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Public space

A public space is a place that is open and accessible to the general public. Roads (including the pavement), public squares, parks, and beaches are typically considered public space. To a limited extent, government buildings which are open to the public, such as public libraries, are public spaces, although they tend to have restricted areas and greater limits upon use. Although not considered public space, privately owned buildings or property visible from sidewalks and public thoroughfares may affect the public visual landscape, for example, by outdoor advertising. Recently, the concept of shared space has been advanced to enhance the experience of pedestrians in public space jointly used by automobiles and other vehicles.

Public space has also become something of a touchstone for critical theory in relation to philosophy, urban geography, visual art, cultural studies, social studies and urban design. The term 'public space' is also often misconstrued to mean other things such as 'gathering place', which is an element of the larger concept of social space. Public spaces have often been valued as democratic spaces of congregation and political participation, where groups can vocalize their rights.[1]

Commons are early examples of public space. Malls, regardless of private ownership percentage, are examples of 'public space' since no fees or paid tickets are required for entry. However most indoor shopping malls and strip malls are private property and subject to the rights of the owners.

Filming in public spaces is legal, but shopping malls are privately owned properties and often require permission for photography and video.

Use of public spaces

Right to common passage

In Nordic countries, like Norway, Sweden, Finland, and also Estonia, all nature areas are considered public space, due to a law, the allemansrätten (the right to common passage).

Definition in the United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom a “Public place” includes any highway and any other premises or place to which at the material time the public have or are permitted to have access, whether on payment or otherwise.[2]

Restrictions on state action in public spaces in the United States

If Members of the public had no right whatsoever to distribute leaflets or engage in other expressive activity on government-owned property...then there would be little if any opportunity to exercise their rights of freedom of expression.

— Supreme Court of Canada, defending right to poster on public utility poles and hand out leaflets in public government-owned buildings[3]

In the United States the right of the people to engage in speech and assembly in public places may not be unreasonably restricted by the federal or state government.[4] The government cannot usually limit one's speech beyond what is reasonable in a public space, which is considered to be a public forum (that is, screaming epithets at passers-by can be stopped; proselytizing one's religion probably cannot). In a private—that is, non-public—forum, the government can control one's speech to a much greater degree; for instance, protesting one's objection to medicare reform will not be tolerated in the gallery of the United States Senate. This is not to say that the government can control what one says in their own home or to others; it can only control government property in this way. The concept of a public forum is not limited to physical space or public property, for example, a newspaper might be considered a public forum, but see forum in the legal sense as the term has a specific meaning in United States law.

Parks, malls, beaches, waiting rooms, etc., may be closed at night. As this does not exclude any specific group, it is generally not considered a restriction on public use. Entry to public parks cannot be restricted based upon a user's residence.[5]

Social norms in public spaces

In some cultures, there is no expectation of privacy in a public space, however civil inattention is a process whereby individuals are able to maintain their privacy within a crowd.

Controversy regarding restrictions on use

 
Leyton Marshes, London, an example of land with long established rights of access, and equally long-standing restrictions

Public space is commonly shared and created for open usage throughout the community, whereas private space is owned by individuals or corporations. The area is built for a range of various types of recreation and entertainment. Limitations are imposed in the space to prevent certain actions from occurring—public behavior that is considered obnoxious or out of character (i.e., drug and alcohol consumption, urinating, indecent exposure, etc.)--and are supported by law or ordinance. Through the landscape and spatial organization of public space, the social construction is considered to be privately ruled by the implicit and explicit rules and expectations of the space that are enforced.

Whilst it is generally considered that everyone has a right to access and use public space, as opposed to private space which may have restrictions, there has been some academic interest in how public spaces are managed to exclude certain groups - specifically homeless[6] people and young[7] people.

Measures are taken to make the public space less attractive to them, including the removal or design of benches to restrict their use for sleeping and resting, restricting access to certain times, locking indoor/enclosed areas. Police forces are sometimes involved in moving 'unwanted' members of the public from public spaces. In fact, by not being provided suitable access, disabled people are implicitly excluded from some spaces.

