Annual Report for 2021

Prepared by Stefania Ragozino, Christine Mady, and Tihomir Viderman, supported by TG members

 

Introduction 

Public Spaces and Urban Cultures (PSUC) is a thematic group established in April 2010 with the initiative of Sabine Knierbein (Associate Professor, TU Vienna, Austria), Ceren Sezer (Chair of Urban Design and Institute for Urban Design and European Urbanism, RWTH Aachen University, Germany) and Chiara Tornaghi (Associate Professor, Coventry University, UK). The main aim of the group is to with the goal of promoting an international and interdisciplinary exchange on public spaces and urban cultures across research and practices. For more than 10 years, this thematic group has informed  research, planning and design agendas within and beyond the AESOP community. 

Despite logistical difficulties due to the Covid-19 pandemic in 2021, the Thematic Group continued its endeavours to involve practitioners, academics, governmental and non-governmental professionals, and further interest groups into the TG’s activities and exchange knowledge across disciplines and domains of action through meetings, workshops, conferences and roundtables mainly conducted online. During 2021, the group’s membership increased to over 140 professionals from research, practice and urban activism, working with public space and engaging in urban cultures. The membership is steadily growing both in Europe and beyond.

 

Internal organization of the group 

The thematic group’s activities are discussed and organized by a collective made up of group members.. This core group continuously attends to the tasks that are central to the success of the thematic group:

-        establishing and promoting the Group’s agenda (working topics, calls, publications, events);

-        managing communication with the thematic group’s members, broader audiences and the AESOP Secretary General (AESOP TG blog, Facebook page, mailing list, newsletter);

-        preparing meetings and annual reports;

-        disseminating scientific results;

-        achieving and using synergies of group’s membership to promote research, exchange and publications.

 

The internal organization of the group is structured as follows: 

Group Coordination: Stefania Ragozino (Main Coordinator, Italy), Christine Mady (Lebanon) and Tihomir Viderman (Germany).

Active members: Patricia Aelbrecht (UK), Nadia Charalambous (UK), Gabriella Esposito De Vita (Italy), Sabine Knierbein (Austria), Christine Mady (Lebanon), Matej Niksic (Slovenia), Stefania Ragozino (Italy), Nikolai Roskamm (Germany), Mohamed Saleh (The Netherlands), Sara Santos Cruz (Portugal), Ceren Sezer (The Netherlands), Socrates Stratis (Cyprus), Tihomir Viderman (Germany), Burcu Yigit Turan (Sweden). 

Advisory Board: Ali Madanipour (University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK); Sophie Watson (Open University, UK); Sabine Knierbein (TU Vienna, Austria); Gabriella Esposito De Vita (CNR-IRISS National Research Council of Italy); Christine Mady (since August 2021, Notre Dame University-Louaize, Lebanon).

 

The list of members who (co-)organized meetings in 2021: 

Christine Mady (Lebanon), Stefania Ragozino (Italy), Tihomir Viderman (Germany), Regions in Recovery. Building Sustainable Futures - Global E-Festival, Special Session 44. AESOP V - What's going on in Public Spaces and Urban Cultures? Updates on Current Research, Policy and Practice, online event, 2-18/06/2021 

Patricia Aelbrecht (UK), Ceren Sezer (Germany), AESOP 2021 Online Conference - Adapting Planning: Rethinking Planning Practices, Faculty of Architecture, Gdańsk University of Technology, Poland, 12-14/07/2021 

Sabine Knierbein, Olivia Kafka, Angelika Gabauer (Austria), Christine Mady (Lebanon), Stefania Ragozino (Italy), Tihomir Viderman (Germany), AESOP TG PSUC Fika, Technische Universitat, Wien, Austria, 14/10/2021 

Evie Athanassiou, Athina Vitopoulou, Matina Kapsali, Maria Karagianni (Greece), Sara Santos Cruz (Portugal), Burcu Yigit Turan (Sweden), AESOP TG Conference Thessaloniki BETWEEN THE HOME & THE SQUARE. bridging the boundaries of public space, School of Architecture, Aristotle University, Thessaloniki, Greece, 22-23/10/2021

  

The list of members who (co-)organize meetings in 2022: 

