The Importance of Visual Sustainability in Urban Design Strategy
Abstract
This research addresses interactions in urban environments—when defined as
interaction types and used as a metric—as they provide an effective strategy
for understanding the relationship between urban heterogeneity and how
we are visually sustained through engagement with our surroundings.
With most of us now living in cities, the importance of visual sustainability
in urban design strategy should not be underestimated. Interaction type
analysis is key to bridging the gap in knowledge which lies in the challenges
posed by the levels of subjectivity inherent in how we see, what we see,
and the difficulty in measuring visual sustainability. The aim of this study
is to explore the philosophy behind how we are sustained by what we see
and its relevance to urban design. By using a mixed methods approach, the
research shows how a practical application of Bergson’s philosophy can be
reconciled with urban design at a strategic level to establish an operational
logic for understanding urban environments, one which does not require
us to identify the meaning or even what it is people have looked at. The
findings suggest that urban density plays less of a role than we might expect
and what is more influential are the elements that hold people’s attention,
in other words, levels of urban activity. The variables comparison points
to the proposal that interaction types have a role to play in urban design
strategy. To understand visual sustainability better we need to understand
three things. Firstly, the role duration plays in the types of interaction we
have with our surroundings. Secondly, how elements that we cannot see
exist on every site, and are important in understanding not only existing
conditions properly but the potential for development. Thirdly, that these
elements that we cannot see are valid, real structures—as real as the physical
structures which act as proxies for them. The main finding of this study is
the suggestion that visual interaction types are the building blocks of visual
sustainability when considered in the context of urban design strategy. What
difference this makes depends on the level of analysis—whether student or
practitioner, commercially oriented, in terms of spatial health and well-being,
or at a more abstract level, in personal development and growth. But the
overarching consideration is that interaction types are able to reveal where
the real city lies and by real city is meant the city we pay attention to. The
emphasis going forward must be on an effective implementation of urban
design strategy by including interaction type because, as city dwellers, it is
we who stand to benefit the most.
Publication date
2024-08-16Funding
Default funderDefault project
Other links
http://hdl.handle.net/2299/28494Metadata
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