Access and accessibility are central themes in architecture and urbanism. The goal is to make buildings accessible both horizontally and vertically, as well as to provide them with technical infrastructure. But the aim is also to ensure the accessibility of whole streets, routes, parks, and squares,
Access for All: Approaches to the Built Environment
β Scribed by Wolfgang Christ (editor)
- Publisher
- BirkhΓ€user
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 184
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Access and accessibility are central themes in architecture and urbanism. The goal is to make buildings accessible both horizontally and vertically, as well as to provide them with technical infrastructure. But the aim is also to ensure the accessibility of whole streets, routes, parks, and squares, and even entire cities and regions. Today, access is a key concept in the most disparate areas of life. Thus, it is also a matter of access to knowledge and education, access to knowledge media like the Internet, access to healthcare, access to languages, etc. In thirteen articles, this book deals with this world of access in architecture, city planning, and neighboring fields. Topics include ensuring the accessibility of entire urban areas, renewing that of areas that were previously utilized differently, including the general populace in concept planning, and how architecture can help provide access to a better quality of life.
Interdisciplinary articles on a central theme in architecture and city planning
With a foreword by Thomas Sieverts
With suggestions for further study on every topic
β¦ Table of Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Elevation β A cultural history of the elevator
Megamobility β Technology for the individual in the urbanised world
Cooperation β Urban planning is a community project
Variety β The SΓΌdstadt in TΓΌbingen as a model for the city
Syntax β Planning urban accessibility
Image β The imaginary as an instrument of urban and regional planning
Practice β Reducing barriers
Everyday life β Normalisation breeds discrimination
Public utility β Car sharing as a complementary means of urban mobility
Reflection β Philosophy for everyone?
Internet β Digital inclusion for everyone regardless of their abilities
Competition β The Schindler Award and the culture of education
Appendix
The Authors
Illustration credits
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