Dirt Jumps are Matter Carefully Placed, Maintained, and Governed

Main Article Content

Liam Healy

Abstract

This article draws on research produced with DIY bike trail and dirt jump builders to unpack the forms of repair and care that they employ in maintaining their spaces. I begin by describing the mundane practices involved in keeping bike trails running, such as shoveling, watering, and compacting, and conceptualize these activities as repairing the ‘ruins’ of the often squatted spaces that they occupy. Second, I draw from literature in feminist science and technology studies (STS) and commons to argue for a thickening of care, finding that these spaces alert me to the ways that ‘neglect’, and exclusion from participation-in, and research-on, are often a requirement of their subsistence. In conclusion, I find that in these spaces forms of repair and maintenance are multiple and layered―from mundane practices to their forms of governance—and in recent years, have involved practices to ‘repair’ the pervasive and dominating macho, heteronormative cultures of these social worlds.

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How to Cite
Healy, L. (2024). Dirt Jumps are Matter Carefully Placed, Maintained, and Governed. Diseña, (24), Article.6. https://doi.org/10.7764/disena.24.Article.6
Section
Original Articles (part 1)
Author Biography

Liam Healy, University of Sheffield

Lecturer in Design at the University of Sheffield School of Architecture. PhD in Design from Goldsmiths, University of London. His research interests focus on situated critical and speculative design practice and research, DIY design, care, the notion of the Anthropocene, and more-than-human entanglements with design. He is currently working on an AHRC-funded research project exploring access to woodlands with Forestry England; and an ethnography of bike trail builders drawing on architecture, participatory design, and inventive methods. Some of his recent publications include ‘Everything Is a Prototype, but Not At All in the Same Way: Towards an Ecology of Prototyping’ (STS Encounters, Vol. 15, Issue 2), ‘Emergent Participation in DIY Designed Bike Trails’ (with P. G. Krogh; Proceedings of the 17th Participatory Design Conference), and ‘Exploring the Temporalities of a Tandem in the Jungle’ (Society for Social Studies of Science: 4S Annual Meeting).

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