picture in header © Tea Marta
produced with Manifesta 14 Prishtina
on site production:
Vanesa Orana
The Brick Factory is Prishtina’s largest post-industrial site. Having been placed under the administration of Kosovo’s Privatisation Agency in 2007, it was returned to public ownership by the Municipality of Prishtina in 2021. The future of the site lies in the hands of the citizens. Will it become a new cultural hub, as foreseen by the municipality? What kind of culture would it support? Would such a hub follow existing models or pioneer new ones? The discussion is only just beginning.
Manifesta 14 Prishtina, the european nomadic biennial, has invited raumlaborberlin – a collective of experimental architects and urbanologists specialising in participatory models of urban transformation – to join forces with the citizens to actively reclaim the site, to establish it as a common ground and to collectively imagine its future. Their project – [Working on] Common Ground – is a 100-day laboratory on eco-urban learning and making, which kicks off with a two-week summer school. The programme has been conceived and is implemented in collaboration with collectives from Kosovo, the region and further afield.
The laboratory relates stories it unearths on site – whether social, political, economic or ecological – to contemporary challenges, such as decontamination, conservation, circular and regenerative economies, sustainable building, mobility and climate care. People of all ages and backgrounds are invited to join in the many activities including archaeology, exploring, mapping and storytelling, building, gardening, swimming, cooking and eating. The programme also features music, film and visual arts by local and regional artists.
Text by Catherine Nichols
Imagination of a possible future of the brick factory
© raumlaborberlin / Veronika Zaripova
© Klodiana Millona
© Manifesta 14 Prishtina / Atdhe Mulla
Round table conference on the future of the Brick Factory © Tea Marta
© raumlaborberlin
© raumlaborberlin
© Mascha Fehse, © raumlaborberlin
© Ariel Curtelin
© raumlaborberlin
© raumlaborberlin
WORKSHOPS DURING THE COMMON GROUND SUMMER SCHOOL
COMBUSTION IN QUESTION
Mentors: temp. space-trans int.
(Mascha Fehse, Ariel Curtelin, Andries de Lange & Marius Busch)
Structured around different hot and cold experiments with materials from the Tullara brick factory, the workshop was involving sourcing, transforming, rearranging and re-making materials on site, trying out transformations on different scales.
Harvesting of clay from the factory © Andries de Lange
Pit fire © Gabriel Jacobs
Kiln for glazing bricks © Andries de Lange
© Andries de Lange
THE SØURCERS
Mentor: STEALTH.Unlimited
(Marc Neelen & Ana Džokić)
Rethinking de-centrilized energy systems by hacking the city away from climate crisis and into energy independence.
© Ana Džokić
© Ana Džokić
Potential solar panel area in the brick factory © Ana Džokić
THE ADAPTER
Mentors: raumlaborberlin
(Jan Liesegang & Kipras Kazlauskas)
In the adapter workshop the whole brick factory site was read as a park and garden. The workshop explored and mapped out buildings, open spaces, existing green, programs and hidden corridors. Based on the analyses, new situations, connections and spaces of encounter was discussed, tested and built.
Brick smashing for garden © Ariel Curtelin
Bar construction of bricks harvested from the abandoned kiln © raumlaborberlin
Overgrown electric central area transformed into a secret garden © raumlaborberlin
Wood workshop © raumlaborberlin
CIRCLES OF LIVES
Mentor: Ecocietystudies
(Argjirë Krasniqi)
The starting point for the workshop was Ecocietystudies two-year long research-by-design project, tracing the meaning of city buildings, looking into the wounds and traumas they still carry with them, and searching ways for healing those spaces in the future. The circles of lives workshop were structured around listening to, writing and drawing upon overlapping histories that unfolded in the Brick factory.
Former workers at Cigllana © Giulia Ficarazzo
© Tea Marta, © Giulia Ficarazzo, © raumlaborberlin
© Luca Liese Ritter
ecocietystudies_circles of life
SITE AS LIVING ARCHIVE / A POLYPHONIC CARTOGRAPHY
Mentors: Millonialiu
(Klodiana Millona & Veronika Zaripova)
A workshop about researching and materialising the history of the Brick Factory based on collective oral histories of the citizens of Prishtina. The strategy was to gather diverse voices and render visible what the legacy of the Brick Factory meant for the communities of different ethnicities; from mapping and including the histories of workers who saw the political unrest unfolding in Kosovo within the developments of the factory, to the social dynamics of workers of different ethnicities producing together, to the stories of the bricks that built and rebuilt Prishtina during various times.
