Abstract
Women Building Brazil (WBB) seeks to underscore women's contributions to architecture and construction in Brazil, particularly in
contexts of self-building. Its main objective is to address the neglect of both women and informal building practices in architectural
and construction history, especially in the global South. The project will tackle that double historical gap by gathering personal stories
and documentation on women builders. Its premise is that women's involvement in self-construction was actually quite common in
vernacular architecture but has been affected by the introduction of new building technologies and materials. Expanding our
disciplinary scope to include vernacular contexts, WBB employs a novel method combining oral history with disruptive archival
research methods and community-based participatory practices, guided by feminist and decolonial principles. This approach will be
applied in three territories in Brazil where self-building remains a prevalent custom: quilombos (afro-Brazilian communities),
indigenous territories and favelas (urban informal settlements). These distinct settings offer new insights to help recover, analyse, and
acknowledge women's construction know-how. The outcomes of WBB include an oral history archive and a public video collection.
The participatory process will also generate a memory artefact, co-created with interviewed women with the purpose of recognizing
their expertise and strengthening their building autonomy. In summary, WBB offers a new methodological approach to a growing
field of construction history and a gendered analysis that contributes to the broader discipline of architectural history. It maintains a
commitment to open science through its research methodology and participatory practices, ensuing constant dissemination of its
results. Most importantly, WBB actively seeks ways of empowering women in construction, giving them voice and reaffirming the
relevance of their know-how.
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