Tell us about the origins of this project. Why were interdisciplinary collaboration and combined expertise central to the project’s design?
Farmer: The Althar Lina Initiative has been working in the neighborhood for ten years, starting on projects that were explicitly about the conservation of historic monuments, but developing over time into being a multi-prong project to build better relationships between community members and the heritage that they live with. The Initiative has branched out into helping document the neighborhood's intangible heritage and revitalizing heritage hand crafts. Part of the challenge in the restoration work is inundation by water leaking from the potable water system, which creates the counterintuitive problem of an overabundance of water in an arid context. The Initiative is looking at ways to build on their prior work to turn this water into a resource for improving the quality of life in the neighborhood, focusing on urban greening to address the impact of climate change and on urban agriculture to improve access to nutrition. They are thinking about ways to turn what has been considered a problem into an opportunity, but that requires thinking through many material, political, social, and economic questions. Bringing together this interdisciplinary team has allowed us to collaborate in the process of understanding all these complexities in deeper and richer ways through the multiplicity of disciplinary perspectives and enabled us to work with community members and the Initiative to come up with locally viable designs for growing food and making their city more livable.