Stefania Ragozino (Italy), Tihomir Viderman (Germany), AESOP Annual Congress Tartu Space for Species: Redefining Spatial Justice, TRACK #2 CULTURE: Reinterpreting the spatial value of culture, heritage and tourism, Estonian University of Life Sciences, 25-29/07/2022 

 

Group’s activities 

This year was dedicated to the development and conclusion of activities related to the working umbrella theme Public Spaces: Knowledge transition between Research, Policy and Practice (2019-2022):

https://www.aesop-planning.eu/blogs/posts/en_GB/urban-cultures-and-public-spaces/2020/01/13/readabout/call-for-interest-public-spaces-knowledge-transition-between-research-policy-and-practice-deadline-15-february-2020)

The first meeting to this theme took place in May 2019 in Cardiff, UK, and the second in July 2019 in Venice, Italy. During 2020 and 2021, due to the pandemic the meetings took place online, in September 2020 in Vienna, Austria, and in Ljubljana, Slovenia, in July 2021, in Gdańsk,Poland, in October 2021 in Vienna, Austria, and in October 2021 in Thessaloniki, Greece. 

Since 2021, organizational activities (Track #2 CULTURE text editing, call for abstract dissemination, call for papers options) have been developed for thematic group’s participation at the AESOP Congress in Tartu (Estonia, 25th-29th July 2022). During the annual congress, as usual a group’s meeting is scheduled for presenting the group and discussing the new umbrella topic 2022-2024 (a call for events and contributions is planned to be launched in September 2022). The group is involved in chairing the Track #2 “CULTURE: Reinterpreting the spatial value of culture, heritage and tourism”. 

The TG has started to support the project “Hands-on Famagusta” (http://www.handsonfamagusta.org/home)  by contributing to the solidarity network for Famagusta, Cyprus. The solidarity network supports collective and public activities for Famagustians to claim their common public infrastructures in a reunified island. It also supports the safe return of those Famagustians who are deprived of their homes, and as such countering the unilateral opening of Varosha by Turkish authorities disregarding the United Nations resolutions. The solidarity network consists of Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot residents of Famagusta as well as Cypriots from all over the island and active citizens from all over the world. On Friday, January 14th 2022, 18.00 Cyprus time (CET+1) Hands-on Famagusta (HoF) Open Doors event will take place online, in this occasion the TG PSUC officialise its solidarity to the project and new activities will be programmed. 

The AESOP TG PSUC Workshop Cardiff “Knowledge Exchange Workshop in Public Realm Design Research and Policy” (Institution: Cardiff University, UK; Local organizers: Patricia Aelbrecht, Hesam Kamalipour, Nastaran Peimani) and the AESOP TG PSUC Conference Uppsala “What is the problem now? Searching for the radical turns in theory and praxis of public space” (Institution: Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences; Local organizers: Burcu Yigit Turan, Mia Ågren, Johan Pries) were accepted within the current working theme but postponed for new thematic call 2022-2024 due to pandemics and logistic issues. 

 

Table of the TG’s current working theme events (2019-2022) 

Date, Title and place

Local organizer

AESOP TG Representative

Contact

 

2019

15/05/2019

AESOP TG PSUC Workshop - Workshop of Knowledge Exchange between Research and Practice on ‘Public Space Design with Social Cohesion and Intercultural Dialogue in mind’

Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK

Patricia Aelbrecht

Ceren Sezer (Germany)

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9-13/07/2019

AESOP Annual Congress Venice 2019 - Track #15, Tourism, public spaces and urban cultures

IUAV, Venice, Italy

 

Gabriella Esposito De Vita (Italy), Stefania Ragozino (Italy), Ceren Sezer (Germany)

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2020

14/09/2020

AESOP TG PSUC Webinar - Power to co-produce: careful power distribution in collaborative city-making. Practices/pedagogies/policies

Technische Universitat, Wien, Austria

Sabine Knierbein

 

 

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23-24/09/2020

AESOP TG PSUC Roundtables Ljubljana - Roundtables (1) Public Spaces - Knowledge Transition Between Research, Policy and Practice; Roundtable (2) Moving Around our Cities in the Times of Epidemics – the Changed Demand for Public Spaces

