David Dooghe works as a researcher, strategist and designer on urban development.
The resulting projects can be temporary or long-term designs and strategies. These projects combine different scales and are characterized by their strong connection with the spatial, cultural, social and economical context of where they occur.
For David Dooghe the city is organic. Questioning the city and understanding its working principles is the path to a sustainable project.
For more information, click on the Project numbers:
P31_The New City Gates / P3o_Island Nijmegen-Lent / P29_World Port Days / P28_Water Garden / P27_the International Perspectives / P26_Economics of Beauty / P25_the Vibrant City / P24_CityGallery Cool / P23_Defining the Metropolis / P22_House DDR'dam / P21_Soundpiece @ Schouwburgplein / P2o_between Space and Place / P19_the top is within reach / P18_Transformation as Inspiration / P17_the Art of an Urban Culture / P16_Youth and the City / P15_IFF@R'dam / P14_We love to build / P13_the Rotterdam urban theatre / P12_Caribbean Summer @Afrikaanderwijk / P11_Festivalscity_Rotterdam / P1o_TimeLine R'dam / Po9_Moving East / Po8_Keep it, Green it, Live in it! / Po7_Morpho-Logic / Po6_Luik, Liege,Luttich / Po5_House FDU'sel / Po4_Shelter / Po3_New Alliances / Po2_Tria / Po1_Loft for Rent
The area around the Neckar between Altbach and Wernau is a mix of industrial sites, some green areas and infrastructure mainly in the valley, villages mainly on the hills and agriculture above the villages. The accessibility and use of the river is under pressure by the domination of the industrial sites and infrastructure in the valley.
The project starts with looking beyond the riverside, what is structuring the area? Two layers define the area. One is the landscape and agriculture, the other the industry, infrastructure and housing. Now the two are divided. In the project we introduced a new intermediary layer, with specific functions that connect the two layers. The functions are specific for the site they are used in.
Three areas are worked out; Deizisau im Wald, the expansion of the village in a forest structure, Labpark Altbach, a new sustainable business area and Quapark-Insel, a common cultural area at the riverside for the villages surrounding the river. The routes between the different villages pass this space.
Morpho-Logic is a co-operation between Wolbert van Dijk, Stefan La Grand and David Dooghe.
2oo5, Stuttgart, Germany
Morpho-Logic was honourable mentioned at Artery competition: Mitten am Rand, Das Neckarknie. Morpho-Logic is a co-operation between Wolbert van Dijk, Stefan La Grand and David Dooghe.
The goal of this competition was to reach a conceptual structure for the Neckar area between Altbach and Wernau. In this area there is mix of industrial sites, some green areas and infrastructure mainly in the valley, villages mainly on the hills and agriculture above the villages. The accessibility and use of the river is under pressure by the domination of the industrial sites and infrastructure in the valley.
Morpho-Logic created a new structure for the further development of the area by first examining what structured the area. Two main layers were found: One is the landscape and agriculture, the other the industry, infrastructure and housing.
What will happen in this area if nobody interferes? What do we want to happen? What should be brought to a halt? What should be the rules to do so?
The project team decided the logic of the strong morphology of the area should be the underlaying organizing rule. By introducing a new intermediary layer, a strong connection between the different layers was made by adding functions at specific sites.

Huub Juurlinck, instructor at the workshop of this competition, wrote about the competition: “A symbiosis between urban and rural areas, between mankind and nature can end the defensive and infinitive battle between city and landscape.
The perception to establish the rules, under which landscape can be urbanized, can result in a much more offensive approach from nature. The statement ‚think global but act local‘ is here in its place.
Of course, the programmatic condition and location of each area is different. But the approach could be the same: how can a symbiosis between industrialization, urbanization and nature be established, in other words between the economical and environmental needs of mankind in this area. To establish new ideas which are based on the local environmental and economical situation for that could be the real task in this area.”