UNCOVER FUTURE OF Placemaking 2023 (original) (raw)
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2020
It is surprising that only now leisure studies are starting to look at the importance of the physical environment (i.e. natural and built environments). Recently, an increasing number of research studies were conducted on leisure and space but most, if not all, were unidirectional, meaning that they only observed the influence of place on leisure. Consequently, research regarding the impact of leisure on place has been scarce. Specifically, this paper presents the concept of place and how it is understood in the field of geography. Using Stebbins’s Serious Leisure Perspective (SLP), this paper: (1) examines how leisure can be a generator of place, (2) illustrates Stebbins’s SLP and the three types of leisure it contains, and (3) demonstrates how serious leisure has the ability to generate place and culture.
AoIR Selected Papers of Internet Research
This panel introduces and critically examines the concept of "digital placemaking" as practices that create emotional attachments to place through digital media use. As populations and the texts they produce become increasingly mobile, such practices are proliferating, and a striking array of applications and uses have emerged which exploit the affordances of mobile media to foster an ability to navigate, understand, connect to, and gain a sense of belonging and familiarity in place. The concept of digital placemaking is both a theoretical and applied response to the spatial fragmentation, banal physical environments, and community disintegration thought to have accompanied the speed and scale of globalization—the implications of which include suggestions that our collective sense of place has been disrupted, leaving people unsure of their belonging within conditions and boundaries that seem increasingly fluid. While it is imperative to attend to the shifting social, econo...
The emergence of creative and digital place-making: A scoping review across disciplines
New Media & Society
The concept of ‘place-making’ emerged in media studies in 2015, but to date, there has been little theoretical engagement with the term. The primary research question this scoping review answers is how is ‘place-making’ defined across disciplines and which methodologies have been applied to creative and digital projects? A bibliometric analysis of 1974 publications from Web of Science (published in the last 30 years) were analysed to (1) define ‘place-making’ across disciplines, (2) model common themes in scholarship, (3) identify the methodologies used and (4) understand the impacts on citizens. The results show that ‘place-making’ first appeared in geography/urban studies in 1960s, was then adopted as ‘creative placemaking’ in the creative industries, and in the past 5 years (since 2015), it has appeared as ‘digital placemaking’ in media studies. It also highlighted areas (i.e. gaps) for future research into ‘creative placemaking’ and ‘digital place-making’ practices for cultural ...
Theory of Place in Public Space
Urban Planning
Place as a theory fails to clearly articulate linkages between meaning and physical settings for chosen activities in public space. In addressing these issues, the meaning of user behaviour in public space is described by affective and cognitive images of the physical setting; a theoretical conceptualisation of individual experiences which include overlapping social, cultural, and educational contexts. The results of a survey of 160 users across four public spaces found that affect framed cognitive evaluations of design elements for anticipated behaviour. A two-stage process suggesting place-making in design need to shift emphases from articulating preferences to enabling interpretation and opportunity. Within this theoretical framework, the argument is presented that a focus on aligning design with public expectation at a point in time will lead to temporal popularity of location, to popular places that will be presented for redevelopment at some future point in time when their pop...
Placemaking: The Power To Change
Journal of Biourbanism, 2017
Placemaking is an approach to designing and planning public spaces, including their management, which is becoming widespread not only in the United States but worldwide. The idea of placemaking is revolutionary because of its approach to urban issues that opens up new possibilities of participatory design. The focus of the practice is on the place, consequently on the community that uses and lives in it because public space symbolizes the “connective tissue” of communities, hence the importance of its care. This paper outlines the issues and major trends emerging from recent placemaking experiences.
Abstract - How people use public spaces varies according to the cities and social groups, and changes over time. This change may become more intensive with the increasing pervasiveness of technology. ICTs and their devices are opening new possibilities to enjoy public spaces and interact with others and the environment. This makes the call for advancing insights on how people use urban spaces, what their needs and preferences are, and the role ITC plays in people’s engagement with spaces. The workshop organised in February 2017 in Lisbon offered a good opportunity to gather meaningful data on these issues. Participants, coming from 10 different European countries, answered an online survey about their outdoors behaviours, and the values given to public spaces and digital technology. The view of young and prospective experts is therefore a valuable source to better understand the process of establishing participative strategies towards responsible public spaces, and how to approach ICTs to support co-creation and inclusiveness in different European frameworks.This chapter presents an analysis of this survey.