Our goal is to contribute to shaping the cities of tomorrow. We can do this not by imposing ideas from above, but by creating room for genuine collective imagination.

Our work spans exhibitions, publications, convenings, curatorial projects, and on-the-ground collaborations. At our core, we’re all about developing practical tools that make pursuing equality and equity in neighbourhoods more possible, more effective, and—hopefully—more enjoyable.

We organise our practice around three questions: How do cities actually work? How do people actually live? And how might we live together differently, in the near and distant future? We anchor ourselves in the cultures and realities of the Global South, working with researchers, designers, organisers, writers, activists, artists, technologists, and citizens interested in grounded, curious, and open-ended practice.

Our work takes different forms depending on the context.

Sometimes it’s deep research. Other times, grounded speculation—spending time on the ground to understand what matters to people in a neighbourhood, or closely analysing specific urban conditions and patterns.

We believe change comes through accumulation rather than rupture—through small, meaningful interventions tested in real contexts and refined through iteration. We build tools, platforms, and spaces for convening that translate research into forms usable beyond expert rooms, supporting both practitioners and citizens in actively shaping the environments they live in.

These are the spaces between research and practice, culture and policy, community and institutions. They’re full of friction and distrust, but also opportunity to perceive things differently. That’s precisely why they matter.

These in-between spaces are hard to manage and often messy. But that’s where the real questions surface—and where conventional tools tend to fail.

Our approach moves through three linked modes:

First, framing and speculation. Not blue-sky thinking, but disciplined reframing that exposes blind spots and challenges inherited assumptions. 

Second, public tools and platforms that translate complex research into things people can actually use without needing experts in the room.

Third, experiments and tests in real conditions where failure, resistance, and iteration are treated as data, not problems to hide.

It all started in 2009, when AbdouMaliq Simone and Edgar Pieterse decided to bring together urbanists from across Africa—architects, cultural producers, designers, curators, social scientists. The initial idea wasn’t just conversation for its own sake. They wanted to actually spark collaborative projects among this diverse group and get things moving.

The early gatherings in Cape Town and Cairo were genuinely energising. But pretty quickly, it became clear that collaboration across different professional languages and frameworks would be harder than anyone had anticipated. Rather than advancing the original vision, the group pivoted. They produced a book where each participant contributed a chapter on their own practice and work: Rogue Urbanism. Putting that volume together took several more years.

At the same time, the African Centre for Cities (ACC) at the University of Cape Town was running CityLabs, a research program focused on Cape Town as it underwent a vast transformation ahead of hosting the 2010 FIFA World Cup. One highlight was a series of weekly lunchtime sessions that invited practitioners from outside the academy to present their work and receive feedback from the centre’s growing team of experts and researchers. The sessions were often exciting—practitioners could reflect on their work from different perspectives, researchers could examine their own work through a practitioner’s lens, and there were many heady, insightful exchanges.

But the sessions also exposed a challenging reality. Practitioners would shift their language and reposition themselves in academic terms just to be taken seriously. To speak to the academy as an equal meant becoming one. It revealed something fundamental: academic language and institutions can feel welcoming while simultaneously closing doors. And when you’re chasing institutional acceptance, you can end up compromising authenticity if the rules of engagement are being written by only one party.

There was another pattern, too. The references structuring discussion were frequently Western: Brooklyn for gentrification, Shoreditch for creative districts, Barcelona for urban regeneration, Northern subway systems as the “ideal” for public transit. The scholarly references disproportionately cited academics from that part of the world. It sometimes seemed as if the rest of the African continent—let alone the rest of the Global South—had no valuable lessons or knowledge to offer. Where was the infrastructure to confront this imbalance?

Addressing this was always part of the ACC’s mission, but it became clear it couldn’t be done solely from within the academy. This pushed us to create Cityscapes Magazine in 2010, designed to cut across and confront these dissonances while anchoring a Global South perspective. From the start, it operated across the divide between research and practice, normalised Southern reference points, and created a space where practitioners didn’t have to perform academic fluency to be taken seriously.

