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Vini,

 

You are much more sanguine than I am regarding the possibility that other
modes of space/society interpretation will open themselves to space syntax.
Look at some of the recent texts in urban design-for example Carmona et
al.'s PUBLIC PLACES, URBAN SPACES (2003), which at least in the States is a
well-used intro text. These authors mention space syntax only once, and that
in passing! And this is one of the best overviews currently in terms of
urban design! Or take Michael Southworth's fine book on the history of
street design-not one mention of space syntax! Or attend an annual EDRA
meeting and discover very little interest in space syntax work, other than a
few explict space-syntax researchers organizing special sessions.

 

Part of the dilemma, I think, is the fact that too many researchers see
space syntax as a new kind of environmental determinism. As a
phenomenologist, I find that concern laughable. To me, space syntax is a
radical new way of seeing the people/place relationship because it provides
a way of seeing that gets beyond the conventional objectivist/subjectivist
lenses. True, most of the space syntax work so far has been analytic (Laura
Vaughn's wonderful work is one exception) and is thus more toward the
"objectivist" side. But, as I have argued in earlier posts and in my keynote
address at the 2007 Istanbul space syntax conference, there is a place for
phenomenological investigation, esp. in-depth descriptive studies of the
sorts of place-based lifeworlds indicated by the various space syntax
measures and cartographic representations (what, for example, is the daily
lifeworld like of the most integrated pathways in a particular neighborhood
or town? This topic cries out for a film version!).

 

In short, I welcome the new space syntax journal and wish it gobs and gobs
of success. Let it be a beacon to "convert" outsiders. But as far as
bringing space syntax to other styles of conceiving and analyzing, I am much
more doubtful than you because space syntax is so radically different in the
way it holds people/world together through space and place-in short, it
identifies one dimension of Heidegger's being-in-the-world as well as
Merleau-Ponty's body-subject and environmental embodiment as extending
invisibly into lived space and time and helping foster (or not) robust
places.

 

David Seamon

 

Dr. David Seamon

Architecture Department, Kansas State University

211 Seaton Hall

Manhattan, KS 66506-2901

785-532-1121

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www.arch.ksu.edu/seamon/