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Wikipedia

Hostile architecture

Hostile architecture[a] is an urban-design strategy that uses elements of the built environment to purposefully guide behavior. It often targets people who use or rely on public space more than others, such as youth, poor people, and homeless people, by restricting the physical behaviours they can engage in.[1]

Bolts installed on the front steps of a building to discourage sitting and sleeping

The term hostile architecture is often associated with items like "anti-homeless spikes" – studs embedded in flat surfaces to make sleeping on them uncomfortable and impractical. This form of architecture is most commonly found in densely populated and urban areas.[2][3] Other measures include sloped window sills to stop people sitting; benches with armrests positioned to stop people lying on them; water sprinklers that spray intermittently; and public trash bins with inconveniently small mouths to prevent the insertion of bulky wastes.[4] Hostile architecture is also employed to deter skateboarding, BMXing, inline skating, littering, loitering, public urination,[5] and trespassing, and as a form of pest control.[6]

Background edit

Although the term "hostile architecture" is recent, the use of civil engineering to achieve social engineering is not: antecedents include 19th century urine deflectors and urban planning in the United States designed for segregation.[7][8][9] American urban planner Robert Moses designed a stretch of Long Island Southern State Parkway with low stone bridges so that buses could not pass under them. This made it more difficult for people who relied on public transportation, mainly African Americans, to visit the beach that wealthier car-owners could visit.[10][11] Outside of the United States, public space design change for the purpose of social control also has historic precedent: the narrow streets of 19th century Paris, France were widened to help the military quash protests.[12][better source needed]

Its modern form is derived from the design philosophy crime prevention through environmental design (CPTED), which aims to prevent crime or protect property through three strategies: natural surveillance, natural access control, and territorial enforcement.[13] According to experts, exclusionary design is becoming increasingly common, not least in large cities such as Stockholm.[14][15][16]

Consistent with the widespread implementation of defensible space guidelines in the 1970s, most implementations of CPTED as of 2004 were based solely upon the theory that the proper design and effective use of the built environment could reduce crime, reduce fear of crime, and improve quality of life. Built environment implementations of CPTED seek to dissuade offenders from committing crimes by manipulating the built environment in which those crimes proceed or occur. The six main concepts according to Moffat are territoriality, surveillance, access control, image/maintenance, activity support and target hardening. Applying all of these strategies is key when trying to prevent crime in any neighborhood, crime-ridden or not.[17]

Beyond CPTED, scholarly research has also found that modern capitalist cities have a vested interest in eliminating signs of homelessness from their communal spaces, fearing that it might discourage investment from wealthier individuals.[18] In England, much of their hostile architecture has been attributed to a desire by the government to combat an anti-social street scene, taking the form of begging and street drinking.[19]

Lack of awareness edit

Many applications of hostile architecture are designed to look inconspicuous to the public, and the absence of seating, bathrooms, or shade can be used to prevent targeted populations from gathering in the area.[20][21]

Identifying hostile architecture edit

Some forms of hostile architecture are easy to identify, while others could be interpreted as either exclusionary or non-exclusionary, such as spaced-out singular chairs constructed at a playground in Sweden, which may appear intentionally designed to dissuade homeless sleeping, or as an acknowledgement that Swedes consider it impolite to sit near strangers.[22] Some researchers have said that hostile architecture should be evaluated within the wider context of the community, and should recognize the social and political forces motivating a particular design choice, such as anti-homelessness legislation or sentiments.[20]

Applications edit

 
Boulders installed along a freeway ramp in Portland, Oregon, United States as a hostile architecture to deter transient camps.
 
The "Camden bench", used in London, has a design that is stated to discourage sleeping, littering, skateboarding, drug dealing, graffiti and theft
 
Benches with metal pipes at a train station in Vienna.
 
Anti-homeless spikes in New York, designed to prevent sitting.
 
Anti-homeless object in Shinjuku Station underpass.

Camping deterrents edit

In Seattle, Washington, United States, the city government installed bicycle racks to prevent homeless people from camping.[23][24]

Since 2013, the Oregon Department of Transportation in Oregon, United States deployed large boulders at eight locations that had been the site of transient camps in Portland. These boulders were installed to deter illegal camping near the freeways.[25]

Fences or grates edit

 
Fence under the stairs of the City Archives in Kungsholmen in Stockholm (2015).[26]

Fences or grates are a common form of exclusionary design, often used to prevent access to places where there is protection from the elements, for example under stairs, bridges, or near fan systems that blow out hot air.[27][28][29]

In the spring of 2015, the City of Stockholm, Sweden, erected a 200,000 kr fence to prevent homeless people from seeking shelter under a staircase in Kungsholmen.[27]

Sleeping deterrents edit

In many large cities, for example Tokyo and London, benches have been designed to prevent people from sleeping on them. These benches have been constructed so that the seat slopes at an angle, which requires the user to support themselves entirely with their feet; such benches are ubiquitous on bus stops across the United Kingdom.[30] Another deterrent design is to include armrests placed down the center of the bench, preventing the user from lying down across the seats.[31]

