177,883 research outputs found

    Human experience in the natural and built environment : implications for research policy and practice

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    22nd IAPS conference. Edited book of abstracts. 427 pp. University of Strathclyde, Sheffield and West of Scotland Publication. ISBN: 978-0-94-764988-3

    Creative spaces and the art of urban living

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    Copyright @ 2009 Routledg

    Plazabilities for Art Education: Community as Participant, Collaborator & Curator

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    In the following article, a plaza metaphor and theories of plazability are applied to the recent work of three Other art educators to acknowledge, examine and articulate a refreshed vision for an art education based in community pedagogy which expands possibilities, builds community, and uses art to work for social change. Examples suggesting such achievements in creating plazability include work from a community artist backed by a visionary community arts foundation, a progressive cultural museum director and staff, and a contemporary artist each actively engaging the community in diverse ways. The innovative and community grounded practice and philosophies of these Other art educators suggest new possibilities for art teaching and learning through making a transfer to collective authority in the art classroom and call for the creation of new discursive spaces within art education practice

    A critical analysis of urban regeneration programmes in Europe

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    Urban regeneration is informed and driven by the causes and effects of globalization, climate change, the global economic crisis, and lifestyle changes. In Europe, there is currently a pressing demand to redevelop brownfields areas, inner-city heritage sites, post-conflict and post-disaster areas, and large-housing estates. Housing regeneration strategies range from large-scale to micro-scale interventions that lead to a complete change to the physical features of neighbourhoods and the life of their residents. This paper presents activities and cases studied in the OIKONET Erasmus Lifelong Learning Project, by highlighting that regeneration is an important issue driving the production of contemporary housing in Europe. The presented review is part of wider research and pedagogical work aimed at identifying significant conceptual, contextual and policy changes affecting housing regeneration demand. Examples of urban regeneration programmes on different urban areas in selected European countries, i.e. the UK, Hungary, Serbia, Slovakia and Russia are examined. As a result of the comparison between the cases analysed, some conclusions can be drawn to inform future research and set up pedagogical programmes to be carried out within the OIKONET project

    The Reconstruction of the Beirut Central District: An urban geography of war and peace

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    Three conceptual themes of public-private, temporality, and heritage-modernity are used to develop an urban geography of war and peace of Beirut. During the 1975-1990 Lebanese civil war public space shrank and people retreated deeper into localised neighbourhoods, with private space becoming more public as people accommodated those who were displaced. Since the war, the public sector has been rehabilitated, but decision making autonomy on the reconstruction of Beirut’s centre has been handed to a private company. The theme of temporality concerns the relationship between the city’s past, present, and future, with debates on what parts of the city should be preserved intimately bound with notions of memory and forgetting. The relationship between heritage and modernity, both of which are fluid and evolving notions, has informed the reconstruction of the city. The reclamation by Beirutis of the centre of the city following the assassination of Rafic Hariri in 2005 makes clear that urban space is constructed as much by publics as by architects and town planners, with Place des Martyrs once again functioning as an integrating space for public dialogue and reconciliation

    Tree-squares in Anatolia : what does an emergent public space mean?

