The short project will be about questions of transformation design, about transitions and transformation to more sustainable societies. Together we will look at the role of creative practices -like design- in rethinking extractivism, activism, dwelling and the necessary abandonment of technologies like lignite-fired power generation. Our perspective will be informed by local and global discussions.
We will be thinking these issues with and through the Rhenish mining area. Our local partner will be the city of Kerpen with its associated communities that directly border what is known today as the Hambach open pit mine. Here, several villages have been cleared in recent years. Most recently, the clearance of the village of Lützerath in the adjacent Garzweiler open pit mine has sent images of people fighting huge, landscape-altering excavators around the world. However, in the Rhenish region some areas will not be mined after all due to the earlier decision to phase out coal in 2030. What will happen now to these places in the Rhenish mining area that have been resettled and in part already cleared? How might we imagine collectively the needed transformations, how could the local stakeholder and communites be supported? How might design and other practices support these kind of transformation processes, that have both local and global impacts?