As a site for democracy

Human geographers have argued that in spite of the exclusions that are part of public space, it can nonetheless be conceived of as a site where democracy becomes possible. Geographer Don Mitchell has written extensively on the topic of public space and its relation to democracy, employing Henri Lefebvre's notion of the right to the city in articulating his argument.[8] While democracy and public space don't entirely coincide, it is the potential of their intersection that becomes politically important. Other geographers like Gill Valentine have focused on performativity and visibility in public spaces, which brings a theatrical component or 'space of appearance' that is central to the functioning of a democratic space.[9]

Privatization

A privately owned public space, also known as a privately owned public open space (POPOS), is a public space that is open to the public, but owned by a private entity, typically a commercial property developer. Conversion of publicly owned public spaces to privately owned public spaces is referred to as the privatization of public space, and is a common result of urban redevelopment.[10]

Beginning roughly in the 1960s, the privatization of public space (especially in urban centers) has faced criticism from citizen groups such as the Open Spaces Society. Private-public partnerships have taken significant control of public parks and playgrounds through conservancy groups set up to manage what is considered unmanageable by public agencies. Corporate sponsorship of public leisure areas is ubiquitous, giving open space to the public in exchange for higher air rights. This facilitates the construction of taller buildings with private parks.

In one of the newer U.S. incarnations of the private-public partnership, the business improvement district (BID), private organizations are allowed to tax local businesses and retail establishments so that they might provide special private services such as policing and increased surveillance, trash removal, or street renovation, all of which once fell under the control of public funds.

Semi-public spaces

A broader meaning of public space or place includes also places where everybody can come if they pay, like a café, train, or movie theater. A shop is an example of what is intermediate between the two meanings: everybody can enter and look around without obligation to buy, but activities unrelated to the purpose of the shop are at the discretion of the proprietor.

The halls and streets (including skyways) in a shopping center may be declared a public place and may be open when the shops are closed. Similarly for halls, railway platforms and waiting rooms of public transport; sometimes a travelling ticket is required. A public library is a public place. A rest stop or truck stop is a public space.

For these "semi-public" spaces stricter rules may apply than outside, e.g. regarding dress code, trading, begging, advertising, photography, propaganda, riding rollerskates, skateboards, a Segway, etc.

Public space in design theory

Public space, as a term and as a concept in design, is volatile. There is much conversation around what constitutes public space, what role it plays, and how design should approach and deal with it.

Historical shift

Historically, public space in the west has been limited to town centres, plazas, church squares, i.e. nearly always engineered around a central monument, which informs the program of the space. These spaces acted as the 'commons' of the people; a political, social and cultural arena. Of the thirteen colonies that became the United States, three were comprehensively planned with integrated physical, social, and economic elements. These planned colonies of Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Georgia each placed emphasis on public space, in particular the public square. The plan for Georgia, known as the Oglethorpe Plan created a unique design in which a public square was created for every ward of forty residential lots and four civic or commercial lots. The design has been preserved in the Savannah historic district.[11][12][13]

Jürgen Habermas' concept of the public sphere links its emergence with the development of democracy.[14] A good example of this is the New Deal projects. The New Deal was a brief period in the US under Franklin Delano Roosevelt's government that produced a huge number of public works in an economic effort to boost employment during the depression. The result, however, was more than this. They constituted a legacy of what has been called the cultural infrastructure underlying American public space.[15] The New Deal projects have been credited with significantly contributing to the quality of American life and encouraging unity between all aspects of the community. It has been recently argued, however, that the democratic ideal of public life through the use of public space has deteriorated. As our cities accelerate towards segregation (social, economic, cultural, ethnic), the opportunity for public interaction is on the decline. John Chase writes, "The importance of voluntary and obligatory participation in civic life has been usurped by the consciousness of the arbitrary nature of assigned cultural meanings and by the increasingly important role that consumption of goods and services plays in the formation of individual identity."[16]

Modern critique

Modern architectural critics have lamented on the 'narrative of loss' within the public sphere. That is, modern society has withdrawn from public life that used to inform city centres. Political and social needs, and forums for expression, can now be accessed from the home. This sentiment is reflected in Michael Sorkin's and Mike Davis' declaration of "the end of public space" and the "destruction of any truly democratic urban spaces."[17] Another side of the debate, however, argues that it is people who apply meaning to public space, wherever it may be. It has been suggested that the concepts of public, space, democracy, and citizenship are being redefined by people through lived experience.[18] Discussion has surfaced around the idea that, historically, public space has been inherently contradictory in the way that it has always been exclusive in who has been able to participate. This has caused the "counterpublics", as identified by Nancy Fraser,[19] to establish their own public spaces to respond to their own concerns. These spaces are in constant flux, and in response, its users restructure and reinterpret physical space. An example of this is in the African-American neighbourhood, Baldwin Hills, Los Angeles. Here, a parking lot has evolved into a scene of intense commercial and social activity. Locals gather here to meet and socialise, sell and consume goods. The example has been used to illustrate that the historical ideal of fixed public space around a monument is not viable for a contemporary diverse social range as "no single physical space can represent a completely inclusive 'space of democracy'."[18]

