Waterfront regeneration projects worldwide have transformed cities’ edges into new public spaces. Although water should be the centerpiece of these transformations, users are often situated as passive observers of water; urban design of public spaces only affords distant views of water and limited possibilities for active bodily engagement and play. Formulaic urban design has often neglected the potentials of indeterminate spaces where users’ desires can unfold. From these departure points, this paper uses a temporary design installation to investigate potential forms of active water engagement in a contemporary waterfront space. The installation prompts users to interact playfully with water through a variety of prototypes and devices. Observation of visitor interactions with the intervention provides data about users’ desires for water engagement, in terms of three research questions concerning: engagement with the water and the marine life within it, the multiple behavioral affordances of the water’s edge, and the adaptability of waterfront spaces. The study indicates the potential of temporary installations to test hypotheses and design possibilities, and thereby inform larger permanent waterfront urban design projects.
Mikkelsen, Jacob Bjerre, Quentin Stevens, Catherine Hills and Florian "Floyd" Mueller. "Exploring How Urban Waterfronts Can Encourage Visitors' Active Engagement with Water through a Temporary Design Installation." Archnet-IJAR: International Journal of Architectural Research. 12, 1 (2018): 91-111.
ISSN
1938-7806. OCLC 145980807; LOC 2007212183.
2018 Archnet-IJAR, Archnet, MIT- Massachusetts Institute of Technology