2025 Urbanism Lecture Series | UNWORLDING ENERGY

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Please join us for a lecture series co-presented by the SMarchS Urbanism program and the LCAU. RSVP HERE. 


 

UNWORLDING ENERGY seeks to ask how might the sense of urgency regarding the climate crisis contribute to a radical reform, not only of petro energy systems but also of the long histories of socio-environmental violence that have sustained them? Put another way, we are interested in the unmaking of inherited energy-worlds toward more just ways of world making. The issue of “energy transition” begs then the question of which theories of change are called upon in rethinking energy and repairing worlds. This urgency parallels broader calls to dismantle entrenched structures and systems, embracing collapse, entropy, and acts of undoing rather than repair, which is often complicit with the very systems it seeks to fix. These conditions ,and the voices and practices that are presenting in this lecture series, provide an initial context for a critical and speculative examination of the relations between climate, crisis, energy, transition, growth, and sufficiency. Such material accounts of energy systems invite a systemic consideration that is always situated in specific places, grounded in real peoples’ lives and labors. This process of unmaking is not an end but an opening, revealing new possibilities coiled in the ruins of what has been, pushing us toward a reimagining of worlds built on justice and sufficiency.

See lecture dates and details below. All lectures are open to the public.

 

February 24th | Cara Daggett | ON WASTING ENERGY 

Associate Professor, Political Science, Virginia Tech

Watch Cara's lecture via Vimeo here.

This talk will meditate on what it means to waste energy, as a distinct phenomenon from waste as a material and spatial arrangement. In discard studies, waste often refers to material objects or bodies and how they relate to power. A waste of energy, however, points to something different - a relation more temporal than spatial. The close relationship between energy and waste becomes clear when looking at energy as a historical construction, rather than a scientific or natural term. Energy is not a material thing, but an epistemology, a set of calculations for understanding change in the world. The science of energy emerged in the 19th century through efforts to understand how steam engines worked, as they were highly inefficient – one might even say, wasteful. Waste came to be defined against an imperial culture of productivism, where work and waste were treated as universal categories, but were administered through gendered and racialized regimes. The science of energy also helped to usher in the notion that nature itself tended toward wast(ing) from the perspective of productive work. Waste remains central to how people think about the problem of energy today. Reducing energy waste, through the pursuit of efficiency, is often described as a central pillar of a low-carbon energy transition. However, this history of energy and waste suggests that a focus on waste can be unhelpful, and even insidious, in the pursuit of energy justice. The talk will start by exploring what waste means in the history of energy and entropy. Using this history, I will propose four different meanings of wasting energy, and the institutions that each proposes for solving the problem of waste. And finally, I will suggest a different politics of wasting energy.
 

March 5th | Marina Otero Verzier | COMPULSIVE DESIRES

Architect, Researcher, Lecturer @ Harvard GSD, Dean’s Visiting Assistant Professor @ GSAPP

Watch Marina's lecture via Vimeo here. 

Through scientific and technological undertakings, as well as the mundane activities of everyday life, both humans and artificial intelligences are amassing data at an unprecedented rate, with significant social and environmental consequences. While data centers are the primary focus of concern regarding the extractive practices of digital storage, archives, institutional repositories, supercomputing centers, cold storage facilities are also contributing to this relentless drive for more data, leading to what has been referred to as the "Zone of Potential Insufficiency"—a point at which the rate of data production will outpace the scalability of existing storage solutions. This looming prospect challenges the illusion of the cloud as an infinite reservoir of unaltered information preserved across time and prompts new questions: Who will decide what knowledge will be preserved? What practices of erasure and mourning will emerge as the unraveling of worlds forces humans to confront the fragility of institutions, environments and their stories?

 

March 17th | RVTR | BECOMING BIOMASS: Thinking Regional Futures for a Biomaterial Transition

Kathy Velikov, Geoffrey Thün, Faculty @ University of Michigan Taubman College

This talk will present regional design research as a speculative world-building project with a focus on Thün and Velikov’s recent Becoming Biomass: a project that envisions a future cooperative-managed agroforestry and biomanufacturing transformation in the Tennessee Valley region as part of the U.S. decarbonization effort. The project deploys methods of narrative and scenario building to design a multi-scalar and multisystemic regenerative future for the region and its human and nonhuman constituents.

 

March 31st | Nicholas Pevzner | Urban Designer, Landscape Architect, Educator, UPenn Stuart Weitzman School of Design

April 14th | Abby Spinak | PhD, Lecturer @ Harvard GSD

April 23rd | Cave Bureau | Kabage Karanja, Louis I. Kahn Visiting Assistant Professor of Architectural Design @ Yale School of Architecture