the corridor//community isolation?

One of the key goals for the modernist project has been an ongoing search for efficiency in all areas of life, but particularly in the home.  Layered into the contemporary home are a few hundred years of effort on the part of builders, designers, and corporations trying to smooth out the daily lives of its inhabitants into one, frictionless existence.

Social structures have traditionally informed the locus of this spatial research; a few examples are the intensive studies on kitchen layouts in the early 20th C; or the placement of groom’s quarters adjacent to the stables in earlier centuries.  In recent years the search for efficiency in spatial layout has been based on the need to streamline the family experience in order to maximize individual production/leisure/consumption time, the triad of the ideal late capitalist existence.

Kitchens, while interesting, remain over-analyzed.  Let us examine the corridor with this context in mind.  How can a corridor effect the spatial efficiency and community of a home or workplace?

The corridor has a relatively recent existence, being invented around 1600 at Beaufort House, in England, in order to separate servants’ movement from the wealthier inhabitants.  At this point, rooms could still have several doors, leading from one to an other.  This separation slowly developed into complete hierarchy of space, with individual rooms adjacent to corridors, with a single door leading into each space.  Robert Kerr’s “The Gentleman’s House” (1864) talks about the ‘wretched inconveience of thoroughfare rooms’.   This slow spatial retreat of rooms from each other has been related to evolving relationships of our society to privacy, household structures of power and the prevailing social view of the body.

What happens when we think about the evolution of “the passage” and its relationship to community building?  Maybe a little friction is required…

(referencing the image below) On the left is the passage-less space (the matrix system in archispeak, hilariously).  On the right is the usual passage/room combination we are so used to experiencing (a series of servant/served spaces in archispeak).  From top to bottom, the comparisons are:

movement in these spaces:      matrix vs. corridor circulation system

the matrix layout: unintended meetings happen merely through movement; social space is created and a social community must be negotiated.        The body is stimulated as it is forced to negotiate multiple spatial conditions
the passage creates transitory moments of connection, easily avoided by the maintenance of a direct gaze.  Vision and the eye is bored by a single perspective

activity + movement:

the matrix: private activity is difficult, creating social norms around the sharing of tasks and ideas
the passage effectively segregates activities from the movement of the passerby.  isolation, solitude and secrecy are encouraged

activity only:

solitary activity is possible in the matrix system, yet there is always a connection to others in the space.
private activity is the default in a corridor system, unless two individuals choose to inhabit the same space (who works in the corridor beside those who clean it?)

Perhaps it is time for a little community friction, caused by the implementation of more matrix-style spaces, complete with glowing numerical wallpaper.

What do you think?  How does the spatial layout of your home or workplace impact your community?
note — this article was inspired by Robin Evans’ excellent essay “Figures, Doors + Passages” (1978).  read it if you are curious about these sort of things.

Vancouver and Community Space

Granville Street Redesign

Granville Street Redesign

When this website was but a nascent blog, I lamented Vancouver’s lack of a public square. A year later, as condo towers continue to spring up all around us, and the pressure to expand transportation infrastructure remains unabated, the need to carve out and protect public spaces is more necessary than ever.  Through the course of its development, Vancouver seems to have missed out on some great opportunities create public spaces. Downtown building density makes it difficult to congregate before and after concerts and films. Outside our stadiums, celebrating a sports victory takes place along the sidewalks of Yaletown or in areas adjacent to glassy towers.  Robson square, while great from a design standpoint (Kudos Arthur Erikson), fails as a public gathering site, in my view. Its basement-like quality leaves it ignored and under-used. Why go there, when the sunlit steps of the VAG beckon above?

It’s not all bad – Vancouver does hold plenty examples of embracing public space in all kinds of creative ways. We just need to do more.

For example, the Olympics have helped turn things around. The task of “hosting the world” in 136 days (and counting), has pumped creativity and dollars in dusting off two of our most important public spaces:

  • Recently capped withsnazzy glass domes this year to the tune of $1.6 million, Robson Square will enjoy a place in the limelight this February as a central media hub. Time will tell if this will give the square a new lease on life. Perhaps the lit-up glass domes, will act as a lure for more impromptu gatherings than the square currently sees. I sure hope so.
  • The near-completed redesignof Granville Street into a majestic promenade promised to inject new life into the city’s central artery, having languished in seedy obscurity for too long.

On a less glitzy but no less important scale, grassroots efforts at promoting all kinds of varied public space deserve a place in the spotlight as well.As described in a recent post, entitled Getting to know your Community Art, Kurt Heinrich describes how the  Commercial Drive community is using its walls as a backdrop for wonderful community art. I also love how, in neighbourhoods across the city, busy residents take part in creative gardening and often artistic gardening, transforming traffic intersection into sites of public, green pride.

PubliCity-Facebook-logo-400The advocacy effort for Vancouver public spaces received a huge boost last Tuesday with the exciting launch of PubliCity, a newly minted magazine put out by theVancouver Public Space Network (VPSN)The VPSN is a grassroots collective that engages in advocacy, outreach and education on public space issues in and around Vancouver. Efforts include combating advertising ‘creep’ in public spaces, promoting creative, community friendly urban design, monitoring private security activities downtown and looking at ways to re-green forgotten spaces and alleys of the city. PubliCity will provide a great vehicle for creating awareness of these issues and inspiring democratic debate about how best to promote, create and use public space in all its forms.

It goes without saying, that without public space, community can and will not flourish.