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Mapping for Architecture, Urbanism, and the Humanities

Maps are devices of power. Their historical significance as representations of territories – and, invariably, of the people who dwell in them – resulted in an amalgamation between cartography and government. A science of mapping supported the art of ruling, and spatial information was closely guarded. The explosion of geographical representation that we are experiencing has transformed our collective relationship with maps, as they have become a commonplace element of our everyday lives. This apparent democratization of cartography, however, has created challenges of its own. Critical readings of maps and spatial data are more relevant than ever for a growing number of disciplines – as they are for civic life. After all, maps are still devices of power.

This course is an introduction to cartography, its history, and its relationship with humanities. As such, it aims at creating a space (or a place?) for critical reflection on the mechanisms to produce and interpret spatial information. Simultaneously, the students collectively develop the necessary skills to posit spatial questions and to use relevant datasets to produce answers. In other words, the course is designed to illustrate the relevance of maps in different forms of intellectual inquiry.

Here are some of the students’ final projects.

Columbia GSAPP | ARCH A4122 | Spring 2022

The concentration of immigrants and the disparity of locations of immigrant organizations in the Hudson Valley area, by Phoenix Yang

Mapping the Effects of Upzoning in Greenpoint and Williamsburg, Brooklyn, by Jonghoon Park

Re-examining Historic Manhattan: Mapping historic properties by date of registration in Community Districts 8 and 12, by Eleanor Birle

Analyzing the conditions of spomeniks in the former Yugoslavia, by Jack Sapoch