Choose Your Neighbours: Decentralised Urban Planning at the Borderland with Rosa and Zoe  episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 9, 2026 · 58 MIN

Choose Your Neighbours: Decentralised Urban Planning at the Borderland with Rosa and Zoe

from Microsolidarity · host Microsolidarity

🔗 The Membership Spring Sale for Borderland 2026 is on Tuesday March 10 17:00 CET! More information here: ⁠⁠https://talk.theborderland.se/main/⁠⁠In this episode, Zoe sits down with Rosa to unpack what it was like co-leading Placement at Borderland (the “not-festival” where you buy a membership, not a ticket). They zoom in on a very microsolidarity-flavoured question:How do you build trust and coordination in a huge, decentralised event without sliding into top-down control?Rosa brings an urban planning lens (citizen engagement, bottom-up design, “desire paths”), and Zoe brings lived experience of arriving to Borderland overwhelmed, then gradually learning how the whole system actually works. Together they tell the story of how Placement evolved from “first-come-first-served” into something more human: plazas, neighbourhoods, pre-placement, and now “shepherds” (stewards) to help camps connect more with their neighbours.They talk about:Realities vs Dreams at Borderland, and why “LARPing an office” can still be playfulWhy camp conflicts often come down to neighbours (sound, vibe, rhythm), not “prime real estate”How pre-placement shifts the mindset from competing for square meters to co-creating shared areasThe emotional side of decentralisation: why people say “no” first (overwhelm, control, uncertainty)A concrete story of a plaza that only worked once people loosened their grip on “straight lines”“Aftermath” drone maps and what they reveal about how people actually move and gatherPower, roles, and the “GPS Stick of Truth” (and how Borderland lets you play with authority instead of hiding it)If you’re into microsolidarity, this is a practical case study in designing at various scales (plazas, neighbourhoods, local stewardship) that make large-scale self-organisation feel more like a living system.Links that were mentioned:Rosa (Instagram): ⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/streets.stockholm⁠⁠⁠⁠studiodanenberg.com⁠⁠Zoe (youtube): ⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/@softaccess⁠⁠⁠⁠https://softaccess.org/about⁠⁠Microsolidarity: ⁠⁠https://www.microsolidarity.cc/⁠⁠💬 What’s your best (or worst) neighbour story from a co-created event? And what micro-structures have helped you trust strangers faster?

🔗 The Membership Spring Sale for Borderland 2026 is on Tuesday March 10 17:00 CET! More information here: ⁠⁠https://talk.theborderland.se/main/⁠⁠In this episode, Zoe sits down with Rosa to unpack what it was like co-leading Placement at Borderland (the “not-festival” where you buy a membership, not a ticket). They zoom in on a very microsolidarity-flavoured question:How do you build trust and coordination in a huge, decentralised event without sliding into top-down control?Rosa brings an urban planning lens (citizen engagement, bottom-up design, “desire paths”), and Zoe brings lived experience of arriving to Borderland overwhelmed, then gradually learning how the whole system actually works. Together they tell the story of how Placement evolved from “first-come-first-served” into something more human: plazas, neighbourhoods, pre-placement, and now “shepherds” (stewards) to help camps connect more with their neighbours.They talk about:Realities vs Dreams at Borderland, and why “LARPing an office” can still be playfulWhy camp conflicts often come down to neighbours (sound, vibe, rhythm), not “prime real estate”How pre-placement shifts the mindset from competing for square meters to co-creating shared areasThe emotional side of decentralisation: why people say “no” first (overwhelm, control, uncertainty)A concrete story of a plaza that only worked once people loosened their grip on “straight lines”“Aftermath” drone maps and what they reveal about how people actually move and gatherPower, roles, and the “GPS Stick of Truth” (and how Borderland lets you play with authority instead of hiding it)If you’re into microsolidarity, this is a practical case study in designing at various scales (plazas, neighbourhoods, local stewardship) that make large-scale self-organisation feel more like a living system.Links that were mentioned:Rosa (Instagram): ⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/streets.stockholm⁠⁠⁠⁠studiodanenberg.com⁠⁠Zoe (youtube): ⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/@softaccess⁠⁠⁠⁠https://softaccess.org/about⁠⁠Microsolidarity: ⁠⁠https://www.microsolidarity.cc/⁠⁠💬 What’s your best (or worst) neighbour story from a co-created event? And what micro-structures have helped you trust strangers faster?

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Choose Your Neighbours: Decentralised Urban Planning at the Borderland with Rosa and Zoe

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🔗 The Membership Spring Sale for Borderland 2026 is on Tuesday March 10 17:00 CET! More information here: ⁠⁠https://talk.theborderland.se/main/⁠⁠In this episode, Zoe sits down with Rosa to unpack what it was like co-leading Placement at Borderland...

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