People's Perception of Urban and Architectural Features


Loading...

Author / Producer

Date

2017-09

Publication Type

Master Thesis

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

By now, 54 percent of the world’s population lives in urban areas,1 turning architecture and urban settings into omnipresent environments for most of us in daily life. The city’s configuration enables to read its differing neighbourhoods, hierarchies of spaces and infrastructures, as well as notions of privacy. To quantify the impact of architecture and urban planning on people’s well-being, one has to break these subjects down into specific measurable features, starting from large scale elements, such as the broader connecting street network, the age and historical style of the single constructions and the functional use of the building. In that matter, this research focuses especially on the ground floor space. It considers not only its concept of utilisation, but also, on a smaller scale, details concerning the facade’s design, as well as the composition of the transition space between the public and the private zones at street level. This transition space - defined as the buffer zone - is, to a great extent, the space that primarily defines how cities are perceived.

Publication status

published

External links

Editor

Contributors

Examiner : Schmitt, Gerhard
Examiner : Ojha, Varun Kumar

Book title

Journal / series

Volume

Pages / Article No.

Publisher

ETH Zurich

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

ARCHITECTURE; URBANIZATION (URBAN STUDIES); Environment

Organisational unit

03276 - Schmitt, Gerhard (emeritus) / Schmitt, Gerhard (emeritus) check_circle

Notes

Funding

Related publications and datasets