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The Urban Improvise
Improvisation-Based Design for Hybrid Cities
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2020
About this book
A book for architects, designers, planners, and urbanites that explores how cities can embrace improvisation to improve urban life
The built environment in today’s hybrid cities is changing radically. The pervasiveness of networked mobile and embedded devices has transformed a predominantly stable background for human activity into spaces that have a more fluid behavior. Based on their capability to sense, compute, and act in real time, urban spaces have the potential to go beyond planned behaviors and, instead, change and adapt dynamically.
These interactions resemble improvisation in the performing arts, and this book offers a new improvisation-based framework for thinking about future cities. Kristian Kloeckl moves beyond the smart city concept by unlocking performativity, and specifically improvisation, as a new design approach and explores how city lights, buses, plazas, and other urban environments are capable of behavior beyond scripts. Drawing on research of digital cities and design theory, he makes improvisation useful and applicable to the condition of today’s technology-imbued cities and proposes a new future for responsive urban design.
The built environment in today’s hybrid cities is changing radically. The pervasiveness of networked mobile and embedded devices has transformed a predominantly stable background for human activity into spaces that have a more fluid behavior. Based on their capability to sense, compute, and act in real time, urban spaces have the potential to go beyond planned behaviors and, instead, change and adapt dynamically.
These interactions resemble improvisation in the performing arts, and this book offers a new improvisation-based framework for thinking about future cities. Kristian Kloeckl moves beyond the smart city concept by unlocking performativity, and specifically improvisation, as a new design approach and explores how city lights, buses, plazas, and other urban environments are capable of behavior beyond scripts. Drawing on research of digital cities and design theory, he makes improvisation useful and applicable to the condition of today’s technology-imbued cities and proposes a new future for responsive urban design.
Author / Editor information
Kristian Kloeckl is associate professor at Northeastern University’s School of Architecture and Department of Art + Design. He was previously a research scientist at MIT’s Senseable City Lab where he established the lab’s research unit in Singapore.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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CONTENTS
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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1. Introduction
1 -
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2. When the City Begins to Talk
22 -
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3. Interface, Interact, Improvact
57 -
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4. Improvisation as System
79 -
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5. An Improvisation-Based Model for Urban Interaction Design
105 -
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6. Experimentation with Uncertainty and the Unpredictable
143 -
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7. Improvisation as Technique and Practice for Design
170 -
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8. Epilogue: Toward the Urban Improvise
188 -
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Notes
193 -
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Index
211
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
January 7, 2020
eBook ISBN:
9780300249347
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
256
Other:
8 b-w illus.