The Super Urban Podcast

Cineurbano

1 h 24 min · 7 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Cineurbano

Descripción

This episode is interested in cities in all their intensity and breadth—not just their realities, but how they exist in our imaginations and dreams. If we are to embrace the super urban, cities must excite our dreams and our nightmares.Cinema is of course a fabulous venue for these imaginations: whether science fiction dystopias, hyperreal dramas, or documentaries, the city can be re-imagined, invented, or observed with a heightened reality for even the mostprosaic moment.   Today's episode takes the form of a film club—each participant selects a favourite film and explores how it connects to their mental image of the city. We are joined by Desirée Grunewald, a designer and illustrator from Mallorca who has lived in Vietnam for over eight years researching the vernacular architecture of Ho Chi Minh City. Interested incomics, animation, video games, and urban studies, her perspective brings a rich visual and cultural dimension to the discussion.   Also joining us is Jésus Mayordomo, a geographer from Madrid who works for a Spanish chamber of commerceorganising trade missions to over 50 countries per year. Deeply interested in urban development, he seizes every opportunity on his travels to understand how cities work and function. Together, the three conversations trace how cinemahas shaped—and continues to shape—the way we see, feel, and imagine urban life. Check out the references from this episode. [https://www.superurbanlab.com/sup/cineurbano]

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24 episodios

Portada del episodio Hyper Cities with Winy Maas

Hyper Cities with Winy Maas

This episode of the Super Urban Podcast ventures into one of the most expansive propositions in contemporary architectural thinking: that everything is urbanism. Drawing from Winy Maas's 2019 guest editorship of Domus, theconversation explores what it means when the city is no longer a bounded object but a total condition — absorbing climate systems, data networks, food production, finance, and human behaviour into a single, planetary field of design. The discussion moves through the long arc of MVRDV's data-driven and speculative work — from Metacity/Datatown and Pig City to FARMAX and KM3 — tracing how architecture shifted from describing objects to modelling systems,using data not as neutral optimisation but as a critical tool to expose contradictions and test urban limits. The conversation also tackles the concept of Biotopia — a future where buildings operate as living ecosystems — alongside the transformation of infrastructure into culture, asseen in projects like Depot Boijmans Van Beuningen. Threading through each of these themes is a consistent tension: does the expansion of architecture's scope intoecology, biology, economics, and atmosphere empower the discipline or risk dissolving its capacity to act and resist? The episode closes with a preview of Sky City, a project developed through The Why Factory currently being co-taught as a studio at RMIT University in Melbourne, which asks what urbanism becomes when the sky itself is treated as a designed, contested, and algorithmically governed urban layer. Winy Maas is a Dutch architect, urbanist, and co-founding partner of Rotterdam-based MVRDV, established in 1993 alongside Jacob van Rijs and Nathalie de Vries. His leadership has driven many of the office's award-winning projects, including Rotterdam's Markthal, the Tianjin Binhai Library, and Depot Boijmans Van Beuningen — the first publicly accessible art depot in the world. He is also the founder of The Why Factory, a research laboratory dedicated to speculativeurban futures, and holds professorships at both MIT and TU Delft.  Check out the references from this episode. [https://www.superurbanlab.com/sup/global-cities-with-winy-maas]

12 de jun de 20261 h 4 min
Portada del episodio Senseable Cities with Fabio Duarte

Senseable Cities with Fabio Duarte

This episode of the Super Urban Podcast turns to the city as a live, legible system — one that can be continuously read, measured, and acted upon in real time. The concept of the 'senseable city', as developed through the work of the MIT Senseable City Lab, is presented not simply as a technological proposition, but as a fundamental shift in how we understand, describe, and design urban environments. As layers ofsensors, networks, and data settle over urban space, the city ceases to be something we merely represent — it becomes something we can sense, interpret, and respond to as it unfolds.   The conversation moves across a series of related provocations: the tension between legibility and overload as data multiplies; the question of who this new visibility actually serves — citizens, governments, or the algorithms increasingly acting on their behalf; and the implications of a shift from long-term planning toward continuous, real-time adjustment. The Lab's prototypical projects are framed as a particular mode of practice — neither purely speculative nor fully deployed — that makes new urban possibilities visible and tangible before they are absorbed into everydayinfrastructure. Alongside this, the episode surfaces the ethical dimensions of the datafied city: questions of ownership, power, and the risk that sensing infrastructures, however neutral in appearance, may quietly reinforce existing structures of control.   The episode closes by holding open a space for uncertainty within the increasingly knowable city. If friction, delay, andunpredictability have historically generated social and cultural life, the question becomes: what should resist optimisation? As the city begins to resemble a feed — constantly refreshed, continuously informing and responding — the conversation asks whether anything can, or should, remain outside thesystem. It is a question as much about values as about technology, and one that sits at the heart of contemporary urban practice.Check out the references from this episode. [https://www.superurbanlab.com/sup/senseable-cities-with-fabio-duarte]