Art in public space

 
Piazza del Popolo in Cesena with the artistic Fontana Masini

This sense of flux and change, informs how contemporary public art has evolved. Temporal art in public spaces has been a long established practice. But the presence of public art has become increasingly prevalent and important within our contemporary cities. Temporal public art is so important because of its ability to respond to, reflect, and explore the context which it inhabits. Patricia Phillips describes the "social desire for an art that is contemporary and timely, that responds to and reflects its temporal and circumstantial context."[20] Public art is an arena for investigation, exploration and articulation of the dense and diverse public landscape. Public art asks its audience to re-imagine, re-experience, re-view and re-live. In the design field, a heavy focus has been turned onto the city as needing to discover new and inspired ways to re-use, re-establish and re-invent the city, in step with an invigorated interest in rejuvenating our cities for a sustainable future. Contemporary design has become obsessed with the need to save the modern city from an industrialized, commercialized, urban pit of a death bed.[citation needed]

Approaching urban design

Contemporary perception of public space has now branched and grown into a multitude of non-traditional sites with a variety of programs in mind. It is for this reason that the way in which design deals with public space as a discipline, has become such a diverse and indefinable field.

Iris Aravot puts forward an interesting approach to the urban design process, with the idea of the 'narrative-myth'. Aravot argues that "conventional analysis and problem solving methods result in fragmentation...of the authentic experience of a city...[and] something of the liveliness of the city as a singular entity is lost."[21] The process of developing a narrative-myth in urban design involves analysing and understanding the unique aspects of the local culture based on Cassirer's five distinctive "symbolic forms".[22] They are myth and religion, art, language, history and science; aspects often disregarded by professional practice. Aravot suggests that the narrative-myth "imposes meaning specifically on what is still inexplicable", i.e. the essence of a city.

See also

References

  1. ^ Caves, R. W. (2004). Encyclopedia of the City. Routledge. p. 549. ISBN 9780415252256.
  2. ^ Section 33 of the Criminal Justice Act 1972.
  3. ^ Petersen, Klaus & Allan C. Hutchinson. "Interpreting Censorship in Canada", University of Toronto Press, 1999.
  4. ^ First Amendment to the United States Constitution
  5. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-14. Retrieved 2011-10-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ "Illegal to be Homeless". National Coalition for the Homeless. 2004.
  7. ^ Malone, K. "Children, Youth and Sustainable Cities" (PDF). Local Environment. 6 (1).
  8. ^ Mitchell, Don. 2003, The Right to the City: Social Justice and the Fight for Public Space. New York: The Guilford Press.
  9. ^ Valentine, Gill, 1996, Children should be seen and not heard: the production and transgression of adults' public space . Urban Geography 17, 205-220.
  10. ^ Vasagar, Jeevan (11 June 2012). "Privately owned public space: where are they and who owns them?". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2012-09-01.
  11. ^ Fries, Sylvia. The Urban Idea in Colonial America. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1977. Chapters 3 and 5 discuss the designs of Pennsylvania and Georgia
  12. ^ Wilson, Thomas D. The Oglethorpe Plan. Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Press, 2012. See chapter 3 for design details.
  13. ^ Rivers, William J. A Sketch of the History of South Carolina. Charleston: McCarter and Co., 1856. See pp. 358-394 for design details; Carolina thus far has received less attention in the urban design literature than Pennsylvania or Georgia
  14. ^ Jurgen Habermas, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1989)
  15. ^ Robert D. Leighninger, Jr., 1996, 'Cultural Infrastructure: The Legacy of New Deal Public Space', Journal of Architectural Education, Vol. 49, No. 4 (May, 1996), pp. 226-236
  16. ^ John Chase, "The Garret, the Boardroom, and the Amusement Park," JAE 47/2 (November 1993)
  17. ^ Michael Sorkin, "Introduction", and Mike Davis, "Fortress Los Angeles: The Militarization of Urban Space," in Michael Sorkin, ed. Variations on a Theme Park: The New American City and the End of Public Space (New York: Hill and Wang, 1992)
  18. ^ a b Margaret Crawford. 1995, "Contesting the Public Realm: Struggles over Public Space in Los Angeles", Journal of Architectural Education, Vol. 49, No. 1 (Sep, 1995) pp. 4-9
  19. ^ Nancy Fraser, "Rethinking the Public Sphere: A Contribution to the Critique of Actually Existing Democracy," in Bruce Robbins, ed., The Phantom Public Sphere (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993)
  20. ^ Patricie C. Philips, 1989, "Temporality and Public Art", Art Journal, Vol. 48, No. 4, Critical Issues in Public Art (Winter, 1989), pp. 331-335
  21. ^ Iris Aravot, "Narrative-Myth and Urban Design", Journal of Architectural Education (1984-), Vol. 49, No. 2 (Nov., 1995), pp. 79-91
  22. ^ Ernst Cassirer, An Essay on Man (New York: Bantam, 1970)

