Leonardo Ricaurte-Ospina
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Postgraduate Research Student
Areas of interest
Housing design; regeneration; social value; post-occupancy evaluation
Postgraduate supervision
Prof. Lorraine Farrelly – University of York
Jean-Christophe Dissart - Université Grenoble Alpes
Research centres and groups
Community Design Research Group – University of Cambridge
Research projects
Design that expands capabilities: Assessing the social value of the housing block.
This research illuminates the concept of the social value of housing, focusing on its impact on people's lives – a research strand that has yet to be addressed in social value scholarship. Amid prevailing narratives that hastily attributed social challenges to design flaws and stigmatised housing estates as hubs of crime and neglect, this study provides a human-centred evaluation of design and management practices effects. By analysing spatial dynamics of housing and the social consequences associated with the use of space, my research broadens the conversation around housing design’s role in fostering wellbeing and quality of life.
This thesis is contextualised within the recent introduction of social impact measurement policies and tools, e.g. the Social Value Act in England and Wales and ESG criteria. By focusing on the role of social housing providers and the impact they can create, this thesis draws on Amartya Sen’s capability approach and highlights the pivotal role of housing as a conversion factor, enabling residents to lead valued and fulfilling lives.
This research is part of the RE-DWELL project funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie SkÅ‚odowska-Curie (MSCA-ITN) grant agreement No 956082.
Background
Leonardo holds a Bachelor's degree in Architecture from the National University of Colombia. He has experience in design, regulatory coordination and on-site supervision of housing projects in Bogotá. Additionally, he holds a joint Erasmus Mundus Master’s degree in International Cooperation in Urban Development and Planning from the Technical University of Darmstadt in Germany and the University of Grenoble Alpes in France.
He has experience facilitating participatory design and co-creation sessions with communities in Colombia and Germany, contributing to projects that integrate capacity building, urban upgrading and grassroots movements at the interface between academic and professional contexts. His research at the CRAterre laboratory at the École Nationale Supérieure d'Architecture de Grenoble focused on sustainable, affordable housing, aligning with the Sustainable Development Goals and the New Urban Agenda.
In 2020, he defended his Master's thesis, Possibilities of participatory tools in the attainment of sustainable housing solutions: The case of Bogotá, which was awarded “mention très bien.” This thesis examined the intersection of social housing production, sustainability frameworks, and the influences of market-driven housing systems, urban inequality, and gentrification on policy development.
Websites/blogs
- RE-DWELL profile:
- LinkedIn:
Selected publications
Assessing social value in housing design: contributions of the capability approach
Buildings and Cities
2023-10-11 | Journal article
DOI:
The array of things, Chicago
Urban Planning for Transitions
2021 | Book chapter
Part ofDOI: