Abstract

This article engages with the role of what one might tentatively call “secondary” urban spaces, in that while they are public, they are not the most vibrant, populated, or active places. These are not the spaces envisioned in many project illustrations. They are not full of people and activity. They are however a crucial part of a wider texture of urban situations, and important to extending our understanding of seclusion, solitude, and tranquility beyond distant parks and recreation areas. My aim here is to understand the emergence of these spaces in-between; those that are close to the vibrant streets and are embedded in city centers yet which offer a respite from the most bustling urbanity. These spaces, I will argue, more easily allow for the kinds of interactions that can lead to bridging and bonding with the unknown, in addition to the important everyday encounters that occur on central streets and squares. Using qualitative methods which build on Lefebvre’s rhythmanalysis, the discussion will draw on observations of the syntactic properties that condition, enable, and characterize such spaces, and address a series of concepts, including capacity, insulation, sequencing, and interface. A better understanding of such places, it is argued, not only allows a richer set of tools for working with urban design and planning, but offers possibilities for more resilient planning in terms of generating social relations, the emergence of communities, and for cities to manage and withstand extraordinary conditions.

Highlights

  • Journal of Design for Resilience in Architecture & Planning, 2021, 2(Special Issue), 56-73 number of vibrant, open, public spaces for social exchange is seen as central solutions in addressing the problem of rest in contemporary cities (United Nations, 2015)

  • The first aspect—capacity to host change—was clearly tested in the Covid-19 pandemic, wherein the extent to which urban textures were able to respond to restrictions and limitations depended on the closeness, plurality, and redundancy of open space (Legeby & Koch, 2020)

  • Without reducing the importance of larger recreational areas (Samuelsson et al, 2021), it is important to understand the ways in which public spaces are distributed and integrated in an urban texture that allow such diversity

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Summary

Introduction

A growing body of research has in recent years highlighted the importance of spaces for rest and pause in contemporary cities. Journal of Design for Resilience in Architecture & Planning, 2021, 2(Special Issue), 56-73 number of vibrant, open (green), public spaces for social exchange is seen as central solutions in addressing the problem of rest in contemporary cities (United Nations, 2015). The fieldwork draws on Lefebvre’s rhythmanalysis (Lefebvre, 1996b, 2004) and makes use of my own experiences as a participant in urban life, addressing both events and everyday situations and the ways in which our understanding of spaces unfolds over time. Such broad knowledge is complemented by structured visits in two forms: specific, documented research visits (Figure 1) and visits conducted in the course of teaching. Koch / Relative rhythms, urban oases, and spatial resilience / Exploring syntaxes of seclusion, solitude, and tranquility

Rhythmanalysis and Configurative Analysis
Configurational understanding of Stockholm, and the use of open space for seclusion in the pandemic
Gamla Stan
Discussion and Conclusions
Full Text
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