URBAN SUTURES JUDY SHAO-YU CHEN 2023 URBAN PUBLIC SPACE AS CONNECTING, MENDING, NEGOTIATING MEDIUMS
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
special thanks
Benjamin C. Howland Traveling Fellowship that UVA Barcelona Program teaching team: Manuel Josep Parcerisa, and Celia Marin Vega, who unpacked through their experiences and passion as Professor Beth Meyer, who introduced me to methods and document the power
Ariana Arenius, who lent me her Fuji x100 digital low-quality photo
Eden McCafferty and Amy Schulz - who accompany derful Barcelona April 5th,
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
thanks to:
that allows this research journey to happen.
Manuel Bailo, Giovanna Bartoleschi, Alvaro Clua, unpacked the beauty and depth of Barcelona as scholars, practitioners, and Catalans. methods and lenses that allows me to appreciate power of public space.
digital camera so I don't have to settle with the of my iPhone SE.
accompany me to walk 10+ miles per day in the wonBarcelona City.
5th, 2023
TABLE OF CONTENTS
01 00 ENCOUNTERING WATERS...............012 INTRODUCTION.................................004 ENMESHING GROUNDS..................084 MENDING CHASMS............................142 PERMEATING BOUNDARIES...........224 02 03 04
URBAN DESIGN HISTORY OVERVIEW OF BARCELONA
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10 B.C. 1859 WITH CERDA’S EIXAMPLE PROPOSAL 550 1903 source: Museu D’Historia De Barcelona, “Carta Històrica de Barcelona,” Carta Històrica de Barcelona, accessed April 1, 2023, http://ajuntament.barcelona.cat/museuhistoria/cartahistorica.
7 BARCELONA
http://ajuntament.barcelona.cat/museuhistoria/cartahistorica. 1823 1956
8 2010
D’Historia
Museu
source: D’Historia De Barcelona, “Carta Històrica de Barcelona,” Carta Històrica de Barcelona, accessed April 1, 2023, http://ajuntament. barcelona.cat/museuhistoria/cartahistorica.
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SITE LOCATIONS
encountering waters
enmeshing grounds
mending chasms
permeating boundaries
source: google earth, 2023
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LLOBREGAT RIVER
Barceloneta
Parc de la Creueta del
Jardins Laura Albèniz
Torre de les Aigües
Sant Felip Neri Square
Pg. de St. Joan
Passatge Permanyer
Bicivia 7
El parc de Joan Reventós
MOUNTAIN
COLLSEROLA
Jardins
Illa Anaïs
11 del Coll
MOUNTAIN RANGE
Icària
Poblenou de Lina Òdena Jardins de Margarida Comas Av. del Bogatell Jardins de Creu Casas Jardins de Mercè Plantada Jardins d’Alícia de Larrocha Anaïs Napoleó
de la trinitat
Parc de la Nova
Parc del
Parc
de Diagonal Mar
Parc
Parc del Fòrum
de
B E S SÒ REVIR 1.5 km
Parc
La Pau
01
ENCOUNTERING WATERS
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Barcelona’s history starts from the sea and the coast. Water carries ships and boats that arrive at the gentle gradient of the coastal bathymetry, helping the Romans land on the coastal plain.
Villages, towns, and the citadel, the historic old town of Barcelona grow contingent on the sea. However, the city has turned its back on the sea over time - industrial development and urbanization happened rapidly, and the coast become forgotten as the city expanded inward, heading toward the mountains. An arterial road is cut through between the coast and the city, making the coast even less accessible by foot.
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This chapter explores how coastal neighborhoods reconnect the city with the sea and waterfront parallel to the horizon
neighborhoods
The 1975 democratization, the 1980s emerging ideal of a “vacation by the beach”, and the 1992 Olympics are pivotal moments in time when the city start to re-evaluate and reimagine the coast. A series of public space designs and constructions took place - using diverse suturing methods ranging from promenades, winding trails, bridges, plazas, stairways, etc. to stretch, patch, and re-claim the waterfront.