Bibliography

  • Sonia Curnier (2023). Universal Singular. Public Space Design of the Early 21st Century. Basel/Berlin/Boston: Birkhäuser Verlag, ISBN 978-3-0356-2094-8.
  • Hoidn, Barbara. “Demo:Polis –The Right to Public Space” in Tom Bieling (Ed.): Design (&) Activism: Perspectives on Design as Activism and Activism as Design, Milano: Mimesis, 2019, p. 87–96 ISBN 978-8869772412
  • Illegal to be Homeless. National Coalition for the Homeless (2004).
  • Maasik, Sonia, and Jack Solomon. Signs of Life in the USA Readings on Popular Culture for Writers. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2006.
  • Malone, K. "Children, Youth and Sustainable Cities". Local Environment 6 (1).
  • "Conclusions of the International Seminar on the Planning of Collectively-Used Spaces in Towns", in: Monumentum (Louvain), Vol. 18–19, 1979, pp. 129–135.

External links

  •   Media related to Public space at Wikimedia Commons
  • European Archive of Urban Public Space
  • Project for Public Spaces

public, space, public, redirects, here, song, kelis, featuring, public, film, public, film, examples, perspective, this, united, states, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, united, states, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, united, states, app. In public redirects here For the song by Kelis featuring Nas see In Public For the film see In Public film The examples and perspective in this United States may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this United States discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new United States as appropriate September 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message A public space is a place that is open and accessible to the general public Roads including the pavement public squares parks and beaches are typically considered public space To a limited extent government buildings which are open to the public such as public libraries are public spaces although they tend to have restricted areas and greater limits upon use Although not considered public space privately owned buildings or property visible from sidewalks and public thoroughfares may affect the public visual landscape for example by outdoor advertising Recently the concept of shared space has been advanced to enhance the experience of pedestrians in public space jointly used by automobiles and other vehicles Urban space Piazza della Signoria Florence Public space has also become something of a touchstone for critical theory in relation to philosophy urban geography visual art cultural studies social studies and urban design The term public space is also often misconstrued to mean other things such as gathering place which is an element of the larger concept of social space Public spaces have often been valued as democratic spaces of congregation and political participation where groups can vocalize their rights 1 Commons are early examples of public space Malls regardless of private ownership percentage are examples of public space since no fees or paid tickets are required for entry However most indoor shopping malls and strip malls are private property and subject to the rights of the owners Filming in public spaces is legal but shopping malls are privately owned properties and often require permission for photography and video Contents 1 Use of public spaces 1 1 Right to common passage 1 2 Definition in the United Kingdom 1 3 Restrictions on state action in public spaces in the United States 1 4 Social norms in public spaces 1 5 Controversy regarding restrictions on use 1 6 As a site for democracy 1 7 Privatization 1 8 Semi public spaces 2 Public space in design theory 2 1 Historical shift 2 2 Modern critique 2 3 Art in public space 2 4 Approaching urban design 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksUse of public spaces EditRight to common passage Edit In Nordic countries like Norway Sweden Finland and also Estonia all nature areas are considered public space due to a law the allemansratten the right to common passage Definition in the United Kingdom Edit In the United Kingdom a Public place includes any highway and any other premises or place to which at the material time the public have or are permitted to have access whether on payment or otherwise 2 Restrictions on state action in public spaces in the United States Edit If Members of the public had no right whatsoever to distribute leaflets or engage in other expressive activity on government owned property then there would be little if any opportunity to exercise their rights of freedom of expression Supreme Court of Canada defending right to poster on public utility poles and hand out leaflets in public government owned buildings 3 In the United States the right of the people to engage in speech and assembly in public places may not be unreasonably restricted by the federal or state government 4 The government cannot usually limit one s speech beyond what is reasonable in a public space which is considered to be a public forum that is screaming epithets at passers by can be stopped proselytizing one s religion probably cannot In a private that is non public forum the government can control one s speech to a much greater degree for instance protesting one s objection to medicare reform will not be tolerated in the