The magazine established a long-term collaboration between co-founders Edgar Pieterse and Tau Tavengwa. It laid the foundation and spirit for CS Studio, which slowly incubated in the centre over the decade that followed.

Our collaborators, contributors, and partners

2U

A4 Arts Foundation

AbdouMaliq Simone

Achal Prabhala

Achille Mbembe

Adanech Abebe

Africa Communications Media Group

African Centre for Cities

Akin Adesokan

Albie Sachs

AlbieVan Association

Alcinda Honwana

Alden Copley

Alejandro Cartagena

Alejandro Echieverri

Alicia Thompson

Alize le Roux

Allan Gagichi

Amit Mehra

Amy Faust

Anaclaudia Rossbach

Ananya Roy

Andesh Tomo

Anglo American South Africa

Anton Cartwright

Anton Harber

Arpita Das

Ash Amin

Ashraf Jamal

Aun Raza

Bekezela Phakathi

Bella Knemeyer

Bright Simons

Benjamin de la Peña

Bhawani Buswala

Bryan Heseltine

Binyavanga Wainaina

Blain van Rooyen

Breinstorm Brand Architects

Brendon Bosworth

C-Studio

Camaren Peter

Carlos Jiménez

Caroline de Christo

Caroline Skinner

Caroline Sohie

Caroline Wanjiku Kihato

Cathrin Schaer

Chaltu Sani

Charity Mwangi

Charles Onyango-Obbo

Chatpong Chuenrudeemol

Chilando Chitangala

Chris Walker

City of Cape Town

Clare Butcher

Claude Borna

Claudia Gastrow

Cosimo Campani

CS Studio

Dalia Wahdan

Dan Eckstein

Daniel Schwartz

Danyal Loofer

Dark Matter Laboratories

David Goldblatt

David Lurie

David Schmidt

Deen Sharp

Delwyn Verasamy

Demian Rotbart

Dillon Marsh

Dina Inds

Dixon Chibanda

Djo Tunda wa Munga

Druv Malhotra

Edgar Pieterse

Edson Chagas

Edwar Calderon

Emanuel Admassu

Emeka Okereke

Emi Kiyota

Emmanuel Makaka

Emmerentian Mbabazi

Eve Thompson

Farai Mudzingwa

Ferial Haffajee

Fernando Serapião

Fikresilassie Aklilu

Filip De Boeck

Filipe Branquinho

Flavie Halais

Fonna Forman

Fran Tonkiss

Fred de Vries

Freddie Bosworth

Gabeba Baderoon

Garnette Cardogan

Garth Myers

Gathanga Ndungu

Gautam Bhan

Gavin Weale

Geci Karuri-Sebina

Geci Sebina-Karuri

George Kibala Bauer

Gitanjali Rao

Gordon Pirie

Graeme Williams

Greg Girard

Guillaume Bonn

Hasan Essop

Hedley Twidle

Heeten Bhagat

Hemangini Gupta

Hennie van Vuuren

Husain Essop

Iain Chambers

Iftikhar Firdous

Ikhtisad Ahmed

Insaf Ben Othmane

International New Towns Institute

Isaac Diggs

Ivan Turok

Iwan Baan

Jai Arjun Singh

Jakkie Cilliers

Jan Banning

Janine Stephen

Jason Corburn

Jason Larkin

Jay Bhalla

Jeremy Sampson

Jessica Fulford-Dobson

Jessica Seddon

Jesusegun Alagbe

Jodi Bieber

Jolyon Leslie

Jonathan Silver

Joonji Mdyogolo

Joseph Dana

Joshua Palfreman

Juan Diego Mejia

Julia Hope

Julian Röder