Urban Planning Institute of the Republic of Slovenia

Matej Niksic

Alenka Fikfak

Christine Mady (Lebanon), Ceren Sezer (Germany)

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22/09/2020

AESOP TG PSUC Roundtable Venice - Making Room, Social innovation in urban planning

IUAV of Venice, Italy

Elena Ostanel

Nadia Charalambous (UK), Gabriella Esposito De Vita (Italy), Christine Mady (Lebanon), Ceren Sezer (Germany)

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2021

15/06/2021

AESOP TG PSUC Special Sessions RSA - What's going on in Public Spaces and Urban Cultures? Updates on Current Research, Policy and Practice. Regions in Recovery | Building Sustainable Futures - Global E-Festival

online event

 

Christine Mady (Lebanon), Stefania Ragozino (Italy), Tihomir Viderman (Germany)

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12-14/07/2021

AESOP 2021 Online Conference Gdańsk- Adapting Planning: Rethinking Planning Practices

Faculty of Architecture, Gdańsk University of Technology, Poland

 

Patricia Aelbrecht (UK), Ceren Sezer (Germany)

 

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14/10/2021

AESOP TG PSUC Fika

Technische Universitat, Wien, Austria

Angelika Gabauer Olivia Kafka

Sabine Knierbein

 

Christine Mady (Lebanon), Stefania Ragozino (Italy), Tihomir Viderman (Germany)

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22-23/10/2021

AESOP TG Conference Thessaloniki - BETWEEN THE HOME & THE SQUARE. bridging the boundaries of public space

School of Architecture, Aristotle University, Thessaloniki, Greece

Evie Athanassiou,
Charis Christodoulou,
Athina Vitopoulou,
Matina Kapsali,

Maria Karagianni,

Sara Santos Cruz (Portugal), Burcu Yigit Turan (Sweden)

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2022

14/01/2022

Hands-on Famagusta (HoF) Open Doors event

University of Cyprus

Socrates Stratis with Imaginary Famagusta Group

Stefania Ragozino (Italy)

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25-29/07/2022

AESOP Annual Congress 2022 Tartu - Space for Species: Redefining Spatial Justice

TRACK #2 CULTURE: Reinterpreting the spatial value of culture, heritage and tourism Estonian University of Life Sciences

Anastasia Sinitsyna, Antonio Jose Salvador (Young Academics from Politecnico di Milano, Italy)

Stefania Ragozino (Italy), Tihomir Viderman (Germany)

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Note: Apart from the general AESOP Annual Congress, the AESOP TG PSUC has established the policy that all meetings should be free of cost to AESOP TG members and that affordable accommodation proposals are provided by the local host.

In times of open call for hosting an AESOP TG PSUC, group members and other interested parties could submit a proposal for hosting a TG event (conference/call for abstract/call for paper/workshop/meeting) about current themes of the PSUC Thematic Group. This proposal should contain information about timing, place, host institution, concept and issues to deepen.

Once the event has been accepted and scheduled, the working group has been constituted from local members and TG representatives, the working group will work on the call that will be shared with active TG members prior to dissemination in order to start the discussion of themes of relevance and to promote the participation to the event. A finally agreed version of the call will be shared with local and TG network through Social Media and Public Relations TG volunteers. 

 

Group’s activities in 2021

This year was entirely dedicated to the working theme Public Spaces: Knowledge transition between Research, Policy and Practice.

 

Consolidating the umbrella topic “Public Spaces: Knowledge transition between Research, Policy and Practice” 

Public space has received increasing attention in urban research, policy and public debate. This is evident in the growing academic literature on the themes related to public space, including accessibility, healthy living, inclusiveness, democracy, urban justice, self-organization, social movements and other. The 2016 UN Habitat Conference, Habitat III, adopted what is called The New Urban Agenda, which focused on public space as a promoter of ‘inclusive, connected, safe and accessible’ cities (UN Habitat, 2016). UN Habitat’s public space programme operates in various countries to promote the design and management of public spaces through participatory approaches engaging different stakeholders. Other initiatives include the Project for Public Space (PPS) Placemaking approach, which has been adopted in several cities. The contributors to public space provision go beyond state actors to include panoply of residents, activists and different combinations of interest groups. 

