African Design Magazine August 2015 | Page 90

i Future Johannesburg recently spoke with Tariq Toffa, South African architect and lecturer in the architecture department at the University of Johannesburg. He shares the main challenges for urban planning in South Africa and some of his current projects. The focus of your articles at URB. im has been on the empowerment of communities and local entrepreneurship. How does this relate to your work this year? The iconic Mandela days, the ‘new South Africa’, the ‘rainbow nation’ – these ideas probably seem to many now as distant and somewhat naïve. And it only took two decades for these – our noblest ideas – to become historical ones, dropping almost completely off the map of priorities, and typically conjured up formulaically for political expediency or opportunistically for branding. But the rounds of xenophobic attacks in Johannesburg and many other incidents around the country that have captured news headlines where difference and othering is synonymous with abuse and violence have returned the older project to the forefront with a vengeance. Other instances around the globe, like Ferguson in the US or the deaths of desperate African migrants to Europe, highlight many similar issues in other contexts. In conceptual terms I call this the ‘softer’ project of democracy, and in spatial terms I think of it as building ‘discursive spaces’, because I am interested in architectural thinking and practice that participates 90 africandesignmagazine.com in, contributes towards, and develops a discourse of society. It is a slow, deliberate and persistent project that needs greater and consistent focus intellectually, imaginatively and experimentally; and that perhaps is its failure, because it is often and easily overtaken by trends and novelties. This has always been a silent but consistent current running through my own work but, given the current local and global social climate, needs to be reasserted and re-centered. Through your experience and work, what are the main difficulties when proposing a new idea or plan to a community, and fostering these discursive spaces? Whether as a practitioner, student or educator, my work thus far has been diverse; but always with a societal, public or humane focus. For me ‘the community’ is not disenfranchised groups and localities only (where this term typically tends to be employed) while the rest of the landscape remains unchanged; it is not quite as localized or isolated as that. Rather our challenges are very much interrelated, and while communities in South Africa may be radically diverse in some respects they can still be engaged through a broader ethical imagination for the kind of society we wish to build.