Camden Borough Council in London commissioned concrete-block benches (dubbed "Camden benches") designed to discourage uses such as sleeping, skateboarding and placing stickers.[7][32] There are other variants, in which level differences are absent but they tend to be either too short to lie on, or have iron pipes placed two-thirds of the way in, or multiple armrests placed along the entire length of the bench.[33] Such benches are common in airports.[34]

When the City Tunnel in Malmö, Sweden, was opened in 2010, the design of the benches on the new train platforms was reported to the Equality Ombudsman because the benches were tilted so much that they were difficult to impossible to use for sitting.[35][36] The Swedish state-owned real estate company Jernhusen has also used so-called "homeless-proof" benches at the train station in Luleå, with seven iron bars at 47 cm (19 in) intervals per bench.[37][38] Jernhusen's press officer maintained that they "put in the armrests primarily to make it easier for the elderly and disabled to sit and stand up" but admitted in an interview that the perceived orderliness problems at the station building influenced how the benches were designed.[37] Another example of a company that has installed such benches is Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe, Berlin's local public transport company.[39][40]

Some examples of sleeping deterrents take the form of temporary changes to buildings. An example of this occurred in a Liverpool building, previously the Bank of England headquarters, in December 2016. A blue sloping steel structure covered in oil was placed over the stairs at night, so that the homeless who used to sleep and rest on the stairs would not stay there.[41][42]

Spikes edit

Hostile architecture can occur as spikes, bumps or other types of pointed structures. They are typically placed on ledges outside buildings, under roofs or other places where people seek rest or shelter, and also around shops.[43][44][45][46] The property management company Jernhusen uses a variant by placing pipes instead of spikes in several places at Stockholm Central Station.[14][47] In 2014, images circulated on the internet of a place in London where homeless people used to sleep. The ground had been fitted with sharp upward-pointing spikes to get rid of people who used to sleep there, but after widespread protests, the anti-homeless spikes were removed.[48] There are also anti-homeless spikes which are intended to ensure that people do not, for example, sit against a house wall, or stand in a particular place.[1] It is difficult to adequately assess how many different types exist, but it is certain that there are many types of the phenomenon, including split bricks which form cracks, various forms of bent metal pipes, and plates welded upwards to form spikes.[49][50][51] Former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has called the spikes "stupid".[52]

Security cameras edit

One of the most common forms of hostile architecture takes the form of surveillance. Indeed, while security cameras do not physically prevent people from engaging in certain behaviors, they can restrict actions in public spaces through enabling remote oversight and increasing the fear of retaliation for socially taboo actions.[20] In cities like Cincinnati, there has been a noted sharp increase in the number of CCTV cameras in public spaces since the 1990s.[53]

Urination deterrent edit

 
In a corner of the Priory Gatehouse in Great Malvern
A urine deflector is a device for deflecting the stream of urine during urination. These may be part of a chamber pot, latrine or toilet intended for the purpose, or they may be deterrents, installed in the sides or corners of buildings to discourage their casual use as urinals by passers-by. They may be constructed in various ways from a variety of materials but are typically designed to have an angled surface which catches and redirects the stream.

Hostile architecture as art or embellishment edit

 
A large, sturdy flowerpot outside a building in Stockholm.

This type of exclusionary design may involve, for example, displaying a large flowerpot where homeless people previously used the pavement to sleep. Other examples that have occurred include a stone painted in rainbow colours, putting out blocking shrubbery on a sidewalk, and "fun" shaped seating.[54][55][50]

Music and noise edit

In Sweden, loudspeakers in Finspång have played music in order to get addicts to leave certain places. In the UK and Germany, so-called anti-loitering devices (see The Mosquito) have been installed to ensure that young people do not stay in places where they are installed.[56][57][58] The devices work by emitting a monotone sound at such a high frequency that most people after adolescence lose the ability to hear it.[59] Critics have stated that the devices constitute a violation of human rights and also comment that the phenomenon would create a "dangerous gap" between young people exposed to it and older people who can avoid it.[60][61] In Germany, classical music has been used in an attempt to keep drug users away.[62] In Berlin, a plan to use atonal music at S-Bahn stations has been withdrawn after criticism.[63]

Removal edit

Sometimes exclusionary design is not about adding features, but rather about taking them away. Fredrik Edin, who has written a book on exclusionary design, says that removal is the most common type of exclusionary design, where, for example, benches used by the public are removed precisely because they are used by the public.[64][65][66] One example is when representatives of the New York City Subway announced via social media in 2021 that "benches were removed from stations to prevent the homeless from sleeping on them." The agency later said the tweet was a mistake.[67][68][69] Benches at certain locations at Stockholm Central Station were removed in 2015 in favour of chairs and benches were also removed at Luleå railway station. Their press officer stated that they had problems with the station being used as a warming shelter.[38] Many public toilets have begun to be removed in the UK in places considered to be untidy.[41]

