LANDSCAPE
radical noticing
Prison siting reflects political and economic strategies that extend carceral power into rural and post-industrial landscapes. Through spatial displacement, marginalized populations are removed from urban visibility and embedded into infrastructures of punishment under the guise of economic development. The analysis traces how these geographic tactics mask social control as rehabilitation, and calls for reimagining carceral land use through abolitionist and community-centered frameworks.
enclosure  / base
separation, visibility, factories




©2025
DIPLOMA THESIS
ADÉLA VAVŘÍKOVÁ









THEORETICAL TEXT

The online archive NOTES ON PRISON forms part of a diploma project undertaken at the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague, within Studio Architecture I. The overarching aim of the archive is to present and describe the practices, strategies, and associated architectural matter through which power is exercised within the prison system. These practices and spatial elements are subsequently revealed within different contexts and typologies.

The project’s political dimension contributes to the discourse on prison abolition, while also serving as a professional appeal to the architectural community: to learn to recognise spaces designed for oppression and violence, and to refuse further participation in their production. Instead, it calls for the use of imagination as a design tool, encouraging the creation of a society grounded in care and social equality.

At the top of the webpage, readers will find (1) a list of frequently asked questions related to prison abolition, (2) a glossary of terms, and (3) a manual explaining the structure of the online archive, including its categories, tags, and entries.