@misc{426d6c4f-fb10-4c8e-8212-1eeadf9f504e,
  abstract     = {{Presented within the Urban Architecture Conference: In the Search of Urban Quality, Urban Form and Urban Life at Lund University (2018), this contribution forms part of a broader exploration into the relationship between architecture, urban design, and contemporary urban conditions.<br/><br/>The presentation introduces a pedagogical and design-oriented framework for engaging with urban architecture, structured as a sequence of five iterative steps: getting lost, treasure hunting, exhausting a place, dreaming a city, and articulating the relationship between dwelling and public space. Developed within first- and second-year studio teaching, the approach positions the urban architect as an active interpreter of spatial conditions rather than a mere problem-solver.<br/><br/>The method emphasizes embodied exploration, observation, and collection as fundamental tools for understanding the complexity of urban environments. Through processes of mapping, assembling, and reinterpreting found material, students are encouraged to construct alternative readings of place that move beyond conventional analytical models. These explorations are then translated into speculative architectural propositions, linking everyday spatial experiences to broader questions of urban form and life.<br/><br/>By framing learning as a sequence of situated practices, the presentation argues for a shift from outcome-driven design toward process-based inquiry, highlighting architectural education as a site for developing new sensibilities toward the city.}},
  author       = {{Mateo Muñoz, Jesus}},
  keywords     = {{Urban architecture; Design pedagogy; Process-based design; Urban design; Spatial analysis; Site exploration}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{09}},
  title        = {{Learning to be an urban architect : five steps in five minutes}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}