Sprinklers edit

Sprinklers can be found in areas where spikes are considered too permanent; this solution involves spraying water on those staying in a particular place at a particular time.[27][38][70][71][72][73] In New Zealand, Auckland City Councillor Cathy Casey described sprinklers being used by businesses in the city as "inhumane".[74]

The Strand Bookstore in New York used such a system in 2013 to deter homeless people sleeping outside the store at night.[75] Bonhams in San Francisco was criticised for an external sprinkler system that it claimed was used to clean "building and perimeter sidewalks during non-business hours intermittently over a 48-hour period", and which was also a point where homeless people gathered.[76]

Public reception edit

Opposition to hostile architecture in urban design states that such architecture makes public spaces hostile to all people and especially targets the transient and homeless populations.[77] Proponents say that clearly establishing a sense of ownership over the space helps maintain order and safety and deter crime and unwanted behaviors.[78]

In 2018, British artist Stuart Semple created a social media public awareness campaign encouraging the public to place identifying stickers on instances of hostile design in their environment.[79][80][81]

Examples of hostile architecture circulating within UK media have led to negative reception. Nonetheless, types of hostile architecture have increased. For example, Selfridges in Manchester installed metal spikes outside their store for the purpose of reducing "litter and smoking," which suggests hostile architecture may be implicated for one reason but explained by another.[45]

Artistic response edit

  • In 2001, Nils Norman published the book The Contemporary Picturesque, which contains photographs he has taken of exclusionary design since the 1990s.[82]
  • In 2003, two Parisians, Stéphane Argillet and Gilles Paté, filmed the film Le repos du fakir (The Fakir's Rest), which shows them attempting to rest on various objects that characterize exclusionary design in Paris.[83]
  • In 2005, American artist and researcher Sarah Ross documented exclusionary design in Los Angeles in her series Body Configurations Testing Resistance. Her 2006 follow-up, Archisuits, created clothing that was designed to work with exclusionary design – to make sleep possible.[84][85]
  • In 2013–2014, an installation in Norrköping, Sweden, called "Modified Social Benches" by Danish artist Jeppe Hein took place.[86][87]
  • In 2015, artist and architect Johanna Nenander drew attention to the phenomenon through her project "Urbana proteser" (lit.'Urban prostheses'), in which she placed seating that was deliberately positioned to make it difficult to sit down on. For a few days, a pair of sheet-metal foundations on the slab, which were impossible to sit on, became a bench for the public.[88]
  • In 2018, British artist Stuart Semple created a social media platform to encourage the public to place identifying stickers where they spotted exclusionary designs in public spaces.[89][90][91][81][92]

Tactical response edit

Often as part of a larger pattern of tactical urbanism, some opponents of hostile architecture have responded to it directly to undermine its intended effects. Where public seating is absent or inadequate, some have built and installed seating themselves in an act called "chair bombing".[93] Others have removed or vandalized anti-homeless spikes and armrests in protest of anti-homelessness legislation.[94][95]

Impacts of hostile architecture edit

Up to this point, there has not been a wide scale empirical study that has measured the impact of hostile architecture on the wellbeing of homeless people or other targeted populations.[20] Some members of England's homeless community interviewed by researchers have noted that hostile design contributes to their displacement and feelings of insignificance, as it appears that local business interests are prioritized over their survival.[19]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also known as defensive architecture, hostile design, unpleasant design, exclusionary design, anti-homeless architecture, or defensive urban design.

References edit

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External links edit

  • Cara Chellew, Bars, barriers and ghost amenities: Defensive urban design in Toronto Torontoist.
  • Lloyd Alter, Hostile design doesn't work for any age group Mother Nature Network.
  • Cara Chellew, Defensive Inequalities Spacing Magazine.
  • "When Design Is Hostile On Purpose". Popsci. 28 July 2016. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  • HostileDesign.org, Project homepage of Stuart Semple sticker campaign.

