Module 3
The material in our third module focused on a select list of
prominent urban design theorists. The ideas and philosophies of many offered insight
and new perspective. One particular theorist caught my attention more than the
others. I was very interested in the ideas surrounding place and placelessness
presented by Edward Relph.
Edward Relph is a Canadian geographer who is well known for
his writing on place and placelessness. His work addresses how spaces are
experienced and how they change over time. Relph was a professor and chair of
Social Sciences at the University of Toronto from 1991-2010. The following
quote is what made me decide to focus my writing on his ideologies.
Referring to place Relph says, “It has to evolve, to be
allowed to happen, to grow and change from the direct efforts of those who live
and work in places and care about them...No matter how sophisticated technical
knowledge may be, the understanding of others' lives and problems will always
be partial. Just as outsiders cannot feel their pain, so they cannot experience
their sense of place. I believe, therefore, that it is impossible to make complete
places in which other people can live.”[1]
This quote was very profound to me. The point that place is
often designed and built by outsiders is a direct cause of the flawed urban
system. The outsider (designer, planner, government agency, etc…) cannot truly
understand the intricacies of a specific society inhabiting an urban space.
This theory aligns with some aspects of formal theory of urban design. Formal
theory maintains that the overall aesthetic and cohesiveness of the city should
be emphasized and is directly correlated with a focus on the human scale. Place
must be unique and reflect the society that resides within it. The success or
failure of urban community depends entirely on the efforts of the society which
inhabits that space. I believe this is one of the reasons that Jane Jacobs was successful
in her fight for urban space. Community cannot be created from the outside.
Architects, planners, and engineers cannot create effectual space by
transplanting strategies from outside factors.
For example, the idea of the three main theories of urban
design, discussed in my second blog, can be a flawed strategy for design. My
first blog addressed the inability to successfully design in a linear method.
Classifying urban theory into three distinct categories is linear design. The theories
can lend insight but can also cause an inherent inability to create complete
spaces. This inability is manifested if the design addresses the problem from
the outside with a predetermined theory in mind. When the designer associates
his/her self with one of the three prevailing theories and then progresses into
designing through that “lens” the end result will be placelessness rather than
a cohesive, identifiable community. Place is created from within, by the
members of that place for the members of that place. Community is built from
within, by the members of that space for the members of that space.
Edward Relph states that the notion of creating successful
urban space is somewhat of a misnomer. Place is constantly evolving based on
internal influences of those who work and live within the space. The definition
of successful place making is creating a living space that allows constant
evolution and adaptation due to direct input from its inhabitants.
Edward Relph's place and placelessness provides a profound understanding in regard to the notion of "place" that is crucial in urban design and place-making process.
ReplyDeleteDo you believe that a designer that comes from 'outside' a community can effectively design for that community given that the designer is especially observant and empathetic? I agree that successful design is most often derived from involving the community, but I also believe that there are great designers that have an inherent ability to place themselves in the mindset of a place without actually being of it.
ReplyDeleteYes, I do believe that successful design is possible from the outside. I think that the revelation for me was that a space will be far more successful if those directly effected are involved in the creation of that space. I also believe that there is a limit to how successful an outside designer can be as compared to a design derived from the inhabitants.
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