Oslo Architecture Triennale 2022: Coming into Community
This autumn, the National Museum – Architecture will be transformed into a queer and playful place. Welcome to an installation and exhibition that explores both community and exclusion!
The National Museum is one of the Oslo Architecture Triennale's main partners. In 2022, the festival will focus on the neighbourhood as a community. The museum's contribution will focus on community and exclusion. One part of the exhibition will show examples from the past 70 years of how ideas about community have shaped architecture and urban development. Who has been included and who has been excluded? How is urban development perceived by queer people, feminists and other marginalised groups?
Post-war housing construction was mainly about housing and protecting the nuclear family. It was not until the 1960s and 1970s that more thought was given to inclusion and diversity. Selegrend Hesthaugen outside Bergen is an example of a project where the nuclear family was no longer the main focus. One-third of the homes were to be reserved for "housing-disadvantaged" groups.
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This autumn, the National Museum – Architecture will be transformed into a queer and playful place. Welcome to an installation and exhibition that explores both community and exclusion!
The National Museum is one of the Oslo Architecture Triennale's main partners. In 2022, the festival will focus on the neighbourhood as a community. The museum's contribution will focus on community and exclusion. One part of the exhibition will show examples from the past 70 years of how ideas about community have shaped architecture and urban development. Who has been included and who has been excluded? How is urban development perceived by queer people, feminists and other marginalised groups?
Post-war housing construction was mainly about housing and protecting the nuclear family. It was not until the 1960s and 1970s that more thought was given to inclusion and diversity. Selegrend Hesthaugen outside Bergen is an example of a project where the nuclear family was no longer the main focus. One-third of the homes were to be reserved for "housing-disadvantaged" groups.