hostile, architecture, urban, design, strategy, that, uses, elements, built, environment, purposefully, guide, behavior, often, targets, people, rely, public, space, more, than, others, such, youth, poor, people, homeless, people, restricting, physical, behavi. Hostile architecture a is an urban design strategy that uses elements of the built environment to purposefully guide behavior It often targets people who use or rely on public space more than others such as youth poor people and homeless people by restricting the physical behaviours they can engage in 1 Bolts installed on the front steps of a building to discourage sitting and sleeping The term hostile architecture is often associated with items like anti homeless spikes studs embedded in flat surfaces to make sleeping on them uncomfortable and impractical This form of architecture is most commonly found in densely populated and urban areas 2 3 Other measures include sloped window sills to stop people sitting benches with armrests positioned to stop people lying on them water sprinklers that spray intermittently and public trash bins with inconveniently small mouths to prevent the insertion of bulky wastes 4 Hostile architecture is also employed to deter skateboarding BMXing inline skating littering loitering public urination 5 and trespassing and as a form of pest control 6 Contents 1 Background 2 Lack of awareness 3 Identifying hostile architecture 4 Applications 4 1 Camping deterrents 4 2 Fences or grates 4 3 Sleeping deterrents 4 4 Spikes 4 5 Security cameras 4 6 Urination deterrent 4 7 Hostile architecture as art or embellishment 4 7 1 Music and noise 4 8 Removal 4 9 Sprinklers 5 Public reception 6 Artistic response 7 Tactical response 8 Impacts of hostile architecture 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksBackground editAlthough the term hostile architecture is recent the use of civil engineering to achieve social engineering is not antecedents include 19th century urine deflectors and urban planning in the United States designed for segregation 7 8 9 American urban planner Robert Moses designed a stretch of Long Island Southern State Parkway with low stone bridges so that buses could not pass under them This made it more difficult for people who relied on public transportation mainly African Americans to visit the beach that wealthier car owners could visit 10 11 Outside of the United States public space design change for the purpose of social control also has historic precedent the narrow streets of 19th century Paris France were widened to help the military quash protests 12 better source needed Its modern form is derived from the design philosophy crime prevention through environmental design CPTED which aims to prevent crime or protect property through three strategies natural surveillance natural access control and territorial enforcement 13 According to experts exclusionary design is becoming increasingly common not least in large cities such as Stockholm 14 15 16 Consistent with the widespread implementation of defensible space guidelines in the 1970s most implementations of CPTED as of 2004 were based solely upon the theory that the proper design and effective use of the built environment could reduce crime reduce fear of crime and improve quality of life Built environment implementations of CPTED seek to dissuade offenders from committing crimes by manipulating the built environment in which those crimes proceed or occur The six main concepts according to Moffat are territoriality surveillance access control image maintenance activity support and target hardening Applying all of these strategies is key when trying to prevent crime in any neighborhood crime ridden or not 17 Beyond CPTED scholarly research has also found that modern capitalist cities have a vested interest in eliminating signs of homelessness from their communal spaces fearing that it might discourage investment from wealthier individuals 18 In England much of their hostile architecture has been attributed to a desire by the government to combat an anti social street scene taking the form of begging and street drinking 19 Lack of awareness editMany applications of hostile architecture are designed to look inconspicuous to the public and the absence of seating bathrooms or shade can be used to prevent targeted populations from gathering in the area 20 21 Identifying hostile architecture editSome forms of hostile architecture are easy to identify while others could be interpreted as either exclusionary or non exclusionary such as spaced out singular chairs constructed at a playground in Sweden which may appear intentionally designed to dissuade homeless sleeping or as an acknowledgement that Swedes consider it impolite to sit near strangers 22 Some researchers have said that hostile architecture should be evaluated within the wider context of the community and should recognize the social and political forces motivating a particular design choice such as anti homelessness legislation or sentiments 20 Applications edit nbsp Boulders installed along a freeway ramp in Portland Oregon United States as a hostile architecture to deter transient camps nbsp The Camden bench used in London has a design that is stated to discourage sleeping littering skateboarding drug dealing graffiti and theft nbsp Benches with metal pipes at a train station in Vienna nbsp Anti homeless spikes in New York designed to prevent sitting nbsp Anti homeless object in Shinjuku Station underpass Camping deterrents edit In Seattle Washington United States the city government installed bicycle racks to prevent homeless people from camping 23 24 Since 2013 the Oregon Department of Transportation in Oregon United States deployed large boulders at eight locations that had been the site of transient camps in Portland These boulders were installed to deter illegal camping near the freeways 25 Fences or grates edit nbsp Fence under the stairs of the City Archives in Kungsholmen in Stockholm 2015 26 Fences or grates are a common form of exclusionary design often used to prevent access to places where there is protection from the elements for example under stairs bridges or near fan systems that blow out hot air 27 28 29 In the spring of 2015 the City of Stockholm Sweden