The Project In Brief...
After making contact with the community of Slovo Park the University of Pretoria with community members began researching and designing an upgrading and development plan for the settlement.
The research team, made up of the community and the students,  identified a small portion of their proposed design in the form of a Community Center that was built over a period of six weeks.
The team had to arrange the funding, build the project and manage the entire process.
The Slovo Park Project 2010
The Slovo Park Project began as a small research project in the University of Pretoria's Housing and Urban Environments module of the Architectural Honours Year.  
It   quickly gained momentum in its relation to the community it desire to   understand the problems faced by South Africa's Urban Poor. The process   culminated in a joint project towards a built goal with not only a   physical product but many intangible outcomes that extended beyond   simply 'another community project'. 
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| The streets are your playground in Slovo | 
Introduction 
 
In   2010 the University of Pretoria Architecture Department, Boukunde,   offered its Honors year students the opportunity to work with a small   informal community located 10km south of Soweto named Slovo Park.
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| Location of Slovo in relation to Johannesburg City | 
  
 The Research
The    student group of Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Hattingh and Makgabutlane,    began the project with a sensitive and holistic research process to  try   and comprehensively understand the socio-economic context of day  to  day  life in Slovo Park.  
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*This article features snippets from the first draft of  the book Slovo Park Project: A process of understanding. 
Edited by Claudia Filipe and compiled by Bennett, Casson, Fillipe,  Van Wyk  
contributions from  Makgabutlane and Hattingh | 
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This involved several mapping exercises, interviews and detailed sketches of the local housing typologies. 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
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| Measuring up the existing | 
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| Discovering the world inside Slovo | 
        
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) |  |  |  |  |  | 
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 The residents of Slovo opened their doors to the research team's questions
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
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| Playgrounds of Slovo - an electricity pylon | 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) 
 
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The myriad of faces in Slovo, a traditional healer and a struggling, but happy couple 
The communities association with the Federation of The Urban Poor (FEDUP) and C.O.R.C   was crucial in this process as they were instrumental in arranging and   facilitating the research trips as well as bringing forward extremely   helpful and willing community members. 
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| Mapping Slovo through the community's eyes | 
 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
 
 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
The Individual Proposals
From    this process a larger urban framework was proposed that sought to  link   Slovo to the neighboring community of El Derado Park while  developing   Slovo from within and maintaining the existing sense of  community that   the township demonstrated to the students during the  research phase. 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
From    here the students were required to propose their own individual    theoretical projects that they felt would aid in the development of    Slovo Park.
The   responses were dynamically varied in nature with some designing a   processional route from the township to the adjacent cemetery,   incorporating the myriad of African cultures and their relationship to   death while others focused on development around housing with titles   such as ‘Housing Clinics’   in an attempt to capture the humble manner in which the inhabitants   throughout south Africa possess the power to build their own houses but   require some assistance and knowledge sharing. 
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| The Housing Clinic | 
 
The   project was well received by the University and was presented to the   Department of Human Settlements at their Indaba in September of 2010 as   well as presented to the community themselves during their meeting with   government on site.
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| Presenting to the community of Slovo | 
 
  
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| Garnering community feedback with an informal presentation to an informal audience | 
The Built Intervention  
The   university then offered the students the further opportunity to fund   and construct a small portion of the proposed design and build it over   an allocated period of 8 weeks.
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
As   the designs proposed over the research period were far too large and   costly to build in the 8 week period the student group decided that they   would pool together the principles from each design and with the   addition of a new student member, Van Wyk, would design a small   intervention within the earlier proposed urban framework.
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| Planning the build with the local business forum | 
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| The site as we found it. Waiting to be unlocked | 
 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
 
The    resultant design was a proposed community center, which fitted into a    civic space. This center and civic area would provide the people of    Slovo Park a place for the community to meet and determine the future    for itself. An existing dilapidated structure that housed the 1994    Election Station was chosen as the team felt that this was where the    change began and should be respected so.
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| Proposed Slovo Hall - Community Meeting Center | 
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| Proposed Civic Center | 
The   center was specifically designed with the larger future in mind and   phased into 5 early construction phases and 5 later larger future   development phases. 
 
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| Community poster to explain the process over the Build Weeks (3m Long) | 
Early   construction phases allowed the functions of the future development   phase to still operate on site without the actual infrastructure of the   later development. 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
  
This scheme was presented to the community for input and design assistance at the future Slovo Hall.
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| First formal presentation to the community | 
 
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| Presenting the ideas to people of Slovo using models proved to be the most effective way of community | 
These   were some of the steps taken in an attempt to construct an effective   space and building in a very short period of time. The team’s motto   became “Do the most, with the least”.
 
 
The Construction Process
Building   began in September and the support received from the community   themselves and the local business was overwhelming with each day as   varied as the next. Daily more people would join the workforce and get   involved in some way.
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| Employing local help in measuring the site | 
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| The first site work informally done by help found on site | 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
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| Clearing the site with more 'help' | 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
 
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| The core team getting the work ball rolling | 
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| Laying the foundation for the center | 
 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
 
As   the project gathered momentum the team began to see the relationships   with these donators and consultants were going to be the lifeblood of   future development in Slovo Park. 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
 
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| Getting into the swing of work | 
 
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| Slowly the site started to take shape | 
 
  
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
The building team discussing how the future wall will look
  
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| Meals, donated by local business's on site, became a key time to reflect and build bonds between the team | 
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| Flood damage slowed the progress at points | 
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| But behind each setback were some truly inspiring moments | 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
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| The ladies working on site working on the reeds added a rich dimension of song and colour to the long day | 
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 The reeds on site went from being a element of contention to a point pride assembled in some way by all members of the team
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| The paving arrived, late, but well received as it drew the elements of the center together | 
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| As the final touches began to be applied the energy on site was electrifying as the team neared their goal | 
 
Last Construction Days
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| The center as it stood before the hand over day | 
  
 BEFORE AND AFTER
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
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| The building team. tired, weary, but proud | 
   
Handing Over
  
The   project was completed on the 20th of November and opened during an   exuberant day of celebration and deliberation where the locals met and   discussed the future of Slovo Park in their new community center while   children and the people of Slovo danced in the civic area and welcomed   in their newly opened public building.
 
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| The first of several community meetings to inaugurate the new meeting center | 
 
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| The newly opened Slovo Hall as the team left it on November 20th, 2010 | 
  
The   student group has followed up on several post hand over visits to   discuss the future of the center and complete the hand over process.
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
Looking Forward
The   team designed the facility to built in stages as part of the formal   hand over these plans were given to the people of Slovo to use in the   future development of their community.
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| (To be Published, Bennett, Casson, Fillipe, Van Wyk) | 
Construction Summary
Week 1 
Week 2
Week 3
 Week 4
 
Week5
Week 6
Week 8
Hand Over Day