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and public spaces and form a continuous walkable horizon of the Mediterranean sea.
THE PUBLIC WATERFRONT
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17 1 mile
SECTION STUDIESDESIGN STRATEGIES THAT SUTURE THE CITY AND THE COAST
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BARCELONETA -
former fishermen village in the 18th century. The architecture’s massing and layout on the flat coastal plain create direct movement from the city to the water.
PARC DE LA NOVA ICÀRIA
the park uses wooden bridges to connect the city to the park and the waterfront.
PARC DEL POBLENOU
The park connects the city with the beach through pine groves, constructed dunes, and both a sinuous and straight path system.
19 COAST
SECTION STUDIESDESIGN STRATEGIES FOR SUTURING THE CITY AND THE COAST
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PARC DIAGONAL MARwalks / retention ponds / contemporary sculptures curates a movement flowing from the city to the sea.
PARC DEL FÒRUMmega plazas / open spaces / and structures for large events. Absorbing the flow of people from the Diagnal and spread them out to the port.
PARC DE LA PAUusing series of steps / walls / balconies to connect the industrial districts to the beach.
21 COAST
BARCELONETA: HITTING THE WATER
designer: Juan Martín Cermeño (engineer)
year: 1754
description: Hitting the water with diagonal straight lines that are formed by the historic fishermen's village. The coastal plain topography creates little elevation change from the city to the sea.
Multiple boardwalks run parallel along the coast, integrating the plaza into the waterfront landscape. The plaza and boardwalks slope up to connect with the boardwalks closer to the Olympic village, constituting a continuous waterfront walk along the city.
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23 50M
24 contour interval 0.3m
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Barceloneta neighborhood architecture forming straight paths that directly hits the water
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Barceloneta has the busiest waterfront in the city
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THE OLYMPIC VILLAGE DISTRICT
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PARC DE LA NOVA ICÀRIA: BRIDGING THE WATER
designer: MBM Arquitectes
year: 1992
description: the park utilizes bridges that step across the arterial road in Barcelona, funneling the flow of pedestrians from the city to the waterfront. The park was one of the 1992 Olympic revitalization projects, and become a key site that foster the continuity of a walkable waterfront.
33 50M
34 contour interval 0.3m 1 2 3
35 1 2 3
PARC DEL POBLENOU: RIPPLING TOWARDS THE WATER
designer: unable to find, part of The Seafront Development Plan year: 1992
description: Prior to intervention, the site was composed of a landfill, obsolete factories, and a goods station. Part of the 1992 Olympic Revitalization Plan, the park is connected to Parc de la Nova Icària, extending the walkable waterfront even further. The design uses inspiration from the natural Mediterranean coastal landscape: dunes and pine groves. The dunes and sporadic pine groves create a cadence of openness and enclosure, compression and release, and light and shadow. A sinuous path system ripples from the city towards the water, interjected by straight path systems that continue the grid pattern of the city. The edge of the park is a 1-Floor height wall, with a line of seating facing the water and wide stairways that direct pedestrian flow to the beach.
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37 WATER 50M
38 contour interval 0.3m 1 2 3
39 1 2 3
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pine groves and constructed dunes
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PARC DIAGONAL MAR: RIBBONING TOWARDS THE WATER
designer: Miralles Tagliabue EMBT
year: 2002
description: The park consists of a series of retention ponds, ribbon-like tube/sculptures, patches of plazas, vegetated grounds, and path systems. The park is a contemporary milestone in urban design, where the design team celebrates the fluidity of water and large irregular grounds as patchwork that suture between the city and the waterfront. The design shuttle between large-scale systematic thinking and meticulous detail design. The aesthetic of the design manifests Gaudi’s legacy in Catalonia culture, while Enric Miralles and Benedetta Tagliabue evolve from Gaudi’s lineage and create something innovative and transformative to the urban condition.
