“Hostile architecture” and its confederates: A conceptual framework for . . . In recent years “hostile architecture” or designs (also called “disciplinary architecture” and “defensive architecture”) has become an ever more common feature of our cities Examples of these designs are benches you cannot sleep on, spikes you cannot stand on, and metal plugs you cannot skate on
Behavioral designs defined: how to understand and why it is important . . . In recent years, a growing discussion about how we should design our cities has emerged, particularly for the more controversial modes of design such as “defensive,” “hostile,” or “disciplinary” architecture (i e , benches on which one cannot sleep, or metal studs on which one cannot skate)
Disciplinary architecture - Alchetron, the free social encyclopedia The idea of shaping behaviours through the psychological effects of architecture is a very clever tool used in design Often this element of control is harder to distinguish and can even be overlooked by the public
Disciplinary Architecture? - CRC Research This is a fascinating article on how architecture and design can include certain people and deliberately exclude others Much of my research is on building social capital, network formation and the importance of diversity and inclusion
Disciplinary architecture - definition - Encyclo Disciplinary architecture Architectures of control have been considered to direct and or prohibit certain types of behaviours within a given space The idea of shaping user behavior is widely evident throughout the built environment
Disciplinary architecture - The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia Architecture regulates behavior; its constraints are simultaneous although are enforced not through the will of the state, or through the will of a community Its constraints are enforced through the physical power of a context, or environment
Hostile architecture and its confederates: A conceptual framework for . . . In recent years “hostile architecture” or designs (also called “disciplinary architecture” and “defensive architecture”) has become an ever more common feature of our cities Examples of these designs are benches you cannot sleep on, spikes you cannot stand on, and metal plugs you cannot skate on
Mapping Inter and Transdisciplinary Relationships in Architecture: A . . . The aim is to create a dictionary whose entries derive from the scope of architecture as a discipline, some that may be not well defined in architecture but have full meanings in other disciplines Or, even, define a hybrid disciplinary scope