gallery of the United States Senate This is not to say that the government can control what one says in their own home or to others it can only control government property in this way The concept of a public forum is not limited to physical space or public property for example a newspaper might be considered a public forum but see forum in the legal sense as the term has a specific meaning in United States law Parks malls beaches waiting rooms etc may be closed at night As this does not exclude any specific group it is generally not considered a restriction on public use Entry to public parks cannot be restricted based upon a user s residence 5 Social norms in public spaces Edit In some cultures there is no expectation of privacy in a public space however civil inattention is a process whereby individuals are able to maintain their privacy within a crowd Controversy regarding restrictions on use Edit Leyton Marshes London an example of land with long established rights of access and equally long standing restrictions Public space is commonly shared and created for open usage throughout the community whereas private space is owned by individuals or corporations The area is built for a range of various types of recreation and entertainment Limitations are imposed in the space to prevent certain actions from occurring public behavior that is considered obnoxious or out of character i e drug and alcohol consumption urinating indecent exposure etc and are supported by law or ordinance Through the landscape and spatial organization of public space the social construction is considered to be privately ruled by the implicit and explicit rules and expectations of the space that are enforced Whilst it is generally considered that everyone has a right to access and use public space as opposed to private space which may have restrictions there has been some academic interest in how public spaces are managed to exclude certain groups specifically homeless 6 people and young 7 people Measures are taken to make the public space less attractive to them including the removal or design of benches to restrict their use for sleeping and resting restricting access to certain times locking indoor enclosed areas Police forces are sometimes involved in moving unwanted members of the public from public spaces In fact by not being provided suitable access disabled people are implicitly excluded from some spaces As a site for democracy Edit Human geographers have argued that in spite of the exclusions that are part of public space it can nonetheless be conceived of as a site where democracy becomes possible Geographer Don Mitchell has written extensively on the topic of public space and its relation to democracy employing Henri Lefebvre s notion of the right to the city in articulating his argument 8 While democracy and public space don t entirely coincide it is the potential of their intersection that becomes politically important Other geographers like Gill Valentine have focused on performativity and visibility in public spaces which brings a theatrical component or space of appearance that is central to the functioning of a democratic space 9 Privatization Edit Main article Privately owned public space A privately owned public space also known as a privately owned public open space POPOS is a public space that is open to the public but owned by a private entity typically a commercial property developer Conversion of publicly owned public spaces to privately owned public spaces is referred to as the privatization of public space and is a common result of urban redevelopment 10 Beginning roughly in the 1960s the privatization of public space especially in urban centers has faced criticism from citizen groups such as the Open Spaces Society Private public partnerships have taken significant control of public parks and playgrounds through conservancy groups set up to manage what is considered unmanageable by public agencies Corporate sponsorship of public leisure areas is ubiquitous giving open space to the public in exchange for higher air rights This facilitates the construction of taller buildings with private parks In one of the newer U S incarnations of the private public partnership the business improvement district BID private organizations are allowed to tax local businesses and retail establishments so that they might provide special private services such as policing and increased surveillance trash removal or street renovation all of which once fell under the control of public funds Semi public spaces Edit A broader meaning of public space or place includes also places where everybody can come if they pay like a cafe train or movie theater A shop is an example of what is intermediate between the two meanings everybody can enter and look around without obligation to buy but activities unrelated to the purpose of the shop are at the discretion of the proprietor The halls and streets including skyways in a shopping center may be declared a public place and may be open when the shops are closed Similarly for halls railway platforms and waiting rooms of public transport sometimes a travelling ticket is required A public library is a public place A rest stop or truck stop is a public space For these semi public spaces stricter rules may apply than outside e g