplines, but has significant potential benefits for both research and practice. Research can gain a better understanding of where new knowledge is needed, and enhance the prospects of being applied. Practice can benefit by using research to improve built outcomes. This paper evaluates the impact of a knowledge-exchange partnership on the state of knowledge of practice and research, and on the art of knowledge exchange in urban design as opposed to other disciplines. It identifies new forms of knowledge exchange through a set of research and engagement activities based on ethnographic methods. It highlights that the sharing of design knowledge is fundamentally a social art.
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December 2015
Research Article|
May 06 2015
The art of knowledge exchange in urban design Available to Purchase
Patricia Aelbrecht, MArch(Hons) MSc PhD;
Patricia Aelbrecht, MArch(Hons) MSc PhD
Teaching Fellow Associate
Department of Town and Regional Planning, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
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Quentin Stevens, BPD BArch (Hons) MUPP PhD
Quentin Stevens, BPD BArch (Hons) MUPP PhD
Associate Professor
School of Architecture and Design, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
November 04 2013
Accepted:
March 16 2015
Online ISSN: 1755-0807
Print ISSN: 1755-0793
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2015
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Urban Design and Planning (2015) 168 (6): 304–317.
Article history
Received:
November 04 2013
Accepted:
March 16 2015
Citation
Aelbrecht P, Stevens Q (2015), "The art of knowledge exchange in urban design". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Urban Design and Planning, Vol. 168 No. 6 pp. 304–317, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/udap.13.00036
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