Sense of home, sense of place : a morpho-typological comparative study of Florida and Queensland


Autoria(s): Guaralda, Mirko; Lawson, Gill M.; Miller, Evonne
Contribuinte(s)

Cavallo, Roberto

Komossa, Susanne

Marzot, Nicola

Berghauser Pont, Meta

Kuijper, Joran

Data(s)

2014

Resumo

Cities in the 21st century have become layered and complex systems not only in terms of physical form, but also social and cultural structure. Consolidated tools to analyze the urban environment have today to be improved including a strong interdisciplinary perspective in order to understand and manage the unprecedented complexity our cities are facing. Redevelopments, new estates, internal and external migrations are all dynamics which are deeply modifying the built environment directly or indirectly also affecting local identity, culture and social structure. This paper investigates the relationship between urban form and social behaviors, with particular attention to the perception of the built environment and its use by long term residents, recent migrants as well as tourists. A comparative study is suggested between South East Queensland and Florida; this two regions share common features such as subtropical climate, similar lifestyle, leisure cities and canal estates. Neighborhoods on the Gold and Sunshine Coasts have been designed using the communities of Florida, such as Celebration or Seaside, as models. These regions share also significant migration processes, similar social problems and high crime rates, which directly affect the local economies. Comparing Florida and SEQ could provide an understanding of different strategies adopted and how urban development and lifestyle can be managed maintaining social equity and security. This study, investigates people’s perception of built form and how this affects the use of public space. The relationship between built environment and social behaviour has been previously investigated, for example by environmental psychology; the innovation proposed by this research is to study the perception of place in leisure cities at multiple levels. Locals, migrants and tourists have different understanding of the built form in the same location; this understanding affects the use of space and the attitude to visit or avoid some precincts. The research methodology integrates traditional morpho-typological investigations with qualitative methods; data are collected in the first phase through online surveys about perception of urban forms. Findings guide then the selection of neighbourhoods to be investigated in detail through questionnaires and Nolli maps, specifying morphological regions as well as recurrent building typologies. A final phase includes interviews with selected stakeholders. Major urban projects are discussed addressing how they are used and perceived by locals, migrants or tourists; the comparison between SEQ and Florida allows the identification of strategies to address migration issues in both regions with particular attention to urban form and placemaking dynamics.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/74383/

Publicador

IOS Press

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/74383/1/Sense_of_Home_-_Sense_of_Place.pdf

http://www.iospress.nl/book/new-urban-configurations/

Guaralda, Mirko, Lawson, Gill M., & Miller, Evonne (2014) Sense of home, sense of place : a morpho-typological comparative study of Florida and Queensland. In Cavallo, Roberto, Komossa, Susanne, Marzot, Nicola, Berghauser Pont, Meta, & Kuijper, Joran (Eds.) New Urban Configurations, IOS Press, Delft, The Nederlands, pp. 567-573.

THE UNITED STATES ST/2011002514

Direitos

Copyright 2014 [please consult the author]

Fonte

Children & Youth Research Centre; School of Design; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #120100 ARCHITECTURE #Urban Complexity #Morpho-Typological Research #Social Behaviors
Tipo

Conference Paper