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    Urban places, besides their physical characteristics, are regarded as grounds where personal or collective meanings are created and accumulated. An individual can capture the meaning of a place, or create new meanings by relying on his/her own feelings and experiences. This research, by discussing the idea of togetherness of meaning and design in urban spaces, presents trees both as place making and meaning generating features, which honors the local identity of a site. Tree-squares are, therefore, the unique urban public places where this relationship is observed clearly. The researcher’s encounter with a Çınaraltı Square - a Turkish term used to define public places under massive and historical plane trees and will be referred as Tree-Square within the scope of this paper - which is marked by a plane tree that is called Musa (Moses) Plane in Antakya/Turkey has triggered an idea of questioning the urban planning and design approaches beyond the broadly accepted role of trees as natural and aesthetic beings in cities. Later on, Yalvaç Plane in Yalvaç/Isparta site, and the outstanding public place under its tremendous branches carried this wonder one step further, since this Tree-Square was not only an attractive place with a magnificent plane tree, but also the heart of the city. It was unplanned and un-envisioned by any kind of legal planning or design authority; instead, it was emerged and developed out of the cultural beliefs and traditions. This emergent public space is a product of a long term social and historical interaction process that created the main public place of a medium-sized Turkish city, as in many Anatolian cities. It carries significant urban qualities, such as forming the heart of cities and having a visible impact on the urban macroform. Therefore, a case study research has been conducted in Yalvaç Tree-Square to gain a comprehensive grasp of the social and spatial organization of an urban place that is dominated by a historical plane tree. In this sense, the role of Yalvaç Plane in the historical and spatial development of an urban space will be evaluated by relying on socially produced meaning in the built environment

    A proposal for an ecological park towards a sustainable humane habitat in Abu Qir, Alexandria, Egypt

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    This paper represents a preliminary stage of a multiphase research-project, carried out at the Arab Academy for Science and Technology (AAST) by the Environmental Design Research Group (EDRG) looking at alternative proposals for urban development strategies at Abu Qir Area in Alexandria, Egypt. Abu Qir is located east of Alexandria has a very important productive bay on the Mediterranean Sea and its eastern and south east coast is the only mirror of Egypt on the Dead Sea. Besides being one of the most important spots on Alexandria bay, Abu Qir is considered one of the highest polluted areas in Alexandria, although the area itself has a very high potential on the Mediterranean and the Dead Sea. This paper explores the design and development of an ecological park as a part of the urban development at Abu Qir bay. The paper investigates the proposals of conceptual design strategies for an Ecological Park at Abu-Qir. Lessons learnt from examples that have successfully introduced and developed the ideas of Ecological parks in the international built environment are reviewed. Parks are key elements in the urban ecosystem, serving dual roles as core zones of urban nature and as multi-use recreational open space. Moreover, as part of an open space system, they play important functional roles as part of landscape-scale habitat and hydrological networks. Today, there is an urging need for the development of urban parks. As urban populations have rapidly increased through civilization and industrialization, cities have been enlarged, nature has been impaired, and human relations have been damaged. For these reasons, people have lost the opportunity to come into contact with nature. Environmental problems such as air and water pollution have resulted, in conjunction with a gradual decrease in natural surroundings. Ecological destruction has caused the landscape to be devastated. For this reason, ecological parks, places serving to reintroduce beautiful birds and insects into the devastated landscape, are needed. There is a need for ecological parks as places where sound ecological values can be instilled and established through the observation and study of nature. Higher priority is given to the ecological environment than in other parks. The design proposal of the ecological park is a place that is ecologically restored and preserved for the purposes of scientific observation and study, and also to provide an easily accessible place for visitors to observe plants, animals and insects living in their natural environment. The proposed park also plays an important role as an educational open classroom for the community and aims at raising global awareness issues in Abu-Qir, thus ensuring that children grow up with an awareness of the global problems facing the world today, and how they can contribute, as active members of the society, in reducing the consequences of pollution and global warming we have created with our own hands. The paper analyses the Abu Qir village potentials and constraints and put forward an urban development strategy based on this analysis. The paper then presents the strategy that has been established to thoroughly preserve, protect and maintain areas of rich natural resources at Abu Qir, and method have been developed to allow enjoyment of them with minimum artificial influence. Eco-tours have been developed for observation of ecosystems. A variety of opportunities to experience nature has been made available by minimization of human interference and by the introduction of an "Environment Commentator" as will be discussed in this paper

    Unfamiliar Objects in Familiar Spaces: The Public Response to Art-in-Architecture

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    Examines the public response to a sample of 41 public art projects funded through the federal government's Art-In-Architecture program and attempts to illuminate the factors that lead to official or organized conflict

    Urban landscapes

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