Kaloleni estate in Nairobi was built in the 1940s by British colonial authorities. It was designed as a model garden suburb for African families, and intended to produce a new type of urban colonial subject. Today the estate is rundown and dilapidated, but still home to many descendants of the original residents. It is now marked for 'regeneration' as part of Vision 2030, a radical planning project that promises to kickstart Nairobi's urban renewal. This thesis lies at the intersection of the anthropology of material culture and the anthropology of history and time. It considers the legacies of a colonial housing scheme, and the way place is produced over time. It explores how the estate has been imaginatively and materially reconfigured by...