Lunch with former factory worker © raumlaborberlin
© raumlaborberlin
© Veronika Zaripova
DIGESTING WATER / THE BIG FAT BELLY OF A POOL
Mentors: raumlaborberlin
(Benjamin Foerster Baldenius & Olof Duus)
In Kosovo you always have to engage in the act of taking your shoes before you enter a house. It’s a gesture of care towards the hospitality and belongings of the host. So do guests in an Oda, the traditional room for receiving guests in an Albanian house. In the Brick Factory, a combined parliament and swimming pool was constructed, called the Liquid Oda, as a place for both leisure and conversations.
© Andries de Lange
© Manifesta 14 Prishtina / Atdhe Mulla
© raumlaborberlin
COMMON GROUNDING
Tour developed by Sabine Zahn
Performed during Manifesta 14 by Okan Xhemaili
Structured as a scripted tour in several acts, the Common Grounding tour was guiding attention to the ways of being with one another within the crevasses of a place suspended in time, by guiding the participants in the closed off parts of the brick factory.
Common Grounding – tour developed by Sabine Zahn © raumlaborberlin
Common Grounding – tour developed by Sabine Zahn © raumlaborberlin
© raumlaborberlin
BRICK FACTORY BEFORE INTERVENTION
© raumlaborberlin
© raumlaborberlin
© raumlaborberlin
© raumlaborberlin
MANIFESTO ON ARTS AND BUILDINGS by Benjamin Forster Baldenius
Art does not need Buildings
Buildings need Art
Art needs Space
Space is the product of social interaction, so
Art needs People
and vice versa:
People need Art
Art needs Artists and
Artists need Art
Artists need Buildings
to work
Buildings for Artists need to be
SAFE // SPACIOUS // FULL OF LIGHT // HEALTHY // FUNCTIONAL //ACCESSIBLE
and first of all
// AFFORDABLE // with long term leases
rarely need these buildings to be new
on the contrary: Atelierbuildings should better be used buildings
For Artists it´s helpful if these Buildings are also functioning as
MEETING PLACES // SPACES OF ENCOUNTER // POSSIBLE DISPLAYS
People need Art
and they need to be confronted to Art
In Museums – yes –
but also in public spaces, in public institutions, in schools, hotels, in libraries, at work, at home and in the digital world (where is the Art in the internet?)
because
through Art we can learn and practice
to ask the relevant questions
INSTALLATION TEAM
Yuan Chun Liu
Vanesa Orana
Avni Sedrini
Fatmir Aliu
Islam Llapashtica
Kadri Llapashtica
Zahir Sallahu
Izet Hajzeri
Izak Fetahi
Jeton Shala
Carlos Merino
Ragip Vllasa
Bekim Obrazhda
(ON SITE) RESEARCH SUPPORT
Gresa Kuleta
Azem Spanca
Bardhyl Gashi
Endrit Maxhuni
Hysni Gashi
Xili and all the neighhbors of ‚Cigllana‘ neighborhood
SUMMER SCHOOL PARTICIPANTS
Aleksandra Kugacka
Alma Hutter
Andia Kolshi
Antzelo Reka
Blerta Krasniqi
Dijellza Preniqi
Doruntina Sylejmani
Drinor Shabanaj
Erëz Bekolli
Erika Lowin
Ermira Gashi
Eylul Nejan Seyhan
Ferdinand Krumhoff
Florencia Pochinki
Gabriel Jacobs
Galena Sardamova
Giulia Ficarazzo
Helene von Stuckrad
İdil Mersin
Irvi Çela
Lilly Ebben
Luca Liese Ritter
Marie Köhler
Martin Huber
Matija Vujović
Melisa Hergaja
Migena Hadziu
Nora Gailer
Okan Xhemaili
Olta Hasanaj
Paulina Gilsbach
Rebecca Dathe
Servio Avdyli
Stella Konietzka
Tea Marta
Trina Hashani
Vibe Overgaard
Will Scobie
Yllka Shala