Within this context, one realises the shifting boundaries and roles of public spaces that include: self-organization in reclaiming public spaces on the one hand and market-led celebration for economic attractiveness as well as political manipulation of the public realm for undemocratic purposes on the other hand, with several shades in the middle. This complexity requires relational perspectives to analyse these spaces as well as further proposals for transdisciplinary methods, which are very much needed to engage knowledge, concepts and theories from various disciplines, allowing them to permeate policy-making and practice processes in different contexts. 

To this end, the working theme poses the question: which actors and which transdisciplinary methods can engage knowledge on public spaces in a transformative manner that directly influences public space policy and practice processes towards meeting the role of promoter of ‘inclusive, connected, safe and accessible’ cities?  

The AESOP Thematic Group Public Spaces and Urban Cultures develop this working theme addressing the following topics:

  • Changing typologies and roles of players and actors: multiplicity of publics and public space cultures, arenas for rebuilding participation;
  • Public spaces and changes: climate change, social movements, circular economy;
  • Changing needs and roles: homelessness, refugees, immigrants and integration, age, gender, social, cultural, ethnic and religious considerations and urban justice;
  • Questioning the global north-south divide and public space dynamics;
  • Changing environmental awareness: public space as a buffer zone, contribution to public health (mental and physical well-being);
  • Changing intangible cultural heritage: adapting the genius loci to multiple and dynamic cultural identities. 

 

Productive steps in 2021 

15th June

AESOP TG PSUC Special Sessions RSA, online event

WHAT'S GOING ON IN PUBLIC SPACES AND URBAN CULTURES? UPDATES ON CURRENT RESEARCH, POLICY AND PRACTICE

 

 Within the Regions in Recovery Building. Sustainable Futures - Global E-Festival, 2nd-18th June 2021, the Thematic Group Public Space and Urban Culture has been invited to organize and chair the SS44. AESOP V – What’s going on in Public Spaces and Urban Cultures? Updates on Current Research, Policy and Practice. 

The SS44. AESOP V session, held on June 15 from 10:00 am to 18:00 pm CEST is divided into three sub-sessions: 

SS44 I AESOP. Struggles Around Inclusive Public Space: Gender, Care and Safety (Chair: Tihomir Viderman, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus, Germany)

SS44 II AESOP. Infrastructure of Inclusive Public Spaces (Chair: Christine Mady, Notre Dame University-Louaize, Lebanon)

SS44 III AESOP. The Making of Inclusive Public Spaces(Chair: Stefania Ragozino, National Research Council of Italy, Institute for Research on Innovation and Services for Development, Italy) 

This special session on “What’s going on in public spaces and urban cultures? Updates on current research, policy and practice” asked how public spaces can inform research, policy and practice towards creating ‘inclusive, connected, safe and accessible’ cities.

Contributions were invited, but are not limited to address one of the following topics:

  • Changing typologies and roles of players and actors: multiplicity of publics and public space cultures, arenas for rebuilding participation
  • Public spaces and changes: climate change, social movements, circular economy;
  • Changing needs and roles: homelessness, refugees, immigrants and integration, age, gender, social, cultural, ethnic and religious considerations and urban justice;
  • Questioning the global north-south divide and public space dynamics;
  • Changing role of public spaces in political conflict zones;
  • Changing environmental awareness: public space as a buffer zone, contribution to public health (mental and physical well-being);
  • Changing intangible cultural heritage: adapting the genius loci to multiple and dynamic cultural identities;
  • The impact of technological innovation on public space research and practice. 

Complete program available at: https://events.rdmobile.com/Lists/Details/1118026

  

12th– 14th July

Aesop TG PSUC Roundtableat AESOP 2021 Online Conference Gdańsk, Faculty of Architecture, Gdańsk University of Technology, Poland

THE DESIGN OF THE PUBLIC REALM: EMERGING THEORIES AND PRACTICES

 

 
   

 

 This roundtable hosted at the AESOP 2021 Online Conference Gdańsk “Adapting planning: rethinking planning practices” focuses on the design of the public realm, a field of scholarship established in the 1980s within the urban design discipline.The public realm has an interdisciplinary character, both ontologically and epistemologically, focusing on the relationship between public life and design. It has always been the chief concern of urban design and the most productive area of urban design thinking;however, it continues to lack a solid and coherent body of knowledge.