erected a 200 000 kr fence to prevent homeless people from seeking shelter under a staircase in Kungsholmen 27 Sleeping deterrents edit In many large cities for example Tokyo and London benches have been designed to prevent people from sleeping on them These benches have been constructed so that the seat slopes at an angle which requires the user to support themselves entirely with their feet such benches are ubiquitous on bus stops across the United Kingdom 30 Another deterrent design is to include armrests placed down the center of the bench preventing the user from lying down across the seats 31 Camden Borough Council in London commissioned concrete block benches dubbed Camden benches designed to discourage uses such as sleeping skateboarding and placing stickers 7 32 There are other variants in which level differences are absent but they tend to be either too short to lie on or have iron pipes placed two thirds of the way in or multiple armrests placed along the entire length of the bench 33 Such benches are common in airports 34 When the City Tunnel in Malmo Sweden was opened in 2010 the design of the benches on the new train platforms was reported to the Equality Ombudsman because the benches were tilted so much that they were difficult to impossible to use for sitting 35 36 The Swedish state owned real estate company Jernhusen has also used so called homeless proof benches at the train station in Lulea with seven iron bars at 47 cm 19 in intervals per bench 37 38 Jernhusen s press officer maintained that they put in the armrests primarily to make it easier for the elderly and disabled to sit and stand up but admitted in an interview that the perceived orderliness problems at the station building influenced how the benches were designed 37 Another example of a company that has installed such benches is Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe Berlin s local public transport company 39 40 Some examples of sleeping deterrents take the form of temporary changes to buildings An example of this occurred in a Liverpool building previously the Bank of England headquarters in December 2016 A blue sloping steel structure covered in oil was placed over the stairs at night so that the homeless who used to sleep and rest on the stairs would not stay there 41 42 Spikes edit Hostile architecture can occur as spikes bumps or other types of pointed structures They are typically placed on ledges outside buildings under roofs or other places where people seek rest or shelter and also around shops 43 44 45 46 The property management company Jernhusen uses a variant by placing pipes instead of spikes in several places at Stockholm Central Station 14 47 In 2014 images circulated on the internet of a place in London where homeless people used to sleep The ground had been fitted with sharp upward pointing spikes to get rid of people who used to sleep there but after widespread protests the anti homeless spikes were removed 48 There are also anti homeless spikes which are intended to ensure that people do not for example sit against a house wall or stand in a particular place 1 It is difficult to adequately assess how many different types exist but it is certain that there are many types of the phenomenon including split bricks which form cracks various forms of bent metal pipes and plates welded upwards to form spikes 49 50 51 Former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has called the spikes stupid 52 Security cameras edit One of the most common forms of hostile architecture takes the form of surveillance Indeed while security cameras do not physically prevent people from engaging in certain behaviors they can restrict actions in public spaces through enabling remote oversight and increasing the fear of retaliation for socially taboo actions 20 In cities like Cincinnati there has been a noted sharp increase in the number of CCTV cameras in public spaces since the 1990s 53 Urination deterrent edit This section is an excerpt from Urine deflector edit nbsp In a corner of the Priory Gatehouse in Great Malvern A urine deflector is a device for deflecting the stream of urine during urination These may be part of a chamber pot latrine or toilet intended for the purpose or they may be deterrents installed in the sides or corners of buildings to discourage their casual use as urinals by passers by They may be constructed in various ways from a variety of materials but are typically designed to have an angled surface which catches and redirects the stream Hostile architecture as art or embellishment edit nbsp A large sturdy flowerpot outside a building in Stockholm This type of exclusionary design may involve for example displaying a large flowerpot where homeless people previously used the pavement to sleep Other examples that have occurred include a stone painted in rainbow colours putting out blocking shrubbery on a sidewalk and fun shaped seating 54 55 50 Music and noise edit In Sweden loudspeakers in Finspang have played music in order to get addicts to leave certain places In the UK and Germany so called anti loitering devices see The Mosquito have been installed to ensure that young people do not stay in places where they are installed 56 57 58 The devices work by emitting a monotone sound at such a high frequency that most people after adolescence lose the ability to hear it 59 Critics have stated that the devices constitute a violation of human rights and also comment that the phenomenon would create a dangerous gap between young people exposed to it and older people who can avoid it 60 61 In Germany classical music has been used in an attempt to keep drug users away 62 In Berlin a plan to use atonal music at S Bahn stations has been withdrawn after criticism 63 Removal edit Sometimes exclusionary design is not about adding features but rather about taking them away Fredrik Edin who has written a book on exclusionary design says that removal is the most common type of exclusionary design where for example benches used by the public are removed precisely because they are used by the public 64 65 66 One example is when representatives of the New York City Subway announced via social media in 2021 that benches were removed from stations to prevent the homeless from