“Empower Shack” at Galerie Eva Presenhuber presents an ETH Zurich and Urban-Think Tank project on South Africa, supported by Swisspearl (Schweiz) AG and in partnership with the South-African NGO, Ikhayalami.
Empower Shack
The exhibition “Empower Shack” presents an ETH Zürich and Urban-Think Tank project in South Africa, as a response to conventional approaches in dealing with urban informality.

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- 14 March 2014
- Zurich
The Empower Shack team was established as a response to conventional approaches in dealing with urban informality, which are unsustainable and painstakingly slow in meeting the immediate needs of the vast majority of South Africa’s urban poor.

With its roots in a research, design and build workshop aimed at developing an innovative, replicable, affordable and sustainable shack prototype for Cape Town’s Khayelitsha (the third largest township in South Africa), the exhibition uses film, photography, drawings, painting and large-scale architectural installations to explore the complexity of living conditions in informal settlements, and the social role of architects in helping to address the economic, ecological and security challenges faced by residents.
With a population of over 50 million and the continent’s largest economy, South Africa is often seen as a source of relative stability and prosperity in the region. Yet economic inequality remains high. Around 1.5 million households (approximately 7.5 million people) live in 2,700 informal settlements scattered across the country, which faces an overall shortage of 2.5 million houses. While the government’s record on housing delivery is laudable, the scale of need means informal settlements will remain for the foreseeable future. In response, authorities have slowly begun shifting the focus to incremental upgrading, including committing in 2010 to improve the quality of life of 400,000 households in well located informal settlements by 2014 through improved access to basic services and land tenure.
Alfredo Brillembourg and Hubert Klumpner, along with their research and design teams and collaborating partners are engaged in an ongoing project to develop and implement design innovations for rapid and incremental informal settlement upgrading. The examples featured in the “Empower Shack” exhibition are intended to provide immediate strategies to alleviate a national crisis, while remaining embedded within community-driven processes around resource allocation.
until May, 10
Empower Shack
curated by Alfredo Brillembourg and Hubert Klumpner
Galerie Eva Presenhuber
Maag Areal
Zahnradstrasse 21, Zurich