利用神经建筑加强参与式规划和设计

Gideon Spanjar, F. Suurenbroek
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引用次数: 1

摘要

市区重建和市区发展项目本质上是高度复杂的过程,涉及众多专业人士、利益相关者和相互冲突的利益。更复杂的是项目必须应对的雄心壮志和社会挑战。其中一个目标是强调更具包容性的规划过程,让居民参与规划过程的各个阶段。在设计方面,另一个挑战是在高密度建筑(如高层住宅建筑)中创造符合人类尺度的环境。阿姆斯特丹大都会区计划到2025年拥有10万套新住宅。这些住宅中的大多数必须在现有的城市结构中增加,计划在过时的市中心棕地位置,在海滨,在高速公路附近,而其他住宅将建在贫困社区。被剥夺的社区主要位于阿姆斯特丹战后地区的北部、西部和东南部。例如,位于城市东南侧的被称为Bijlmermeer的贫困社区是荷兰第一个高层开发项目。它被设计成一个单一的项目,在六边形网格中有相同的高层建筑,周围有大片的绿色空间。这些贫困的现代主义社区缺乏经典的住宅街区结构,建筑和街道空间之间没有清晰的衔接。他们似乎要为“不人道”的规模负责,并证明了关键的设计缺陷可能对居民的日常生活产生持久的影响。因此,问题是如何开发宜居环境,让人们感受到建筑和街道景观配置的充分支持。为了防止新城市地区的发展再次无法融入人类规模,需要科学的方法和用户的输入来指导规划和设计的实践,以及他们的应用设计解决方案。在两个研究项目(一个是参与式规划,另一个是神经建筑研究)的基础上,我们探索了新兴的神经建筑领域,特别是眼动仪,如何在人类尺度上促进城市地区的发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Using Neuro-Architecture to Reinforce Participatory Planning and Design
Urban renewal and urban area development projects are by nature highly complex processes involving a multiplicity of professionals, stakeholders, and conflicting interests. Adding to this complexity are the formulated ambitions and societal challenges projects have to answer to. One of these ambitions emphasizes a more inclusive planning process, involving the inhabitants in all stages of the planning process. In terms of design, another challenge is to create environments on a human scale while building in high density such as with tall residential buildings. The metropolitan area of Amsterdam intends to have 100,000 new dwellings by 2025. Most of these dwellings have to be added within the existing urban fabric, planned on obsolete inner-city brownfield locations, at the waterfront, nearby highways whereas others are going to be built in deprived neighborhoods. The deprived neighborhoods are mainly located in the postwar areas of Amsterdam, on its northern, western, and south-eastern sides. The deprived neighborhood called the Bijlmermeer located on the south-eastern side of the city, for instance was the first high-rise development project in the Netherlands. It was designed as a single project with identical high-rise buildings in a hexagonal grid surrounded with large green spaces. These deprived, modernistic neighborhoods lack the classic housing block structures with a clear articulation of buildings and street spaces. They appear to be responsible for an ‘inhuman’ scale and demonstrate the lasting impact critical design flaws can have on the daily lives of inhabitants. Hence, the question is how to develop liveable environments where people feel fully supported by building architecture and streetscape configuration. To prevent new urban area developments that will again fail to incorporate human scale, scientific methods and user input are needed to inform the practice of planning and design, and their applied design solutions. Building on two research projects (one on participatory planning and the other on neuroarchitecture research), we explore how the newly emerging field of neuroarchitecture - and the eye-tracker in particular, might enhance urban area developments on a human scale.
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