Uganda Martyrs University Library Uganda Martyrs University
Archbishop Kiwanuka Memorial Library
  • Home
  • Contact us
    • Our Team
    • About
    • Ask a Librarian
  • Services
    • Library Catalogue
    • Online Journals
    • Past papers
    • Reading lists
    • Newspaper Index
    • Open Access Resources
  • Identify Me
  • Research
    • Staff publications
    • Student dissertations
    • Institutional repository
  • Website

Library Catalog

Find books, articles, CDs, DVDs and more...



Advanced Search | Browse By Subject

Online resources

Find, articles, journals...

  • Student dissertations
  • Institutional repository
  • Website
  • Home
  • Publication

Capacity Building in Adaptive Reuse Through Collaborative Workshops for Students: On-Site and Remote Experiences in Rwanda and Zanzibar(Article)

The idea of ‘adaptive reuse’ is relatively new in the African built environment. The value of working with existing under-utilised buildings as a resource for the future lies in the inherent potential for addressing sensitive issues that often originate from their colonial past or previous regimes during which they were built or occupied. As part of the International Forum Cultural Spaces for Kigali, a workshop for students was hosted at the University of Rwanda’s School of Architecture and Built Environment from 10 - 14 March 2019. The participants included the University of Rwanda (UR), Uganda Martyrs University (UMU) and the University of Cape Town (UCT). The objective of the workshop and the Forum was to test the adaptive potential of unused buildings near Kigali’s city centre, and to evaluate whether disused buildings – such as the Kigali Central Prison (also known as Nyarugenge Prison, Gikondo Prison, or simply “1930”) and the Ecole Belge (the former Belgian School) – could be adapted for use as precincts for the production and performance of art and culture. The project was launched and run by the Rwanda Arts Initiative (RAI), with African Architecture Matters and the Centre for Fine Arts Brussels (BOZAR), and funded by the Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles. The workshop targeted students, who, navigating their cultural differences, presented a variety of options or possibilities using visualisation methods. This was done in cooperative workshops, with presentations by students and professionals from across Africa, developing an independent, continent-specific approach. The success of the Rwandan workshop, and its reiteration in Zanzibar, are presented here.

Authoured by: Ahimbisibwe Achilles , Louw Michael, Michieletto Manlio , Mark Olweny , Stella Papanicolaou, Berend van der Lans

Academic units: Faculty of The Built Environment


View

Back to Top

© 2015 Uganda Martyrs University Library