10 de may de 202655 min
Portada del episodio Global Cities with Caroline Bos

Global Cities with Caroline Bos

This episode of the Super Urban Podcast centres on the evolving nature of urban practice — from the design of discrete forms toward the orchestration of complex systems. The conversation frames contemporary urbanism as a practice of alignment: between infrastructures andecologies, between global operations and local conditions, between the physical fabric of cities and the digital layers increasingly woven through them. Rather than a single authored vision, the city emerges as a negotiated, continuously updated condition — one shaped by logistical, environmental, financial, and technological forces that extend far beyond architecture's traditional reach.   Against this backdrop, Caroline Bos reflects on decades of practice at UNS — formerly UNStudio — a networked firmwhose work spans architecture, infrastructure, and urban strategy across the globe. The conversation moves across several of the studio's defining interests: the role of infrastructure as a primary spatial generator (as seenin projects such as Arnhem Central Station and the Mercedes-Benz Museum); the studio's early engagement with diagrammatic and proto-digital thinking and its evolution into today's more immersive, data-driven environments; and thegrowing pressure on architecture to operate at territorial and regional scales — a condition exemplified by projects such as THE LINE and Expo City. Bos addresses the tension between global expertise and local specificity, and what authorship might mean within systems that no longer belong to any single discipline.   The episode closes on questions of speculation and agency. Architecture, the conversation suggests, cannot simplyrespond to the conditions it finds itself within — it must work through its entanglement with governance, environment, technology, and infrastructure to identify new forms of influence, even as certain forms of control are relinquished. Sustaining space for radical ideas within the constraints ofglobal practice remains one of the central challenges — and, perhaps, one of the discipline's most defining responsibilities.  Check out the references from this episode. [https://www.superurbanlab.com/sup/global-cities-with-caroline-bos]

7 de may de 202649 min
Portada del episodio Cineurbano

Cineurbano

This episode is interested in cities in all their intensity and breadth—not just their realities, but how they exist in our imaginations and dreams. If we are to embrace the super urban, cities must excite our dreams and our nightmares.Cinema is of course a fabulous venue for these imaginations: whether science fiction dystopias, hyperreal dramas, or documentaries, the city can be re-imagined, invented, or observed with a heightened reality for even the mostprosaic moment.   Today's episode takes the form of a film club—each participant selects a favourite film and explores how it connects to their mental image of the city. We are joined by Desirée Grunewald, a designer and illustrator from Mallorca who has lived in Vietnam for over eight years researching the vernacular architecture of Ho Chi Minh City. Interested incomics, animation, video games, and urban studies, her perspective brings a rich visual and cultural dimension to the discussion.   Also joining us is Jésus Mayordomo, a geographer from Madrid who works for a Spanish chamber of commerceorganising trade missions to over 50 countries per year. Deeply interested in urban development, he seizes every opportunity on his travels to understand how cities work and function. Together, the three conversations trace how cinemahas shaped—and continues to shape—the way we see, feel, and imagine urban life. Check out the references from this episode. [https://www.superurbanlab.com/sup/cineurbano]

7 de may de 20261 h 24 min
Portada del episodio Kumbh Mela with Vaishnavi Laddha

Kumbh Mela with Vaishnavi Laddha

In this episode, we speak with Vaishnavi Laddha about the Kumbh Mela—the world's largest experiment in ephemeral urbanism. Occurring every 12 years, it is a religious pilgrimage that manifests as a mega 'pop-up' city on the floodplains of India's sacred rivers, driven by religious mythology and collective devotion. With over 80 million visitors, the city emerges across 30 square kilometres of sandbanks, equipped with housing, temples, clinics, electricity, sanitation, and even governance structures—and then vanishes, leaving almost no trace.   What does this extraordinary event reveal about the nature of cities? The Kumbh Mela challenges many of our assumptions about permanence, infrastructure, and planning. It is a city that is simultaneously ancient in its origins and radically temporary in its form—a place where millions of people live, worship, and move through space with remarkable efficiency, despite the scale and intensity of the gathering. Vaishnavi Laddha is an urban designer and graduate of the Master of Urban Design program at RMIT, currently working as a Junior Urban Designer at Dewan Architects and Engineers in Dubai. Her research brings a rigorous design lens to the question of ephemeral urbanism—and invites us to consider what lessons the Kumbh Mela might hold for the way we plan, design, and inhabit permanent cities. Check out the references from this episode. [https://www.superurbanlab.com/sup/nasic-kumbh-mela-with-vaishnavi-laddha]

4 de may de 202659 min