Dissertation

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physical interaction with that particular place. Consequently, place appearance may cause some levels of emotion, no matter one has previously experienced it or not. However, this may not guarantee that outlook of places can always shape the emotional attachments to these places and it greatly depends on the existing bonds formed through previous environmental experiences. (Najafi, 2012) 2.4 The Era of Placelessness “There is no second thought that the localism and variety of the places and landscapes that characterised preindustrial societies and unselfconscious, handicraft cultures are being diminished and perhaps being eradicated leading to the creation of flatscape which provides the possibilities only for a commonplace and mediocre experience.” (RELPH, 1976) C.W. Moore has written, “the richly varied places of the world are raplidly being obliterated under a meaningless pattern of buildings, monotonous and chaotic” and also Gordon Cullen suggests of Britain that “we appear to be forsaking nodal points for a thinly spread coast-to-coast continuity of people, food, power and entertainment, a universal wasteland…..a chromium-plated chaos.” All these comments lead us towards the possibility of placesless geography, lacking both landscapes and significant places implying us subjecting ourselves to the forces of placelessness and are losing sense of place.(RELPH, 1976) In order to explain the phenomenon of placelessness, Relph starts by examining the ways a place is experienced. According to him, places can be experienced authentically or inauthentically; where authentic sense of place is referred as “a direct and genuine experience of the entire complex of the identity of places”. He says for authentic places, the sense of place is created either unself-consciously or deliberately. Further he argues that, in our modern era, an authentic sense of place is being gradually overshadowed by a less authentic attitude which he called as placelessness: “the casual eradication of distinctive places and the making of standardized landscapes that results from an insensitivity to the significance of place”.(RELPH, 1976) Placelessness can be described as a phenomenon where the environment lacks significant places and the underlying attitude of not acknowledging significance in places. It has resulted in cutting us from our cultural roots, eroding away all the symbols, replacing the diversity into uniformity and converting experiential order into 11 | P a g e


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BIBLIOGRAPHY

4min
pages 95-98

REFERENCES

2min
pages 92-94

Chapter 8 : CONCLUSION

1min
page 91

Illustration 28: Entry to the Coffeehouse; (Homegrown, 2019

1min
page 88

6.2 Theories of Placemaking

1min
page 80

Illustration 26: Platform and AFC Gates at ITO Metro Station; TOI

1min
page 70

Illustration 22: Interior of ITO Metro Station; Hindustan Times

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page 67

Table 5: Comparative Analysis for parameters of Built Environment; Self

1min
page 76

Figure 28: External Influences; Self

1min
page 71

Illustration 20: Sahitya Academy at Metro Station; DNA India

1min
page 62

Illustration 18: Interior of Kashmere Gate Metro Station, Hindustan Times

1min
page 60

Figure 7: External Influences; Self

1min
page 51

Illustration 17: Image of Platform at Yellow Line; Hindustan Times

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page 59

Illustration 8: Scale of the Central Space; Economic Times

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page 49

4.3 Place attachment and Mental Health

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page 39

Chapter 5 : PLACELESSNESS IN TRANSIT NODES

3min
pages 40-41

Illustration 1: Various forms of Built Environment; Oreskovic et al., 2014

4min
pages 30-32

Chapter 1 : INTRODUCTION

1min
page 13

3.2 How is Built Environment perceived?

1min
page 26

2.3 Place Attachment

1min
page 22

3.3 Attributes of Built Environment affecting Human Experience

5min
pages 27-29

2.2 Place Identity

1min
page 21

2.4 The Era of Placelessness

2min
pages 23-24

1.1 Research Question

1min
page 14
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