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AVINGUDADIAGONAL
49 WATER
50M
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52 contour interval 0.3m 1 2 3
53 1 2 3
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thresholds
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moments of lingering
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PARC DEL FÒRUM: GRABBING THE WATER
designers: Elías Torres’ and José Antonio Martínez Lapeñas
year: 2004
description: The park/plaza is built for the Universal Forum of Cultures held in Barcelona in 2004. The design is a mega plaza and park that can accommodate large-scale events. The public space design is combined with massive infrastructure: solar panels held up by a multi-story height concrete pavilion, port infrastructure, and a museum, all covering the sewage water plant below ground. The design connects the arterial road that cut through the the city - Diagonal Avenue, and is capable of taking in a heavy traffic footprint.
AVINGUDADIAGONAL
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63 50M
64 1-1 1-2 2 contour interval 0.3m
65 1 2
massive infrastructure as public space. underground is the sewage water plant of the city.
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movements across elevation change
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74 CITY PARK&
PARC DE LA PAU: STEPPING THE TO SEA
INDUSTRIAL ZONE
designer: unable to find year: 2004, in sync with Parc del Fòrum description: The design is located in the industrial zone of Barcelona, using irregular patchwork to suture the city, the industrial factories, and the recreational beach. The park is connected by a footbridge with the Parc del Fòrum, extending a walkable waterfront all the way to Besos River. The park uses brick as the main material palette, and creates whimsical repetitive ground patterns that naturally guide the movement towards the beach. The focal point of the park is the large basin that supports all kinds of group activities and the grand stairway that steps down to the waterfront promenade. The tall walls also create seat-able balconies that overlook the sea.
75 PARK& PLAZA
50M
76 contour interval 0.3m 1 2 3 4
77 1 2 3 4
78 CITY
PARK& PLAZA
INDUSTRIAL ZONE
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palm tree and chimneys
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overlapping materiality park - beach
overlapping experience production - recreation
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02
ENMESHING GROUNDS
This chapter explores how public space existing terrain and creates public centers ferent neighborhoods to the once
Barcelona is a city that has its natural boundaries and constraints. As the settlements and city started their journey near the coast, the urban expansion hits a terrain barrier inland - the Collserola mountain range. At the edge where the city touches the foot of the mountain is a series of hilly landscapes that is occupied by both planned neighborhoods and informal settlements.
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space design grounds itself in the centers that draw and connect difonce (near) inaccessible terrain.
Neighborhoods such as Sarria, Gracia, and Horta ground themselves within the undulating terrain, adapting their structures and roads to the crowded contour lines.
Public space and recreation centers also need to accommodate themselves to the dramatic elevation change, transforming topographic changes from obstacles into opportunities.
How are terrain mitigated, utilized, or perhaps amplified, is the focus of the following analyses.
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88 50m
designer: MBM Arquitectes
artist: Eduardo Chillida and Ellsworth Kelly year: 1992, part of the Olympic revitalization plan description: The park is located on one of the topographic high points of the hilly Gràcia neighborhood. The site was once a stone quarry, deeply carved into the ground, creating a flat bottom and steep surrounding arms that warps around the park. The park uses a main water feature and terraces to embrace the topography of the old quarry. On the other side of the mountain which is not impacted by quarrying activities, a network of trails circulates and connects to the park. The park and the trail design transform the terrain from an obstacle to a popular destination and gathering space, enlivening the neighborhood with the experience it curates and the activities it facilitates.
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PARC DE LA CREUETA DEL COLL
CONTEXTCONTOURS LEADING THE GROWTH OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD
90 14m 35m 63m
91 NEIGHBORHOOD 1 meter contour buildings 188-264m contour 50m
SITETOPOGRAPHY AS OBSTACLES AND OPPORTUNITIES
THE TOPOGRAPHY QUARRY BECOMES FOR CRAFTING
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site plan park / neighborhood / trail system
enrtances trails
TOPOGRAPHY OF AN OLD
BECOMES AN OPPORTUNITY CRAFTING EXPERIENCE
sections embracing the elevation change
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enrtances trails
DESIGNFOUND IMAGES AND PHOTOGRAPHY
source: “EUMiesAward,” accessed March 18, 2023, https://www.miesarch.com/work/1379.