This roundtable brings together existing and new emerging knowledge in the design of the public realm and taking a more global and comparative view on scholarly research, practice and policy. It intends to stimulate a discussion on the ongoing and future public realm practice, research and policy debates and agendas and open new avenues of enquiry in several areas, which include but are not limited to the following:

  • To rethink the established public realm design theories and practices by examining their applicability in contexts beyond the Global North.
  • To examine and propose new public realm design theories and/or practices that have not yet been established or applied in public space design but have nevertheless been acknowledged to work as effective principles or tools to make more lively, inclusive and resilient public spaces.
  • To discuss emerging theoretical and methodological advances in the public realm research and design with user characteristics in terms of age, gender, disability, social, cultural, ethnic, and religious backgrounds in mind
  • To discuss emerging issues related to the Covid 19 pandemic and its management (i.e. lockdown and social distancing measures in public space’ use) and its implications on the way we think of and design the public realm. 

Moderators:

Patricia Aelbrecht, Cardiff University, School of Geography and Planning, UK

Ceren Sezer, RWTH Aachen University, Chair and Institute for Urban Design and European Urbanism, Germany
               

Participants of the roundtable, full names and affiliation:

Josep Llorca-Bofí, Institute for Hearing Technology and Acoustics, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany.

Vikas Mehta, School of Planning. College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning, University of Cincinnati

Lakshmi Priya Rajendran, Anglia Ruskin University, Future Cities School of Engineering and Built Environment, Chelmsford, UK.

Nastaran Peimani, Cardiff University,Welsh School of Architecture, UK

Matej Nikšič, Urban Planning Institute of the Republic of Slovenia, Ljubljana.

  

14thOctober

AESOP TG Fika, Technische Universitat, Wien, Austria

FICA AESOP THEMATIC GROUP PUBLIC SPACES AND URBAN CULTURES

 

 
   

 

 Following the Swedish tradition of the Fika, the Interdisciplinary Centre for Urban Culture and Public Space (SKuOR) invited colleagues and especially students of the Faculty of Architecture and Planning to engage in dialogue with coordinators of different Thematic Groups (TGs) of the Association of European Schools of Planning (AESOP). The aim is to show the broad spectrum of AESOP communities and introduce different research traditions in planning, and beyond, and to discuss together new perspectives and current challenges.

On October 14th the three co-coordinators of the TG, Stefania Ragozino (Italy), Christine Mady (Lebanon) and Tihomir Viderman (Germany) dialogued about past, current and further perspectives. 

The session was recorded and be accessed here: https://tube1.it.tuwien.ac.at/w/pECviTzdPeaHBqjP26HCGH

  

22nd– 23rdOctober

AESOP TG International Conference Thessaloniki, School of Architecture, Aristotle University, Thessaloniki, Greece

BETWEEN THE HOME & THE SQUARE. BRIDGING THE BOUNDARIES OF PUBLIC SPACE

 

 
   

 

 The international conference organized by the Research Unit for South European Cities of the School of Architecture at the Aristotle University was structured around the concept of boundaries of public space and the relation between public space and more private spheres of urban life, like the home. By taking an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approach, the meeting discussed, challenged and rethough traditional boundaries between public and private, legal and illegal, planned and unplanned, formal and informal, natural and social, digital and material, familiar and uncanny. Moreover, the meeting reflected on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the making and unmaking of boundaries within the public space as well as between public space and home.

The meeting was organised as a two-day event, which was preceded by a seven-day workshop. The two-day event combined keynote speeches, the contributions to the Call for Papers, fieldtrips and roundtables. The workshop was an international, urban teaching, action research and design workshop that will investigate transformations of housing and public space in sites of major importance in Thessaloniki. The conference provided the opportunity for participants to discuss, exchange views, and propose ideas around the topic of boundaries between public and private spaces in Thessaloniki and beyond.