sleeping on them The agency later said the tweet was a mistake 67 68 69 Benches at certain locations at Stockholm Central Station were removed in 2015 in favour of chairs and benches were also removed at Lulea railway station Their press officer stated that they had problems with the station being used as a warming shelter 38 Many public toilets have begun to be removed in the UK in places considered to be untidy 41 Sprinklers edit Sprinklers can be found in areas where spikes are considered too permanent this solution involves spraying water on those staying in a particular place at a particular time 27 38 70 71 72 73 In New Zealand Auckland City Councillor Cathy Casey described sprinklers being used by businesses in the city as inhumane 74 The Strand Bookstore in New York used such a system in 2013 to deter homeless people sleeping outside the store at night 75 Bonhams in San Francisco was criticised for an external sprinkler system that it claimed was used to clean building and perimeter sidewalks during non business hours intermittently over a 48 hour period and which was also a point where homeless people gathered 76 Public reception editOpposition to hostile architecture in urban design states that such architecture makes public spaces hostile to all people and especially targets the transient and homeless populations 77 Proponents say that clearly establishing a sense of ownership over the space helps maintain order and safety and deter crime and unwanted behaviors 78 In 2018 British artist Stuart Semple created a social media public awareness campaign encouraging the public to place identifying stickers on instances of hostile design in their environment 79 80 81 Examples of hostile architecture circulating within UK media have led to negative reception Nonetheless types of hostile architecture have increased For example Selfridges in Manchester installed metal spikes outside their store for the purpose of reducing litter and smoking which suggests hostile architecture may be implicated for one reason but explained by another 45 Artistic response editIn 2001 Nils Norman published the book The Contemporary Picturesque which contains photographs he has taken of exclusionary design since the 1990s 82 In 2003 two Parisians Stephane Argillet and Gilles Pate filmed the film Le repos du fakir The Fakir s Rest which shows them attempting to rest on various objects that characterize exclusionary design in Paris 83 In 2005 American artist and researcher Sarah Ross documented exclusionary design in Los Angeles in her series Body Configurations Testing Resistance Her 2006 follow up Archisuits created clothing that was designed to work with exclusionary design to make sleep possible 84 85 In 2013 2014 an installation in Norrkoping Sweden called Modified Social Benches by Danish artist Jeppe Hein took place 86 87 In 2015 artist and architect Johanna Nenander drew attention to the phenomenon through her project Urbana proteser lit Urban prostheses in which she placed seating that was deliberately positioned to make it difficult to sit down on For a few days a pair of sheet metal foundations on the slab which were impossible to sit on became a bench for the public 88 In 2018 British artist Stuart Semple created a social media platform to encourage the public to place identifying stickers where they spotted exclusionary designs in public spaces 89 90 91 81 92 Tactical response editOften as part of a larger pattern of tactical urbanism some opponents of hostile architecture have responded to it directly to undermine its intended effects Where public seating is absent or inadequate some have built and installed seating themselves in an act called chair bombing 93 Others have removed or vandalized anti homeless spikes and armrests in protest of anti homelessness legislation 94 95 Impacts of hostile architecture editUp to this point there has not been a wide scale empirical study that has measured the impact of hostile architecture on the wellbeing of homeless people or other targeted populations 20 Some members of England s homeless community interviewed by researchers have noted that hostile design contributes to their displacement and feelings of insignificance as it appears that local business interests are prioritized over their survival 19 Gallery edit nbsp Spikes added around fountain in Government Center Miami in 2011 at downtown transit center nbsp Ledge with skatestoppers preventing skateboarders from grinding nbsp Spikes on a ledge in Boston to prevent sleeping or sitting nbsp Spiked handrail presumably preventing users from sliding down nbsp Floor spikes in Shoreditch London U K designed to prevent people from sleeping on the ground See also editArchitecture terrible Anti trespass panels spiky rubber and wooden mats meant to discourage trespass on or near rail tracks Bird control spike Defensible space theory Defensive design Functionalism architecture Privately owned public space New Urbanism Urban vitality Natural surveillanceNotes edit Also known as defensive architecture hostile design unpleasant design exclusionary design anti homeless architecture or defensive urban design References edit a b Chellew Cara 2019 Defending Suburbia Exploring the use of defensive urban design outside of the city centre Canadian Journal of Urban Research 28 19 33 Archived from the original on 2019 07 22 Retrieved 2019 07 22 Omidi Maryam 12 June 2014 Anti homeless spikes are just the latest in defensive urban architecture The Guardian Archived from the original on 31 May 2020 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Andreou Alex 18 February 2015 Anti homeless spikes Sleeping rough opened my eyes to the city s barbed cruelty The Guardian Archived from the original on 19 April 2020 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Quinn Ben 13 June 2014 Anti homeless spikes are part of a wider phenomenon of hostile architecture The Guardian Archived from the original on 7 May 2020 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Morris Hugh 2016 02 04 Anti pee paint San Francisco s walls fight back The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 2022 08 22 Andrea Lo 7 December 2017 The debate Is hostile architecture designing people and nature out of cities CNN Retrieved 