Introduction: Making the civic city: Architectural interventions and experiments in the urban

Daryl Martin, Alice Wilson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This Special Feature seeks to inform contemporary debates about the role of architectural design on the development (or not) of civic cultures within our cities. Contributors to this Special Feature present research that covers a wide spectrum of case studies that demonstrate the influence of urban design on the articulation of new models of citizenship, and the role of architecture in shaping patterns of exclusion in contemporary cities. In response to these issues, we highlight how the effects of architectural elements within their individual buildings can have much wider social implications in terms of the often impoverished dynamics of the urban spaces they foster; we offer examples of how urban infrastructures hold the potential for animating more just public cultures; and we review examples of the convivial cultures that support citizenship on the ground in cities today. In the final analysis of the impact of architectural interventions in the development of civic cultures, we argue that urban researchers should work with methods that trace the sonic qualities of public space in order to supplement visual approaches to the urban.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages11
JournalCity
Volume28
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Jun 2024

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Keywords

  • Architecture
  • Citizenship
  • Conviviality
  • Public space
  • Urban infrastructure

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