regarding dress code trading begging advertising photography propaganda riding rollerskates skateboards a Segway etc Public space in design theory EditPublic space as a term and as a concept in design is volatile There is much conversation around what constitutes public space what role it plays and how design should approach and deal with it Historical shift Edit Historically public space in the west has been limited to town centres plazas church squares i e nearly always engineered around a central monument which informs the program of the space These spaces acted as the commons of the people a political social and cultural arena Of the thirteen colonies that became the United States three were comprehensively planned with integrated physical social and economic elements These planned colonies of Carolina Pennsylvania and Georgia each placed emphasis on public space in particular the public square The plan for Georgia known as the Oglethorpe Plan created a unique design in which a public square was created for every ward of forty residential lots and four civic or commercial lots The design has been preserved in the Savannah historic district 11 12 13 Jurgen Habermas concept of the public sphere links its emergence with the development of democracy 14 A good example of this is the New Deal projects The New Deal was a brief period in the US under Franklin Delano Roosevelt s government that produced a huge number of public works in an economic effort to boost employment during the depression The result however was more than this They constituted a legacy of what has been called the cultural infrastructure underlying American public space 15 The New Deal projects have been credited with significantly contributing to the quality of American life and encouraging unity between all aspects of the community It has been recently argued however that the democratic ideal of public life through the use of public space has deteriorated As our cities accelerate towards segregation social economic cultural ethnic the opportunity for public interaction is on the decline John Chase writes The importance of voluntary and obligatory participation in civic life has been usurped by the consciousness of the arbitrary nature of assigned cultural meanings and by the increasingly important role that consumption of goods and services plays in the formation of individual identity 16 Modern critique Edit Modern architectural critics have lamented on the narrative of loss within the public sphere That is modern society has withdrawn from public life that used to inform city centres Political and social needs and forums for expression can now be accessed from the home This sentiment is reflected in Michael Sorkin s and Mike Davis declaration of the end of public space and the destruction of any truly democratic urban spaces 17 Another side of the debate however argues that it is people who apply meaning to public space wherever it may be It has been suggested that the concepts of public space democracy and citizenship are being redefined by people through lived experience 18 Discussion has surfaced around the idea that historically public space has been inherently contradictory in the way that it has always been exclusive in who has been able to participate This has caused the counterpublics as identified by Nancy Fraser 19 to establish their own public spaces to respond to their own concerns These spaces are in constant flux and in response its users restructure and reinterpret physical space An example of this is in the African American neighbourhood Baldwin Hills Los Angeles Here a parking lot has evolved into a scene of intense commercial and social activity Locals gather here to meet and socialise sell and consume goods The example has been used to illustrate that the historical ideal of fixed public space around a monument is not viable for a contemporary diverse social range as no single physical space can represent a completely inclusive space of democracy 18 Art in public space Edit Piazza del Popolo in Cesena with the artistic Fontana Masini Martin Firrell The Royal National Theatre London 2016 Main article Public artSee also Anti monumentalism This sense of flux and change informs how contemporary public art has evolved Temporal art in public spaces has been a long established practice But the presence of public art has become increasingly prevalent and important within our contemporary cities Temporal public art is so important because of its ability to respond to reflect and explore the context which it inhabits Patricia Phillips describes the social desire for an art that is contemporary and timely that responds to and reflects its temporal and circumstantial context 20 Public art is an arena for investigation exploration and articulation of the dense and diverse public landscape Public art asks its audience to re imagine re experience re view and re live In the design field a heavy focus has been turned onto the city as needing to discover new and inspired ways to re use re establish and re invent the city in step with an invigorated interest in rejuvenating our cities for a sustainable future Contemporary design has become obsessed with the need to save the modern city from an industrialized commercialized urban pit of a death bed citation needed