重建建筑环境实践:迈向无障碍城市

Nicole Mechkaroff, S. Kaushik, M. Jackson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

作为澳大利亚维多利亚州的执业建筑师,我们观察到重大的、系统性的行业失败,阻碍了无障碍和包容性城市的发展。当代建筑环境设计实践和设计价值观将“无障碍设计”推向边缘,通常被认为是事后的想法,仅在技术和法规合规方面。建筑环境实践需要挑战更深层次的思维方式——激发专业话语,提高行业对建筑环境可达性结果的控制意识,更重要的是,它在服务公众利益方面的责任。城市总是由社区组成。为了开始理解社区尺度的建筑环境不可达性,建筑环境的思维模式必须改变,以适当地融入复杂的、社会生态的、公共领域(公共空间)的建筑环境。设计实践必须改进其社区场地分析方法,超越私人、合同场地边界和直接的物理环境,以理解最终用户体验、社区旅程和更广泛的可达性。行业态度、实践方法和行业对残疾的定位必须改变,以接受需要跨多个学科和部门的不同参与者共同努力的过程,而残疾人是决策的核心参与者。我们相信,在培养行业兴趣和能力方面存在着机遇。以研究为基础的建筑环境实践,包括系统思维、基于人权的方法和跨学科,可以有效地加剧行业变革和行业定位残疾的方式。本文采用了一种分析性的、协作性的自我民族志方法,研究了社区尺度可达性评估的案例研究、质疑建筑环境从业者为什么认为不可达性存在的活动的产出,以及对10到35年以上建筑实践工作的自我反思。重要的是,本文认为,在努力为所有人实现普遍可达的公共空间的过程中,建筑环境从业者,尤其是建筑师,必须承担他们的行为对残疾人生活经历的影响的责任。在这里以可访问的html格式阅读全文。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Re-framing Built Environment Practice: Towards an Accessible City
As practising architects in Victoria, Australia, we have observed significant, systemic industry failure, impeding the development of accessible and inclusive cities. Contemporary built environment design practice and design values push ‘accessible design’ to the margins, often considered as an after-thought and only in terms of technical and regulatory compliance. Built environment practice needs to be challenged into deeper ways of thinking – ones that stimulate professional discourse and heighten industry awareness of both its control over built environment accessibility outcomes and, critically, its accountability in serving the public good.Cities invariably comprise neighbourhoods. To begin to understand built environment inaccessibility at the neighbourhood scale, the built environment mindset must change to properly engage with complex, socio-ecological, public-realm (public space) built environments. Design practice must improve its neighbourhood site analysis approach, going beyond private, contractual site boundaries and immediate physical surrounds, to understanding end-user experiences, neighbourhood journeys, and the broader scale of (in)accessibility. Industry attitudes, practice approaches and the way disability is positioned by industry must change to embrace processes that necessitate diverse actors working together across multiple disciplines and sectors with people with disability being core actors in decision-making.We believe that opportunities exist in building industry interest and capacity. Research-informed built environment practice embracing systems-thinking, human rights-based approaches, and transdisciplinarity can be effective for aggravating industry change and the way industry positions disability. This paper adopts an analytical, collaborative autoethnographic approach, examining case studies of neighbourhood-scale accessibility assessment, outputs from activities questioning why built environment practitioners believe inaccessibility exists, and self-reflection on 10 to 35+ years of working in architectural practice. Importantly, this paper argues that in working towards achieving universally accessible public spaces for all, built environment practitioners, and architects in particular, must accept accountability for the impact of their actions on people with disabilities’ lived experiences.   Read the full article in accessible html-format here.
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