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left - close-up site plan and section upper right - site plan lower right - site photo
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a park that manifests aesthetics and affect. sculpture: “Eulogy to Water” by Chillida
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a park that manifests aesthetics and affect
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1st tier
2nd tier
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3rd tier
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immersive view of the 2nd tier
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2nd tier (view from 3rd tier)
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entrance circulation area
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view from the trail above the 3rd tier
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stairs/steps/seats
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clusters of gathering
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trails that wrap around the park
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PARC DE JOAN REVENTÓS
designer: BAGURSA (Barcelona Urban Management)
year: 2008
description: The park is located in the Sarrià neighborhood, a threshold where the city touches the Collserola mountain range. The park was once an abandoned forest and the catchment area of “Riera de les Monges”. The design embraces the sunken topography and uses a series of ramps and steps to connect urban fabrics that locate at very different elevations. The whole park is composed of flat lingering areas, a playground, and a series of accessible ramps that sinuates along the stormwater management system. The sinuous shape is stretched in a linear direction, forming comfortable and convenient shortcuts for pedestrians, bikers, and skaters. The park development kept the lush and rich vegetation of the once-forested area, creating an enclosed and tranquil public space to linger.
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119 50M
120 50m
before, 2004an abandoned forest in a suken bowl
after, 2008a park with accessible paths and lingering zones
121 50m 50m
DESIGNWORKING WITH THE EXISTING TOPOGRAPHY
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DESIGNCONNECTING NEIGHBORHOODS ON DIFFERENT ELEVATIONS
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125 ELEVATIONS
the park is in a sunken bowl
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entrance switch-back ramps and stairs
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enclosure and tranquility provided by the sunken topography, thick woods, and shrubs
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stormwater management system
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accessible ramps as desired walk/bike/skate paths
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138 enclosure
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140 enclosure
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03
MENDING CHASMS
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This chapter explores how urban public neighborhoods divided by
From the 1930s to the 1990s, Barcelona began its rapid eastward expansion towards the Besòs River. Urban developments, metro system growth, and the 1992 Olympics, all contributed to large-scale infrastructural implementations in the city. The infrastructural development forms new urban centers and accommodates more urban activities, but at the same time fragment the city with the chasms and the terrain vague (Solà-Morales, 1995) it creates.
As ideologies of walkable, sustainable, green healthy cities emerged at the end of the 20th century and still trending in the 21st century, urban park/recreational space projects that
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function in infrastructural scale and scope are introduced to the city to bridge the existing gaps by interweaving itself between grey infrastructures.
These designs straddle the field of urban planning, urban design, landscape architecture, and urban furniture design simultaneously, shuttle between the city’s scale and the body scale.
Design strategies that foster body-scale space-making are particularly highlighted in the following analyses, documenting how design can establish in-situ experiences that is not engulfed by the massiveness of the site.
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public space can suture fragmented by massive infrastructures.
BICIVIA 7
designer: batlleiroig (BIR) year: 2018
description: The linear park/bike lane/footpath is a project that establishes a new urban network that connects Barcelona city with the adjacent outskirt district. The design extends the end of Diagonal Avenue (the longest arterial road that cut through the city) and runs parallel with Highway B-23, threading the urban fabric by providing a 1km (0.55 miles) long, accessible walkways and bike lanes. The linear park is active with fluid movements and intermittent corners of lingering. Without any stairs, the design gently ramps up and down and interweaves itself among highways. The design demonstrates how by yielding 1-2 car lanes to pedestrians and bikers, the lived experience and public well-being can be significantly transformed.
