A FRAMEWORK FOR EMPOWERMENT Leveraging Urban Design to Repair and Revitalize the Informal Settlement of ‘Villa 31’ in Buenos Aires The “Villa 31” in the heart of Buenos Aires, Argentina is an informal settlement(sqautter) which has been battling for its existence for the past seven decades. The immigrant settlement having resisted several ‘eradication drives’ is finally going to be revitalized and repaired by the public administration’s urbanization plan through the initiative called ‘Treinta y Todos 2009’ The project, “A Framework for Empowerment” not only works in parallel with the initiative’s vision but also strives to augment the vision to create self-sustaining communities. Further, the design project critically investigates the ‘Top Down’ urban design schemes generated through the urbanization plan and tangentially proposes an ‘Urban Repair’ framework that aims to poise between the city driven ‘Top Down’ and community driven ‘Bottom up’ design approaches. The proposed design framework also aims at capitalizing the ‘Urban scavenging’ and recycling practice of “The Cartoneros” as an impetus to drive the revitalization of the settlement. This would include production of building materials for construction of housing, reinforcement of public realm and re-connection of the settlement to the formal city. The proposal will formalize and upscale the waste recycling industry as an economic generator to aid in the social development of the people in the settlement. Collaboration with the city: The professional project "A Framework for Empowerment" was accomplished in a span of one year by collaborating with "Secretariat of Social and Urban Integration" in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The local government office which is set up in the slum, supported the project with Demographic data, Documentations and organizing site visits. The project will be presented to the Buenos Aires city administration by the end of 2017. Key Words: Revitalization, Self-sustaining, Empowerment, Bottom up urbanism, Urban scavenging, Waste Recycling, The Cartoneros, Economic development, Social development