Stéphan de Beer is an urbanist-theologian, passionate about cities that are radically inclusive, both socially and spatially. Previously, he led a community-based organization in the inner city of Tshwane, focusing on vulnerable people and places, and creating responsive social and housing infrastructure. Currently, he is Professor of Practical Theology and director of the Centre for Faith and Community at the University of Pretoria. With doctoral qualifications in theology and urban planning, he seeks to traverse disciplines and boundaries in undoing the apartheid city. He convenes the Urban Studio and the Unit for Street Homelessness, connecting scholarship, neighbourhoods and the streets. He believes that spirituality made concrete can help transform urban places.
""This book offers refreshing new methodologies for engaging with the city. The retelling of stories, the capturing of lost voices and a spirituality and ethic of urban space underpin this important work. Planning practice is deconstructed, and in the process, decolonized, beyond a limiting technocratic, modernist understanding."" Amira Osman, Professor of Architecture, Tshwane University of Technology & South African Research Chair in Spatial Transformation ""Against the backdrop of post-apartheid South African cities, De Beer, through a trans-disciplinary lens, develops a welcome life-affirming ethic of urban space. City-Making invites urban professionals along with community stakeholders to co-embrace city-building process that are participatory, critical and liberating."" Michael A. Mata, The Voices School for Liberation and Transformation, USA