Three lectures was offered by:

  • Anastasia-Sasa Lada, “After the Pandemic: An Intersectional feminist response to reflect and reimagine our cities, our communities and everyday life”
  • Isabelle Anguelovski, “Greening public spaces: From renaturing cities to equity-based urban nature”
  • Claudio de Magalhaes, “Creating the public realm in the
  • Contemporary city: London and Hong Kong and the public use of public and private space”

Two roudtables approached themes regarding: “Bridging the boundaries of public space in Thessaloniki” and “Post-pandemic pedagogies in the urban. Paths to transformative change?”. The call for papers collected more than 70 contributions presented in 16 parallel sessions.

The TG PSUC meetingwas presented elaborating its organization, activities, team, working themes, past and forthcoming events and different ways of collaboration.

official websitehttp://southeuropean-cities.arch.auth.gr/en/betweenthehomeandthesquare#callforpapers2021

conference programhttp://southeuropean-cities.arch.auth.gr/sites/default/files/International%20Meeting%20Programme.pdf

book of abstracthttp://southeuropean-cities.arch.auth.gr/sites/default/files/psuc%20book%20of%20abstracts_updated%2018.10.pdf

  

Book launch

CARE AND THE CITY – ENCOUNTERS WITH URBAN STUDIES

 

 
   

 

edited by Angelika Gabauer, Sabine Knierbein, Nir Cohen, Henrik Lebuhn, Kim Trogal, Tihomir Viderman, and Tigran Haas. Routledge 2022, New York, London 

Open Access 2021: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/oa-edit/10.4324/9781003031536/care-city-angelika-gabauer-sabine-knierbein-nir-cohen-henrik-lebuhn-kim-trogal-tihomir-viderman-tigran-haas 

Care and the City is a cross-disciplinary collection of chapters examining urban social spaces, in which caring and uncaring practices intersect and shape people’s everyday lives. While asking how care and uncare are embedded in the urban condition, the book focuses on inequalities in caring relations and the ways they are acknowledged, reproduced, and overcome in various spaces, discourses, and practices. By establishing links to various fields of knowledge, this book seeks to systematically introduce debates on care to the interconnecting fields of urban studies, planning theory, and related disciplines for the first time. By establishing links to various fields of knowledge, this book seeks to systematically introduce debates on care to the interconnecting fields of urban studies, planning theory, and related disciplines for the first time.

  

Call for paper

SPECIAL ISSUE FOR THE JOURNAL OF URBANISM ‘THE DESIGN OF THE PUBLIC REALM: EMERGING THEORIES AND PRACTICES’

 

The call for papers was launched in March 2021. At the end of January 2021, papers are under editorial review. 

Guest editors:

Patricia Aelbrecht, Cardiff University, School of Geography and Planning, UK

Ceren Sezer, RWTH Aachen University, Chair and Institute of Urban Design, Aachen, Germany. 

This special issue focuses on the design of the public realm, a field of scholarship which was established in the 1980s within the urban design discipline but which has been long in the making in both urban design and sociology. The public realm has always been the chief concern of urban design and the most productive area of urban design thinking, however it continues to lack a solid and coherent body of knowledge.

It aims to respond to different calls by bringing together existing and new emerging knowledge in the design of the public realm and taking a more global and comparative view on scholarly research, practice and policy in both the Global North and Global South. It intends to stimulate a discussion on the ongoing and future public realm practice, research and policy debates and agendas and open new avenues of enquiry in a number of areas, which include but are not limited to the following: 

  • To rethink the established public realm design theories and practices by examining their applicability in contexts beyond the Global North. This is the case of design theories and principles of legibility, diversity, and adaptability, just to mention a few.
  • To examine and/or propose new public realm design theories and/or practices that have not yet been established or applied in public space design but have nevertheless been acknowledged to work as effective principles or tools to make more lively, inclusive and resilient public spaces. This is the case of urban design thinking related to forms of informality, temporary/tactical urbanism, congestion, just to mention a few.
  • To discuss emerging theoretical and/or methodological advances in the public realm research and design with user characteristics in terms of age, gender, disability, social, cultural, ethnic, and religious backgrounds in mind (e.g., intergenerational, elderly, women, children, disadvantageous users including ethnic minorities, deprived communities, homeless people, refugees).
  • To discuss emerging issues related with the Covid 19 pandemic and its management (i.e. lockdown and social distancing measures in public space’ use) and its implications on the way we think of, and design the public realm.