Approaching urban design Edit Contemporary perception of public space has now branched and grown into a multitude of non traditional sites with a variety of programs in mind It is for this reason that the way in which design deals with public space as a discipline has become such a diverse and indefinable field Iris Aravot puts forward an interesting approach to the urban design process with the idea of the narrative myth Aravot argues that conventional analysis and problem solving methods result in fragmentation of the authentic experience of a city and something of the liveliness of the city as a singular entity is lost 21 The process of developing a narrative myth in urban design involves analysing and understanding the unique aspects of the local culture based on Cassirer s five distinctive symbolic forms 22 They are myth and religion art language history and science aspects often disregarded by professional practice Aravot suggests that the narrative myth imposes meaning specifically on what is still inexplicable i e the essence of a city See also EditAgora Busking Enclosure Footpath Freedom of panorama Girls at Dhabas Guerrilla gardening History of Public Library Advocacy Mobility transition Principles of Intelligent Urbanism Public art Public display of affection Public indecency Public land Public Library Advocacy Public nudity Speakers Corner Street photography Terrorism Act 2000 UK law Toronto Public Space Committee Third place community Urban design Urban vitality Village greenReferences Edit Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 549 ISBN 9780415252256 Section 33 of the Criminal Justice Act 1972 Petersen Klaus amp Allan C Hutchinson Interpreting Censorship in Canada University of Toronto Press 1999 First Amendment to the United States Constitution Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 04 14 Retrieved 2011 10 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Illegal to be Homeless National Coalition for the Homeless 2004 Malone K Children Youth and Sustainable Cities PDF Local Environment 6 1 Mitchell Don 2003 The Right to the City Social Justice and the Fight for Public Space New York The Guilford Press Valentine Gill 1996 Children should be seen and not heard the production and transgression of adults public space Urban Geography 17 205 220 Vasagar Jeevan 11 June 2012 Privately owned public space where are they and who owns them The Guardian London Retrieved 2012 09 01 Fries Sylvia The Urban Idea in Colonial America Philadelphia Temple University Press 1977 Chapters 3 and 5 discuss the designs of Pennsylvania and Georgia Wilson Thomas D The Oglethorpe Plan Charlottesville VA University of Virginia Press 2012 See chapter 3 for design details Rivers William J A Sketch of the History of South Carolina Charleston McCarter and Co 1856 See pp 358 394 for design details Carolina thus far has received less attention in the urban design literature than Pennsylvania or Georgia Jurgen Habermas The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere An Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society Cambridge MA MIT Press 1989 Robert D Leighninger Jr 1996 Cultural Infrastructure The Legacy of New Deal Public Space Journal of Architectural Education Vol 49 No 4 May 1996 pp 226 236 John Chase The Garret the Boardroom and the Amusement Park JAE 47 2 November 1993 Michael Sorkin Introduction and Mike Davis Fortress Los Angeles The Militarization of Urban Space in Michael Sorkin ed Variations on a Theme Park The New American City and the End of Public Space New York Hill and Wang 1992 a b Margaret Crawford 1995 Contesting the Public Realm Struggles over Public Space in Los Angeles Journal of Architectural Education Vol 49 No 1 Sep 1995 pp 4 9 Nancy Fraser Rethinking the Public Sphere A Contribution to the Critique of Actually Existing Democracy in Bruce Robbins ed The Phantom Public Sphere Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1993 Patricie C Philips 1989 Temporality and Public Art Art Journal Vol 48 No 4 Critical Issues in Public Art Winter 1989 pp 331 335 Iris Aravot Narrative Myth and Urban Design Journal of Architectural Education 1984 Vol 49 No 2 Nov 1995 pp 79 91 Ernst Cassirer An Essay on Man New York Bantam 1970 Bibliography EditSonia Curnier 2023 Universal Singular Public Space Design of the Early 21st Century Basel Berlin Boston Birkhauser Verlag ISBN 978 3 0356 2094 8 Hoidn Barbara Demo Polis The Right to Public Space in Tom Bieling Ed Design amp Activism Perspectives on Design as Activism and Activism as Design Milano Mimesis 2019 p 87 96 ISBN 978 8869772412 Illegal to be Homeless National Coalition for the Homeless 2004 Maasik Sonia and Jack Solomon Signs of Life in the USA Readings on Popular Culture for Writers Boston Bedford St Martin s 2006 Malone K Children Youth and Sustainable Cities Local Environment 6 1 Conclusions of the International Seminar on the Planning of Collectively Used Spaces in Towns in Monumentum Louvain Vol 18 19 1979 pp 129 135 External links Edit Media related to Public space at Wikimedia Commons European Archive of Urban Public Space Project for Public Spaces Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Public space amp oldid 1141157628, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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