Several contemporary studies on public space focus on its loss, in relation to an increase in people’s disengagement from these types of spaces. Since the 1960s, a considerable part of urban culture has attempted to develop strategies for people to re-appropriate public space and to ‘inhabit the city again’.
This has defined a line of research that, although now consolidated, is still little known in its complexity. In the effort to create a unified framework for the different attempts through which architecture has historically responded to the rise of spontaneous forms of urban creativity, this paper outlines a short history of design strategies aimed at enabling and encouraging different forms of spatial appropriation. It also highlights a gradual shift from perspective and repeatable rules to site-specific approaches, prompting a new disciplinary convergence between urban planning and design, interior architecture, industrial design and public art.
Volume 1 / Num 1 : “Methodologies for Research”
Format: PDF | 102 color pages | in English
ISSN: 2183-3869| €-
Volume 1 / Num 2 : “Places and non Places”
Format: PDF | 104 color pages | in English
ISSN: 2183-3869| €-
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