This special issue of Asylum, guest edited by The Urban Advisory, is an opportunity to broaden the remit of the publication to be a curated collection of peer-reviewed and practitioner-led articles designed to challenge our collective thinking about a key urban topic. Specifically, the editors were challenged to bring together ideas commonly restricted to academic journals and share them more widely into the professional sphere. The theme of this issue is Rethinking Our Future Neighbourhoods, a concept at the essence of what the team at The Urban Advisory strives to do. As a result, this issue is focused on evolving the discourse in Aotearoa about the design and delivery of our future neighbourhoods. We have drawn together articles that explore ways to address our social, cultural and environmental challenges, opportunities for decolonisation, what embracing citizen-centric approaches to designing our neighbourhoods might look like, and how the built-environment professions might work together in new ways to deliver these wellbeing outcomes. The issue includes new, young voices, and some less-than-conventional ideas. The combination of peer-reviewed and practitioner articles asks the reader to imagine what a neighbourhood might be, and challenge their own preconceptions.

https://doi.org/10.34074/aslm.20231

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Introduction: About This Issue
Natalie Allen and Devon Sanson


Distributed Resource Centre: A Soft Infrastructure for Neighbourhood Creativity
Chris Berthelsen


A Pleasurable Methodology: Joyously Reimagining our Neighbourhoods
Bhaveeka Madagammana


Can Form-Based Codes be the Opportunity to Achieve a Quality Built Environment in Aotearoa New Zealand?
Ben van Bruggen and Eva Zombori


A Contemporary Pacific Village: A Proposal
Elyjana Roach


Imagining a Narrative Form for Place
Charlotte Billing and Liz Allen


Designing Neighbourhoods to Facilitate Intercultural Encounters: Negotiating Between Self, Society
and Place

Niyati Soni


Walking Backwards into the Future in Te Pokapū Tāone, Auckland’s City Centre
Liz Nicholls


Decolonising and Re-Indigenising Neighbourhood Design
Grace Clark


The Fires of Ambition: Te Awa Tupua 2040
Ahlia-Mei Ta‘ala


Resilient Hub
Ben Hickling


Developing Urban Furniture by Unitec Students for an Emerging Urban Fabric in Auranga, New Zealand:
The Socio-Ecological Dynamics of Creative Sustainable Prototyping Production During the Covid Crisis

Sameh Shamout, Yusef Patel and Alessandro Premier


Katamari Kart: A Serious and Hilarious Sub/Urban Game for More Serendipitous, Playful and Friendly Public Art
Chris Berthelsen, Rumen Rachev and Alex Bonham


Editors: Natalie Allen and Devon Sanson

ISSN:  2463-4190

Date of publication: 22/11/2023