S04 Ep. 13. Joni Baboci - Cities in Flux: from Bureaucratic control to Participatory Ecosystems
Boundaryless Conversations Podcast - Un pódcast de Boundaryless SRL - Martes
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In this podcast, we dive into the shift towards a more decentralized and organic approach to city planning with Joni Baboci, an architect, planner, and urban enthusiast. We discuss how the modernist paradigm of deconstructing everything into individual parts and putting them back together linearly is becoming less relevant. Instead, we see a shift towards a more organic, bottom-up approach that looks at the city as a complex and multi-layered system. Joni Baboci is the founder of Layer, a spatial orchestration platform that empowers teams to govern through tactics and patterns while leveraging machine learning and artificial intelligence. He has previously served as the General Director of Planning and Urban Development for the City of Tirana and the director of Atelier Albania, a structure of the Albanian government dealing with national and regional strategic planning. Joni has executed planning, design, and development projects at different scales at the national, regional, and local levels. Joni shares his insights on how technological advancements such as AI and blockchain are enabling bottom-up processes in planning and thinking about cities. We also delve into the challenges of making these ideas practical and building a process to make them a reality. Joni highlights the importance of reinventing physical production through local value loops and incentivizing the interconnection between urban and rural landscapes. We also discuss how DAOs and blockchain technology can improve local governance and participation, and how cities can invest in citizen-based entrepreneurship that lets them decide how to perform a job or access a service rather than relying on a top-down approach. Join us as we explore the potential of a more decentralized and organic approach to city planning with Joni Baboci. Remember that you can always find transcripts and key highlights of the episode on our website: https://boundaryless.io/podcast/joni-baboci Key Highlights 👉 The static, modernist way of thinking and planning cities is changing. 👉 Looking at cities through a “pattern language”: from communities to subcultures to regions. 👉 Bureaucracy can help to make sure things do not move too fast. 👉 The physical city won’t be replaced by a virtual city or a network state any time soon. 👉 New technologies make it possible to scale governance both on a technical and geographical level. 👉 Communities should be able to make small bets on things that matter to them. Topics (Chapters) (00:00) Joni Baboci quote (00:47) Joni Baboci introduction (02:13) A Paradigm Shift Towards Humility in Organizing Cities and Space (05:56) The Shift Towards Decentralized and Organic City Planning (10:57) The Role of Cities in the Modern World: Cities as Labor Markets and More (18:15) Exploring the Pros and Cons of Network Cities: Coexisting with Physical Cities (23:13) The Future of Cities and the Interconnection between Urban and Rural Landscapes (30:55) Using DAOs and Blockchain to Improve Local Governance and Participation (40:41) City and Citizen Entrepreneurship for Bottom-up Development (47:15) Joni Baboci's breadcrumbs To find out more about Joni’s work: Twitter: https://twitter.com/dbaboci LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonibaboci Website: https://joni.baboci.net Other references and mentions: Layer: https://getlayer.xyz Joni’s newsletter: https://thinkthinkthink.substack.com METABOLISM OF ALBANIA | FABRICations: https://www.fabrications.nl/portfolio-item/metabolismofalbania-2 The Deeper Order of Cities: https://thesideview.co/journal/the-deeper-order-of-cities Eyes on the Street: The Life of Jane Jacobs: https://www.amazon.com/Eyes-Street-Life-Jane-Jacobs/dp/0345803337 Remote bureaucracy by Dror Poleg: https://www.drorpoleg.com/remote-bureaucracy and https://medium.com/block-science/disambiguating-autonomy-ca84ac87a0bf Center for International Development | Harvard Kennedy School: https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cid