Applying Participatory Design for the Reuse of Deserted Community Spaces
Commenced in January 2007
Frequency: Monthly
Edition: International
Paper Count: 32797
Applying Participatory Design for the Reuse of Deserted Community Spaces

Authors: Wei-Chieh Yeh, Yung-Tang Shen

Abstract:

The concept of community building started in 1994 in Taiwan. After years of development, it fostered the notion of active local resident participation in community issues as co-operators, instead of minions. Participatory design gives participants more control in the decision-making process, helps to reduce the friction caused by arguments and assists in bringing different parties to consensus. This results in an increase in the efficiency of projects run in the community. Therefore, the participation of local residents is key to the success of community building. This study applied participatory design to develop plans for the reuse of deserted spaces in the community from the first stage of brainstorming for design ideas, making creative models to be employed later, through to the final stage of construction. After conducting a series of participatory designed activities, it aimed to integrate the different opinions of residents, develop a sense of belonging and reach a consensus. Besides this, it also aimed at building the residents’ awareness of their responsibilities for the environment and related issues of sustainable development. By reviewing relevant literature and understanding the history of related studies, the study formulated a theory. It took the “2012-2014 Changhua County Community Planner Counseling Program” as a case study to investigate the implementation process of participatory design. Research data are collected by document analysis, participants’ observation and in-depth interviews. After examining the three elements of “Design Participation”, “Construction Participation”, and” Follow–up Maintenance Participation” in the case, the study emerged with a promising conclusion: Maintenance works were carried out better compared to common public works. Besides this, maintenance costs were lower. Moreover, the works that residents were involved in were more creative. Most importantly, the community characteristics could be easy be recognized.

Keywords: Participatory design, Deserted spaces, Community building, Reuse.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI): doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1112304

Procedia APA BibTeX Chicago EndNote Harvard JSON MLA RIS XML ISO 690 PDF Downloads 1248

References:


[1] Altschuler, Alan A, Community Control. New York: Random House. 1970..
[2] McClure, Wendy. The Rural Town: Designing for Growth and Sustainability. University of Idaho, Moscow: Center for Business Development and Research, 1997.
[3] Sanoff, Henry, Designing with Community Participation. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1978...
[4] Sanoff, Henry. Visual Research Methods in Design. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1991.
[5] Smith, Herbert. The Citizen’s Guide to Planning. Chicago: Planner’s Press, 1993.
[6] Towers, Grahams. Building Democracy: Community Architecture in the Inner Cities. London: University College London Press, 1995.
[7] K Al-Kodmany, Landscape and Urban Planning, using visualization techniques for enhancing public participation in planning and design: process, implementation, and evaluation, Volume 45, Issue 1, 15 September 1999, Pages 37–45.
[8] Sanoff, Henry. Participatory Design: Theory and Techniques. Raleigh, NC: Bookmasters, 1990.
[9] T. Robertson, J. Simonsen, Challenges and opportunities in contemporary participatory design, Design Issues, 28 (2012), pp. 3–9.
[10] H. Sanoff, Community participation methods in design and planning John Wiley and Sons, Inc, New York, Chichester, Weinheim, Brisbane, Singapore, Toronto, 2000.
[11] M. Francis, Community design, The Journal of Architectural Education, Vol 36 (No 5), 1983, pp. 14–19.
[12] Henry Sanoff, Design Studies, Participatory Design, Volume 28, Issue 3, May 2007, Pages 213–215.
[13] Cheng, Ming-Chih. The research of the mechanism public-private collaboration of the employment laborers and procurement materials– The example of the townscape improvement in Hsin-Chu County. 2009.
[14] Cecilia Valencia-Sandovala, David N. Flandersb, Robert A. Kozaka. Landscape and Urban Planning. Participatory landscape planning and sustainable community development: Methodological observations from a case study in rural Mexico. Volume 94, Issue 1, 15 January 2010, Pages 63–70.