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147 50M
148 BEFORE
AFTER
149 50M
ENTANGLING WITH EXISTING INFRASTRUCTURE4-TIER STRATEGY
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3-4 low
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high
1-2
1 2 3 152
1 2 3 153
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by yielding a width of less than 2 car lanes for pedestrians and bikers, the urban lived experience can be significantly improved.
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intermittent lingering areas in the linear park
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elevated from the highways, the park creates a safer environment for pedestrians and bikers and provides balcony views of the bustling traffic.
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retaining walls and handrails run along the park, becoming significant design elements to demonstrate caring in detail.
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intertwining with highway infrastructures.
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vegetation buffers create a linear urban oasis in parallel with heavy vehicular traffic.
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174 Trinitat Vella neighborhood 50M
BesòsRiver
PARC DE LA TRINITAT
designer: batlleiroig (BIR) year: 1993
description: The park is situated between converging arterial roads, highways, and railroads. Aiming to transform the “terrain vague” (Solà-Morales, 1995) condition, the design extended the activity area of a neighborhood and stitched the park with the urban fabric to enliven the leftover space shaded under intertwining infrastructures. The Park uses multi-tier and multi-ring strategies to work with the elevation change of the existing neighborhood, different levels of highway infrastructure, and the metro station. There are several entrances on each tier, threading between the park and the neighborhood. Through ramps, stairs, and “doorways” created by highway overhangs, every tier hits the grade and provides fluid connections for commuting, leisure, and sport. The rings of the park support distinct activities, creating smaller pockets among the vastness of the park. The total area of the park is capable to hold large events (e.g. La Merce festival for kids), lightening up the space with laughter that echoes between massive concrete infrastructures.
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A PARK WITHIN THE HIGHWAY SPAGHETTI
50M
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Trinitat Vella neighborhood
BesòsRiver
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50m
above: the park viewed from the road close to the highway infrastructure
below: highway infrastructure viewed from the park
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low tier mid tier
tier
multi-tier and multi-ring strategy
high
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vegetation design giving structure to the park
TIERS AND RINGS FORMED THROUGH TOPOGRAPHY
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50m
topography and vegetation curating experience
tiers 1-3 (low to high)
2nd tier
1-2 tier
2nd tier
3rd tier
1st teir
tiers 1-3 (low to high)
3rd tier
1st tier
2nd tier
people moving from tier 1 to 3 (low to high)
ACTIVITES DIAGRAM
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La Merce children’s festival
The inner ring of the park is composed of accessible paths
chasing a tennis ball on the basketball court
playing ping-pong on the badminton court
kids playing hide and seek, using trashcans to hide
bumpy tree trunk initiates a climbing competition between kids
event spaces formed by topography change and vegetation placements
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1 2 3 214
ENTRANCES
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a double allee of London Planes as the welcoming threshold between the neighborhood and the park
residential
neighborhood
park
218 entrance 1
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high way
220 entrance 2
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3
entrance
04
PERMEATING BOUNDARIES
Similar to other European cities, Barcelona experienced the rise of Bourgeoise, waves of liberal and rational thinking, the force of a competitive market, and the spiking need for housing in cities in the mid-19th century. Urban expansion became an unstoppable force led by middle-class people. Ildefons Cerdà, a Catalan civil engineer, proposed the Eixample (the expansion) as an urbanization strategy for the city in 1859. He carefully examined the city's topography and set rigorous rules for the Eixample grid: 133m-wide for each block (measured from road centerlines) with 65m-wide internal courtyards, 20m-wide streets, 8m intervals between street trees, and 45-degree corner cuts for traffic.
All the rules are aiming to increase the health of urban dwellers and the living condition of the city.
