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Project for Public Spaces
How To Turn a Place Around.
A Handbook for Creating Successful Public Spaces
Project for Public Spaces Inc., New York, 2000
pp.128, 82 ill. b/w, $30
Buying information
The book is also available at the PPS web site:
https://www02.hway.net/ppsorg/Products/products_publications.html
and mail order from Eco Distribution, 117 Main Street, Woodhouse
Eaves, Leicestershire LE12 8RY.
Book review
The book written by PPS (Project for Public Spaces),
a non-profit planning and design organization dedicating to preserving
and increasing public spaces, originates from twenty-five years
ago technical assistance, research, education, planning and design
activities.
The experience of this organization is closely connected to the
fertile American research tradition opened by William H. Whyte (the
mentor of PPS) and by the more critical and less operational Jane
Jacobs' work. From that work traditions PPS inherits the richness
of multidimensional and well-organized outlook on the public spaces
design in which are involved technical, morphological, functional,
symbolic and perceptive elements, able to gather and to position
in a profitable way the different knowledge. Therefore the strategy
of PPS is to built "crowded places" in which there should be the
conditions for realising identification and appropriation processes
that seem indispensable for the community construction.
The reflection tone and the suggested operational principles bound
the sphere of action, including only the management and the urban
spaces turning intervention, not even the design of new public spaces.
However, it's not very clear how this principles can be transferred
from a field to another and what are the attentions we have to pay
in this operation. This handbook is for everyone: from the citizen
to the public administration, passing through the different level
of government and including stakeholders, professionals and students.
The language is very clear and friendly, indeed PPS handbook contains
a lot of examples, case studies and pictures. Therefore it is consistent
with the width and the heterogeneity of the potential users. In
the same way the reasoning explains easily intuitive concepts (too
often known) using frequently short circuit with the experience
and the practice.
The book is composed by three chapters: the first ("Why Places are
Important to Cities") presents some of the most important functions
of the urban places and some of the most frequent causes of failure.
In the end of this chapter we find the proposal of a new approach
("place driven" and "community based") to the project of public
space. This one will be developed through 11 points and a large
series of examples and case studies in the following chapter ("Principles
of Creating Great Places"). The last chapter ("Workbook for Evaluating
Public Spaces") studies the evaluation aspects of the public spaces
in deep and proposes the analysis of some characteristics of the
places that are able to give success and the fundamental aspects
of their working, moreover the third chapter contains some indications
about people participation and observation techniques. The handbook
concludes with an appendix that presents materials and forms to
collect behavior data.
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