2022 08 16 a b Swain Frank 2 December 2013 Secret city design tricks manipulate your behaviour BBC Archived from the original on 26 June 2019 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Lee Jackson 23 July 2013 Urine Deflectors in Fleet Street The Cat s Meat Shop Archived from the original on 6 October 2013 Retrieved 23 February 2014 Architectural Exclusion Discrimination and Segregation Through Physical Design of the Built Environment Yale Law Journal 124 6 1836 2201 2015 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2022 01 27 Edin Fredrik 2017 Exkluderande design in Swedish Stockholm p 42 ISBN 978 91 87777 28 8 OCLC 1045613015 Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wilson Paul 1989 Designing Out Crime Australian Institute of Criminology p 23 Gerrard Jessica Farrugia David September 2015 The lamentable sight of homelessness and the society of the spectacle Urban Studies 52 12 2219 2233 Bibcode 2015UrbSt 52 2219G doi 10 1177 0042098014542135 ISSN 0042 0980 S2CID 146460552 a b Johnsen Sarah Fitzpatrick Suzanne Watts Beth 2018 10 03 Homelessness and social control a typology Housing Studies 33 7 1106 1126 doi 10 1080 02673037 2017 1421912 ISSN 0267 3037 S2CID 158718588 a b c d Rosenberger Robert March 2020 On hostile design Theoretical and empirical prospects Urban Studies 57 4 883 893 Bibcode 2020UrbSt 57 883R doi 10 1177 0042098019853778 ISSN 0042 0980 S2CID 202333075 Kelter Sammy In Plain Sight Hostile Architecture Medium 31 Jan 2022 medium com sammykeltersami in plain sight hostile architecture 6430a7cb915d Accessed 09 Feb 2024 de Fine Licht Karl February 2021 Hostile architecture and its confederates A conceptual framework for how we should perceive our cities and the objects in them Canadian Journal on Urban Research Groover Heidi 19 December 2017 Seattle Uses Bike Racks to Discourage Homeless Camping The Stranger Archived from the original on 22 November 2019 Retrieved 17 December 2017 New anti homeless architecture Seattle uses bike racks to block rough sleepers The Guardian 2018 01 24 Archived from the original on 2020 08 14 Retrieved 2020 07 25 Kruzman Diana 2019 07 04 Portland s homeless campers face new obstacle piles of boulders oregonlive Archived from the original on 2020 07 24 Retrieved 2020 07 25 The boulders are a form of hostile architecture or defensive design Staket for 200 000 ska halla hemlosa borta DN SE in Swedish 2015 03 23 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a b c Edin Fredrik 2017 Exkluderande design in Swedish Stockholm p 20 ISBN 978 91 87777 28 8 OCLC 1045613015 Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link ZEIT ONLINE Lesen Sie zeit de mit Werbung oder im PUR Abo Sie haben die Wahl www zeit de Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Schneider Jens 28 September 2011 St Pauli halt Obdachlose mit Zaun auf Distanz Suddeutsche Zeitung in German Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 The cornucopia of anti homeless sleeping design BBC News 2014 06 09 Archived from the original on 2022 01 28 Retrieved 2022 02 19 Look at the design of bus stop seats in the UK They typically prevent anyone from sleeping One of the most common designs is a narrow plastic bench with a pronounced slope A sleeper would roll off Bell Kim 2013 12 18 Metro s bench dividers at bus shelters seen by some as slap at homeless St Louis Post Dispatch Archived from the original on 2014 08 22 Retrieved 2014 06 08 The Camden Bench Ian Visits 2 December 2016 Archived from the original on 7 January 2021 Retrieved 4 January 2021 Waters Carlos 2017 12 01 Why cities are full of uncomfortable benches Vox Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Obekvam design motar bort oonskade fran staderna Dagens Nyheter in Swedish 2014 11 30 ISSN 1101 2447 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Exkluderande arkitektur paverkar hela samhallet negativt Sveriges Arkitekter in Swedish 8 January 2019 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Edin Fredrik 2017 Exkluderande design in Swedish Stockholm p 16 ISBN 978 91 87777 28 8 OCLC 1045613015 Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Nyberg Micke Isberg Catharina 2015 03 12 Har ar det forbjudet att ligga ner SVT Nyheter in Swedish Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a b c Gitz Randi Haupt Inger 2014 02 26 Har ar jarnvagsstationen med enbart staplats SVT Nyheter in Swedish Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Wagner Jonas Kein Platz fur Obdachlose nd aktuell de www nd aktuell de in German Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Krieg Claudia Menschen statt Banke schutzen nd aktuell de www nd aktuell de in German Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a b Edin Fredrik 2017 Exkluderande design in Swedish Stockholm pp 23 24 ISBN 978 91 87777 28 8 OCLC 1045613015 Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Anti homeless slope put in doorway BBC News Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Chellew Cara 2016 Defensive Inequalities Spacing Magazine Dum Christopher P 2016 Exiled in America life on the margins in a residential motel New York p 222 ISBN 978 0 231 54239 5 OCLC 958066095 Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Defensive architecture keeping poverty unseen and deflecting our guilt The Guardian 2015 02 18 Archived from the original on 2015 02 20 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Kim Elizabeth 2019 08 14 A Field Guide To The Weapons Of Hostile Architecture In NYC Gothamist Archived from the original on 2021 08 14 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Exkluderande design vid Centralen tar bort sovplatser DN SE in Swedish 2015 03 27 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Edin Fredrik 2017 Exkluderande design in Swedish Stockholm p 18 ISBN 978 91 87777 28 8 OCLC 1045613015 Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Photos of the Most Egregious Anti Homeless Architecture www vice com 25 June 2019 Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a b 15 Examples of Anti Homeless Hostile Architecture That You Probably Never Noticed Before interestingengineering com 2020 11 22 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Vancouver s defensive architecture is hostile to homeless say