Public SpaceCambridge University Press, 1992 - 400 pages This book reveals the social basis for public space use, design and management. The authors - an architect/environmental designer, a landscape architect, an environmental psychologist, and an open space administrator - offer a well-integrated perspective of how to integrate public space and public life. They contend that three critical human dimensions should guide the process of design and management of public space: the users' essential needs, their spatial rights, and the meanings they seek. To develop and explain these three dimensions, the authors draw on the history of public life and public space, evidence from recent social research, and a series of original case studies, all amply illustrated. Public Space offers an innovative approach for adapting the dimensions to the unique social and environmental context of each project. |
Contents
The nature of public life | 22 |
Public space evolving | 50 |
Human dimensions of public space | 85 |
Boston City Hall Plaza Boston Massachusetts | 88 |
Pershing Park Washington D C | 95 |
Lovejoy and Forecourt Fountains Portland Oregon | 104 |
Plaza of the Centre Georges Pompidou Paris France | 110 |
Grand Street Waterfront Park Brooklyn New York | 116 |
Tranehytten Adventure Playground Copenhagen | 171 |
Grace Plaza New York New York | 177 |
Public space meanings and connections | 187 |
Boston Waterfront Park Boston | 191 |
Haymarket Boston Massachusetts | 200 |
Vietnam Veterans Memorial Washington D C | 208 |
Times Square New York New York | 215 |
Making public space | 241 |
Gas Works Park Seattle Washington | 126 |
Rights in public space | 137 |
Woonerf Delft The Netherlands | 139 |
Bryant Park New York New York | 146 |
Barretto Street Neighborhood Park New York New York | 161 |
The process | 292 |
The future of public space | 343 |
The authors | 369 |
384 | |
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Common terms and phrases
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