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This chapter explores how urban spatial planning and design strategies, boundary of public
Cerdà's vision and legacy remain influential to this day for the vision he had for urban public space. He described the city as "vias and intervias" (street and non-street), envisioning an urban environment that germinates from how the public lives and uses the public space instead of architectural massings. Cerdà’s strict rules form an urban board game that allows flexibility and contemporary interpretation - carriages and pedestrian traffics in the 1800s, the emergence, and dominance of cars from the 19th-20th century, the metro system's construction and expansion since the 1920s, and the present ideologies of the walkable, smart, and green city - all find there a place in Cerdà’s grid, weaving layers of cultural and social significance on the urban fabric.
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urban public space that emerge from strategies, can suture between the and private realms.
URBAN COURTYARDS BEFORE AND AFTER MODERNIZATION
Both in the historic old town and the 1859 Eixample district, urban courtyards play a significant role in shaping urban life. An urban typology that manifests how urban dwellers live and enlivens the city.
old town
10b.c.- 1859
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133m
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Eixample district 1859~
230 15m
PLAÇA DE SANT FELIP NERI
year: 1752
description: Located in the Gothic Quarter of the historic old town of Barcelona, the square is reachable by two allies among the labyrinth-like streets and is enclosed by 6 facades, forming a clear but asymmetrical spatial geometry. The school of Sant Felip Neri (elementary school) forms one of the facades. During break time, mobile barriers will be put at the end of the two allies, turning the public square into a temporary private playground. Three massive Jacarda trees form a well-covered ceiling in the square creating an ambiance with the dappled lights that glisten on the facade and the trickling fountain. The tranquil square has a traumatic past during Franco’s dictatorshiptwo bombs killed 42 people, most of them were kids from the school of Sant Felip Neri and the rescue crew who tries to move injured bodies after the first bomb. The trace of this tragic event remains on the facades of the square.
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restaurant 15m
school of Sant Felip Neri
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234 enclosure
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activity diagram - during the restaurant’s opening hours
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activity diagram - during the school’ break
temporary fence temporary fence
break time of the school of Sant Felip Nerikids fighting for the ball stuck in the tree pit.
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entering the square
entering the square
dappled light
restaurant (day)
restaurant (night)
marks of trauma - bombing in 1938
EIXAMPLE COURTYARDS
planner: Ildefons Cerdà designer: varies year: 1859~
description: While the original Eixample blocks each contain a courtyard within for public hygiene and health, urbanization and industrialization in the late 19th century to early 20th century had led to the sprawl of architecture vertically and horizontally into the open courtyard. Over time, the city had gradually lost its outdoor public space and was overcrowded with households and factories per Eixample block.
The end of Franco’s dictatorship becomes the beginning of democratization and set off the blooming of thoughts in spatial design strategies that transform the urban environment.
The General Metropolitan Plan was initiated in 1976 with the goal to recover the interior courtyards of Eixample blocks. In 1985, the first recovery is accomplished (Torre de les Aigües). Currently, there are 50+ urban courtyards that serve as part of the public space network and urban green patchwork that plays a key role in maintaining the physical and mental well-being of urban dwellers.
(reference: Journalist, “Miniature Paradises.”)