critics Vancouver Is Awesome 24 June 2019 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Activists Pour Concrete on Store s Anti Homeless Spikes Win www boston com Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 C Hurley David 2002 Closed circuit television the Cincinnati experience University of Cincinnati OCLC 52100550 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Edin Fredrik 2017 Exkluderande design in Swedish Stockholm p 21 ISBN 978 91 87777 28 8 OCLC 1045613015 Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hostile design makes Calgary an unwelcoming modern city says architect CBC Radio Canada Archived from the original on 2021 07 17 Snis Alva 2016 11 28 Kritiserat pipljud i Tensta avstangt under helgen Sveriges Radio in Swedish Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 defensiveTO Light Sound defensiveto Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Raue kampft mit Piepton gegen Jugendliche MAZ Markische Allgemeine in German 19 September 2018 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Education com Sonic Science The High Frequency Hearing Test Scientific American Archived from the original on 2017 10 24 Retrieved 2022 01 27 High pitched anti 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design in Swedish Stockholm ISBN 978 91 87777 28 8 OCLC 1045613015 Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link NYC Transit blasted for tweeting that subway station benches were removed to deter homeless New York Post 2021 02 06 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Perrett Connor The New York City MTA sparked backlash for saying it removed benches from subway stations to prevent the homeless from sleeping on them Business Insider Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Goldbaum Christina 2021 02 08 The Subway Was Their Refuge on Cold Nights Now It s Off Limits The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 The growth of hostile architecture how developments in urban design are exacerbating social injustice A id Archived from the original on 2021 04 16 The Creative and Cruel Ways People Make Life Hell for the Homeless www vice com 19 July 2019 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Bristol tanning salon installs sprinklers to stop homeless people from sleeping outside The Independent 2018 02 01 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Salon criticised over anti homeless water sprinklers BBC News 2018 01 30 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Anti homeless sprinkler systems inhumane RNZ 2017 05 05 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Strand Bookstore uses sprinklers to evict homeless New York Post 2013 11 14 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Luxury auction house under fire after sprinkler system douses homeless The Guardian 2016 06 10 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Hu Winnie November 8 2019 Hostile Architecture How Public Spaces Keep the Public Out The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 3 2020 Retrieved November 12 2020 O Shea Linda S Awwad Rafferty Rula Design and Security in the built environment Fairchild Books inc 2009 ISBN 978 1 56367 497 6 Pp 27 Wallace Elizabeth 21 March 2018 What s Behind the Uptick in Hostile Architecture Architectural Digest Archived from the original on 2020 08 10 Retrieved 2020 07 25 Stuart Semple launches campaign to eradicate hostile design around the world theartnewspaper com 31 January 2018 Archived from the original on 2019 12 26 Retrieved 2018 02 15 a b Voon Claire 2018 02 01 Artist Launches Campaign to Call Out Hostile Urban Design Hyperallergic Archived from the original on 2021 08 17 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Hohenadel Kristin 2014 06 12 Are Anti Homeless Sidewalk Spikes Immoral Slate Magazine Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Interventions urbaines Gilles Pate gilfakir com Archived from the original on 2022 01 14 Retrieved 2022 01 27 SARAH ROSS www insecurespaces net Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 The Arsenal of Exclusion amp Inclusion www interboropartners com Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 S Ann Charlotte Elin 2013 06 12 Besvarliga bankar berattar om livet reportage KULTURSIDAN nu in Swedish Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Edin Fredrik 2015 01 21 Exkluderande design konst i Norrkoping Skumrask in Swedish Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Edin Fredrik 2017 Exkluderande design in Swedish Stockholm p 70 ISBN 978 91 87777 28 8 OCLC 1045613015 Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hostile Architecture Design Crimes Campaign Gets Bars Removed from Benches 99 Invisible 9 February 2018 Archived from the original on 2020 05 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Stuart Semple launches campaign to eradicate hostile design around the world The Art Newspaper International art news and events 2018 01 31 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 hostiledesign hostiledesign Archived from the original on 2021 03 02 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Hu Winnie 2019 11 08 How We Searched for Hostile Architecture in New York The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2022 01 27 chair bombing popupinfrastructure cargocollective com Retrieved 2024 04 26 MacNeill Arianna Hostile architecture A group wanted for removing armrests from MBTA benches says they re helping the homeless www boston com Retrieved 2024 04 26 Victory As Tesco Abandons Anti Homeless Spikes After Concrete Vandalism HuffPost UK 2014 06 12 Retrieved 2024 04 26 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hostile design Cara Chellew Bars barriers and ghost amenities Defensive urban design in Toronto Torontoist Lloyd Alter Hostile design doesn t work for any age group Mother Nature Network Cara Chellew Defensive Inequalities Spacing Magazine When Design Is Hostile On Purpose Popsci 28 July 2016 Retrieved 16 August 2017 HostileDesign org Project homepage of Stuart Semple sticker campaign Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hostile architecture amp oldid 1220936364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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