Julie Ruvolo

Justin Plunkett

Kashef Chowdhury

Kerwin Datu

Kevin Bloom

Kevin Shi

Kilian Kleinschmidt

Killian Doherty

Kim Gurney

Kimon de Greef

Kirsten Harrison

Kwanele Sosibo

Kyle Morland

Lard Buurman

Laura Gottesdiener

Laura Malan

Laura Wainer

Laurence Bonvin

Lee Middleton

Leon Krige

Leonie Joubert

Lesley Lokko

Lindokuhle Sobekwa

Liza Cirolia

Lloyd DeGrane

Luiz Eduardo Soares

Luísa Dias Diogo

Maarten Hajer

Mahdi Sabbagh

Malini Kochupillai

Malkit Shoshan

Manuel de Araujo

Marcelo Corti

Mark Lewis

Mary Anne Fitzgerald

Maryam Azwer

Mathias Agbo Jr

Matias Echanove

Matthew Gandy

Matthew Shirts

Max Planck Institute for Religious and Ethnic Diversity

May al-Ibrashy

Megan Lindow

Mercy Brown-Luthango

Michael Awake

Michael Uwemudimo

Michael Wolf

Miguel Luiz Bucalem

Miguel Viera Baptista

Mikael Awake

Mike Nicol

Mikhael Subotsky

Mildred Musonda Nkole

Miora Rajaonary

Mohammad Rakibul Hasan

Mpho Matsipa

Msingi Sasisi

Mukanzi Musanga

Musharraf Ali Farooqi

Nabeel Petersen

Namatai Kwekweza

National Research Foundation

Nausheen Anwar

Negar Azimi

Neha Dixit

Neil Armitage

Neo Muyanga

Nida Kirmani

Nolita Mvunelo

Nolita Thina Mvunelo

Nzinga Biegueng Mboup

Obadiah Mungai

Olalekan Jeyifous

Oliver Kruger

Olufemi Terry

Omaid Shariffi

Omar Wana

Omar Yousef

Ore Disu

Oumar Sylla

P. Christopher Zegras

Patrick Bond

Patrick Latimer

Patrick Waterhouse

Paul Hamilos

Pedro de Cristo

Pedro Henrique de Christo

Penny Dale

Periphery Films

Philip Harrison

Pixel Project

Puja Sen

Rahul Mehrotra

Rahul Srivastava

Rajesh Vora

Rasna Warrah

Regina Opondo

Rekha Raghunathan

Renzo Guinto

Richard Sennett

Rivets & Rockets

Robert Neuwirth

Robyn Bennett

Ruchi Gupta

Rupleena Bose

Rustum Kozain

Samanth Subramanian

Sammy Baloji

Sean Christie

Sean O’Toole

Sergio Fajardo

Shahidul Alam

Sheela Patel

Shola Lawal

Steve Song

Steve Vertovec

Suzi Hall

Sydelle Willow Smith

Sylvia Croese

Talib Ahmed Bensouda

Tanya Pampalone

Tanya Zack

Tanya Zack Development Planners

Taran N. Khan

Tatiana Fernandez Geara

Tatiana Thieme

Tau Tavengwa

Teddy Cruz

Teresa P. R. Caldeira

Teshome Adugna

The Radio Workshop

Thembisile Simelane

Theresa Bodner

Thiresh Govender

Tolu Ogunlesi

Tolullah Oni

Tomi Seyi Laja

Tomà Berlanda

Trevor Manuel

Trevor Ngwane

Triennial de Lisboa

Urban2063 Coalition

Vanessa September

Vanessa Watson

Victor Vargas Rodríguez

Viviane Sassen

Vukosi Marivate

Vyjayanthi Rao

Wael Al Awar

Wangui Kimari

Waziri Mainasara Abubakar

Will Senyo

Yan Yang

Yepoka Yeebo

Zahra Hankir

Zayd Minty

Zeeshan Khan

Zeph Nhleko

Zhuofei Tang