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Publication

Designing for a future self: How architect Stéphane Beel empathises with wheelchair-users

Journal Contribution - e-publication

Architects tend to design consistent with their own values and concerns. Designing for imaginary users, especially disabled ones, may pose major challenges. Drawing on aspects of focused ethnography, we show how architect Stéphane Beel’s anticipation of using a wheelchair in the future due to a progressive-regressive disease influences his willingness and ability to empathise with, and design for, wheelchair-users. We study a museum building in Belgium, that he, as part of a larger design team, helped restoring, renovating, and expanding, paying special attention to (wheelchair-)accessibility. We rely on interviews, observations, design documents, and two tours guided by Stéphane. Findings suggest that Stéphane’s ability to empathise with users benefits from flexibly using his embodied self, and moving between positions in various design stages. Foregrounding bodily resonances with wheelchair-users seems to facilitate incorporating the other as self and reaching affect, while thinking of the self as other promotes looking at designs through someone else’s eyes. Conclusively, empathy brought Stéphane to design inclusive environments, not because he has embodied knowledge derived from using a wheelchair, or beyond his technical knowledge as an architect, but because he feels affected by his own future possibility. Affect, set against indifference, triggered a powerful response in his architecture.
Journal: Journal of Architecture
ISSN: 1360-2365
Issue: 6
Volume: 26
Pages: 912 - 937
Publication year:2021
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CSS-citation score:1
Authors from:Higher Education
Accessibility:Open