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  <title>Doris Kleilein on Changing Definitions of Urban Architecture</title>
  <description>What makes a city a home for&amp;amp;nbsp;people&amp;amp;nbsp;with&amp;amp;nbsp;different&amp;amp;nbsp;backgrounds?&amp;amp;nbsp;How has the pandemic impacted city planning&amp;amp;nbsp;and urban architecture?&amp;amp;nbsp;In this episode, the 2022 Thomas Mann Fellow,&amp;amp;nbsp;architect&amp;amp;nbsp;and author&amp;amp;nbsp;Doris&amp;amp;nbsp;Kleilein&amp;amp;nbsp;looks at the&amp;amp;nbsp;benefits&amp;amp;nbsp;of&amp;amp;nbsp;L.A.’s&amp;amp;nbsp;‘laissez-faire urbanism’ compared to more regulated approaches in Europe. She argues that “the built visibility of a culture or minority is key to becoming part of society.” Kleilein’s research focuses on how city planning can propose new forms of living together in a changing heterogenous societies. Kleilein heads the architectural book publishing house JOVIS in Berlin, and co-edited the book “Post-Pandemic Urbanism” in 2021.&amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
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