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El. knyga: Architecture of Threshold Spaces: A Critique of the Ideologies of Hyperconnectivity and Segregation in the Socio-Political Context

(University of New South Wales, Australia)

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This book explores the relationship between architecture and philosophy through a discussion on threshold spaces linking public space with publicly accessible buildings. It explores the connection between exterior and interior and how this creates and affects interactions between people and the social dynamics of the city.

Building on an existing body of literature, the book engages with critical philosophy and discusses how it can be applied to architecture. In a similar vein to Walter Benjamin’s descriptions of the Parisian Arcades in the nineteenth century, the book identifies the conditions under which thresholds reveal and impact social life. It utilises a wide range of illustrated international case studies from architects in Japan, Norway, Finland, France, Portugal, Italy, the USA, Australia, Mexico, and Brazil. Within the examples, thresholds become enhancers of social interactions and highlight broader socio-political contexts in public and private space.

Architecture of Threshold Spaces

is an enlightening contribution to knowledge on contemporary architecture, politics and philosophy for students, academics, and architects.



This book explores the relationship between architecture and philosophy through a discussion on threshold spaces linking public space with publicly accessible buildings. It explores the connection between exterior and interior and how this creates and affects interactions between people and the social dynamics of the city.

Part 1 Thresholds: Some Theoretical Background 1 Threshold Spaces are
Singular Spaces 2 Threshold Spaces Express Dialectics 3 Observations on
Threshold Spaces Part 2 Thresholds of Buildings of Different Functions 4
Thresholds in Cultural Architecture 5 Thresholds of Services Areas and Retail
Shops 6 Thresholds in Architecture for Age-Specific Groups 7 Public Space as
Threshold Space 8 Thresholds around Semi-Private Pockets in Public Space Part
3 Constraints to the Existence of Thresholds and Proposals of Resistance
Strategies 9 Thresholds in the Context of Security Strategies 10 Thresholds
in the Context of Excessive Morality or Denial of Social Practices 11
Thresholds in the Context of Homogenisation of Space 12 A Critique of
Homogenisation and Segregation Part 4 Towards a Concept of Threshold
Architecture 13 Artworks in Public Space: The Role of Thresholds 14 Design
Principles of Threshold Architecture, and Theoretical Implications 15
Implications of Threshold Spaces for Communities
Laurence Kimmel is a Lecturer at the Faculty of Built Environment at the University of New South Wales. She is an architect (MArch, École Nationale Supérieure d'Architecture de Lyon, 1998) and a philosopher of architecture (PhD, University Paris 10 Nanterre, 2006). Her research focuses on boundaries and gradients between public and private space. Her book Architecture as Landscape (2010) describes experiences of architectures as a succession of heterogeneous spaces of different statuses, and shows how architectural shapes mediate the perception of adjacent spaces and the landscape. The objects of her research cover architecture, artworks, landscape architecture, and urban planning, all of which she analyses in a cross-disciplinary way. Her research also addresses the notion of "critical practice": architects who consider and express tensions, paradoxes or contradictions of the socio-political context in their practice.