《Everyday practice in the high density, volumetric Hong Kong: Ambiguity, intensity and life between interfaces》

打印
作者
Weijia Wang
来源
CITIES,Vol.96,Issue1,Article 102462
语言
英文
关键字
Volumetric city;Ambiguity;Intensity;Everyday life between interfaces;Densely populated urban areas
作者单位
Centre for Social Policy and Social Change, Department of Sociology and Social Policy, Lingnan University, New Territories, Hong Kong SAR, China;Centre for Social Policy and Social Change, Department of Sociology and Social Policy, Lingnan University, New Territories, Hong Kong SAR, China
摘要
Increasing numbers of cities in densely populated urban areas are being transformed from vertical to volumetric. Elements such as skyscrapers, residential towers, elevated pedestrian bridges, and subways transform people’s vertical living into volumetric urban living. Drawing on calls for more research on everyday practice in the three-dimensional city, this study focuses on Mong Kok district in Hong Kong to examine everyday, volumetric urbanism in the densely populated urban context. The key focus is on the dynamic relationship between micro-scale spatial characteristics and people’s everyday actions. Using physical survey, observation, narrative city walks, test walks and questionnaire, this research investigates volumetric spatial formation and daily practices. The paper concludes that volumetric urban space is produced as interlaced stacks of interfaces, which are integrated within the three-dimensional urban fabric. There is ambiguity between space for circulation and for staying. Volumetric urban life is inherently associated with intensity of people’s varied everyday practices rather than verticality, which points to the “life between interfaces” as a critical dimension of volumetric urban living. The volumetric-ness accommodates and sustains vibrant high-density cities.