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50m
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EIXAMPLE TYPOLOGYIN-BETWEEN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE
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enclosed, single public access enclosed, 1 private access + single public access 2 connected, highly visible public access cut-through road
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residents the
route
public
+ semi-public
canopy
2 connected public access connected blocks public space private space
public visibility
multiple
access
+ private access
258 enclosed, single public access TYPOLOGY 1: public space private space residents the public visibility route canopy
TORRE DE LES AIGÜES DE L’EIXAMPLE
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trees trunks create playable space
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canopies and walls create tranquil and enclosed corners
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entering the interior courtyard
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dogs wading in the pool and leaving traces on the sandy ground
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moments of thrill and joy
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moments of solitude
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274 TYPOLOGY 2: enclosed, single public access, highly visible public space private space residents the public visibility route canopy
ILLA ANAÏS NAPOLEÓ
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chatting group seating deployment
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vibrant colors adding playfulness to the courtyard
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entrance highlighted with vibrant yellow
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284 enclosed, single private access , single public access TYPOLOGY 3: public space private space residents the public visibility route canopy
JARDINS LAURA ALBÈNIZ
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Saint Nicholas School
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287 break time of Saint Nicholas School
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clusters of teenagers during break time
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Saint Nicholas School back entrance
2 connected public access TYPOLOGY 4:
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public space private space residents the public visibility route canopy
JARDINS DE LINA ÒDENA
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shortcut through
an urban
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through the courtyard
2 public entrances
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there are 5 people+1dog+1 pigeon in this photo
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TYPOLOGY 5:
multiple public access + semi-public + private access
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public space private space residents the public visibility route canopy
JARDINS D’ALÍCIA DE LARROCHA
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semi-private space bleeds into the public courtyard
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stores and offices on the 1st floor of residential buildings with glass facades that allows direct seethrough between the courtyard and the street
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restaurant tables bleeding into public entrances
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312 private pool only accessible by residents sharing the public courtyard space
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TYPOLOGY 6:
2 connected, highly visible public access
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public space private space residents the public visibility route canopy
CARRETERA ANTIGA D’HORTA
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a courtyard and a corridor
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the corridor widens up as it touches the streets on both ends
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napping corners along the corridor
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photos taken within 15min time span
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connected blocks
public space private space residents the public visibility route canopy
TYPOLOGY 7:
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5 EIXAMPLES
Jardins de Margarida Comas Av. del Bogatell Jardins de Creu Casas Jardins de Mercè Plantada Jardins d’Alícia de Larrocha
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Jardins de Margarida Comas
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Jardins de Creu Casas
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Jardins de Creu Casas
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Jardins de Creu Casas
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Jardins de Mercè Plantada
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Jardins de Mercè Plantada
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Jardins de Mercè Plantada
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Jardins de Mercè Plantada
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From Jardins de Mercè Plantada to Jardins d’Alícia de Larrocha
from Av. del Bogatell to Jardins de Creu Casas
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road
8: public space private space residents the public visibility route canopy
cut-through
TYPOLOGY
PASSATGE PERMANYER
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PASSEIG SANT JOAN
designer: Teresa Gali-Izard and Lola Domènech
year: 2012 (Phase I), 2016 (Phase II)
description: The project is a 1 km streetscape design connecting Arc de Triomf to the Avinguda Diagonal. The design creates generous walking and lingering space on Passeig Sant Joan. Restaurants’ outdoor seating blends with the deployment of public benches, creating fluid exchanges between public and private realms. The way the public benches interact with street trees and shrubs creates diverse types of living rooms that can accommodate various sizes of group clusters while making solitary individuals at ease in the streetscape. The bench is made with thick slabs of wood with nicely polished surfaces and steel armrests, removing the cheapness that is usually observed in public benches, serving whoever appropriates the bench with a sense of comfort and dignity. 133m
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AvingudaDiagonal
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a streetscape that accommodates pedestrian flow, lingering group/ individual, restaurant outdoor seating, and temporary parking.
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PERMEATING BOUNDARIESTHE BALANCE AND OVERLAP OF THE PUBLIC AND PRIVATE
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the balance and blending of public and private space
371 SPACE public 5m private
The vicinity and juxtaposition of public benches and private restaurant seating
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The vicinity and juxtaposition of public benches and private restaurant seating
immersive view of restaurant seating from the public bench
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BENCH ARRANGEMENT TYPOLOGYSPACE MAKING THROUGH TREES, SHRUBS, AND BENCHES
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accommodating groups
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vegetation creating enclosure (left) and openness (right)
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playable bench (photo taken from the bus)
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HIDE AND SEEKMOMENTS OF PRIVACY CREATED BY VEGETATION AND BENCH
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BENCH ARRANGEMENT
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moments of togehterness and solidtude
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napping person’s clothes
claiming public space as a private bedroom
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napping person
napping person
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