Lisa Miyagi, Cheesesticks and Benchwarmers; Playing in the Shadow of Capitalism [×]

Can seeing playful potential in our exploited urban environments offer a contemporary potency to normative modes of interior design practice?
Capitalism, discussed within the context of design practice, is not merely the elephant in the room, it is the room. And so sometimes in a strange way, it eludes us. It is from this troubling but necessary acknowledgement that this work emerges.
This exploratory research project is situated at the place of its namesake; the site of the infamous ‘Cheesesticks’ designed by Denton Corker Marshall, around Flemington Bridge where the crudely manipulated ‘drains’ of Moonee Ponds Creek pools into a multi-level pile-on of trains, motorists, commuters, and locals. Capitalism in this site is expressed through speed and abuse. The ominous rumble of trucks overhead muffles the scraping of skateboards against the monolithic concrete, trains chug on and motors cough and spew leaving black clouds in their wake. All the while the ever-ephemeral creek flows on; trickling at times and gushing at others, carrying miles of suburban dregs through and beyond this site.
Here, with the guiding principles of Deleuze and Guattari, in particular their ideas of ‘becoming-minor’ and ‘deterritorialization’, as well as modes of knowledge production from more recent thinkers like Irit Rogoff, I have designed into a site and situation. Co-opting playful methods, I, as ‘interiorizt’ (as propositioned by Suzie Attiwill) have endeavored to cultivate softly non-capitalistic engagements with the urban and subsequently, with the interior design process. Acts of gleaning, playing and gifting-back are traced through recurrent dwellings, drawing and filmmaking to reveal a potentiality for divergent social interactions through placemaking in a site preoccupied with transit. Furthermore, I would like to argue for a greater sensibility around what I call ‘rogue’ uses of space; to see creative possibilities in that which is overlooked and at times absurd. Cheesesticks thus ponders whether designing into our cities can culminate in fulfilment, joy, and encounter, as opposed to mere transaction or extraction.