Cordelia Dingle Fellowship

 
Abstract art of montreal map
 
 

Cordelia Dingle (2000-2020) was a joyous, inspired, energetic, and remarkably sensitive young scholar. In the Winter of 2020, the Building 21 community was lent the privilege of her company and friendship. During this time she pursued her research interests as a BLUE Intern. Her project sought to answer a fundamental and prescient question: what might an Urban System look like in 2070? In her memory, and in celebration of her work, Building 21 is now offering the Cordelia Dingle Fellowship.

The Cordelia Dingle Fellowship will be offered once annually, pending exemplary applications. Applications are welcome from any level of University Education and from any discipline. Creativity in focus and methodology are (in Building 21 spirit) strongly encouraged. However, we ask that applications be concerned with the future of environments, physical or cognitive. Perspectives from literature, mathematics, the fine arts, philosophy, architecture, geography—indeed, any discipline—are invited. We welcome your creativity and vision.

 

Cordelia Dingle, Winter 2020

How to design a post-consumption urban-system?

First, we must define what we mean by design, second, we must define what we mean by post-consumption, and third, we have to define what we mean by urban-system. Design, according to the Oxford dictionary, is the general arrangement of the different parts of something that is made. How do we want to arrange our city? What values do we hold that will affect the blue-print? Does good design increase human empathy? The adjective ‘post-consumption’ (as in post-consumption school, post-consumption workplace, etc.) is the idea that in the future, to follow the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report guidelines and the recommended trajectories, we must decrease our consumption in many sectors. It’s much more complicated than that, but yet the simple reality that growth cannot be unlimited on a closed-system like Earth feels ignored by policy-makers and government officials. This is disheartening to regular citizens who feel that they have simply become a number, customer #456723445. The goal is that by 2070 the hierarchy flattens to allow for community agency.

In regards to the city itself, an urban-system by nature needs to be open. But, when we look empirically to see how people move through cities, they are quite predictable in their behaviour. The way in which space is built and then interacted with is often boring. I understand that we need more parking lots, but didn’t you also break pavement last week? Our use of concrete is becoming a habit, and the energy that fuels it is an addiction. Can we iterate alternatives? Also, there are many papers that show the benefit of daily outdoor activity, but most people in urban-systems don’t get enough exercise. Why is this? How much of our public health prevention budget can go into making recreational green spaces? Again, how do we use our spaces right and promote life? The answer is pretty simple, but it does require work. It also requires creativity and the suspension of disbelief while we build our new narratives. Call me naive, but I promise that change can be fun.

Now, I walked into this internship thinking I should look for an answer to the question of what Montreal will look like in 2070, and then host a dinner party set in the future as ‘the output’. Due to unforeseen events, the dinner party in question was, along with the spring plans of most Montrealers (and the rest of the world, for that matter), cancelled. Yet even without the final event, the process is still valuable. Building 21 is a place for curiosity, for empathy, and for keeping one’s eyes and heart open. It’s a place to learn. And I did learn one thing for sure: Montreal in 2070 is communities; and it’s all about people, entities, and structures interfacing. To help untangle the original question, one must ask themselves how does the city imagine our future now? Are we even imagining it or just remixing the past? What liberties, rights, and freedoms can we afford ourselves when playing with time? Also, assuming that entropy is certain and that precision is rarely available, how do we play within this chaotic system? There are so many questions that we cannot answer, but what we can do is choose the direction of inquiry. This is important. It is also important to act like honourable members of our city, and speak when you believe.


Sarah Graham, winter 2021

 

Forget the Rent: Reimagining Housing as a Fundamental Right

In a society filled with excess, why does homelessness persist? Canada is supposed to be benevolent, yet annually hundreds of thousands go without the basic dignity of stable housing. Let us further the change necessary to end homelessness. Housing First (HF) policies get people out of shelters and into homes. In countries like Finland, HF policies have been successful. It is time for us to provide housing to all, no strings attached.

My goals:

1) Encourage a collective rethinking of stereotypes of worth/lessness, to further a recognition of housing as a fundamental human right.

2) Explore options of redirecting police funding towards housing and health care, such as HF policies.

In weekly podcasts I will unite diverse perspectives to understand the complexities of Canada’s housing crisis. To begin I spoke with Dr. Wachsmuth about Airbnb’s impact on housing unaffordability. I have received interest from the Defund Coalition and Dr. Dosani, Founder of Palliative Education and Care for the Homeless. COVID-19 has ignited a public reckoning with the ugly truth of who Canada has always cast aside. COVID-19 has also shown the power of unity. My project is grounded in this potential.


valérie bourassa and hannah derue, winter 2023

 

What Does Pain Look Like?

One in five Canadians will experience chronic pain at least once over the course of their lifetime. Pain is fluid, influenced by genetics and sociocultural factors, and incredibly challenging to quantify. It is not only difficult to conceptualize but also a challenging experience to communicate to others. A large group of individuals at McGill are living with chronic pain and feel unseen.  
 

In this project we aim to bridge art and science to answer one of the fundamental questions of the human experience, which is “what does pain look like?” Using artificial intelligence, we plan to produce artwork derived from the testimonies of individuals at McGill living with chronic pain and share this art with the community in order to promote awareness of chronic pain conditions and create a more inclusive environment for our peers.