Lighting design in shared public spaces
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Lighting design in shared public spaces
Routledge, 2022
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book advocates an approach to lighting design that focuses on how people experience illumination. Lighting Design in Shared Public Spaces contextualises light, dark and lighting design within the settings, sensations, ideas and imaginaries that form our understandings of ourselves and the world around us.
The chapters in this collection bring a new perspective to lighting design, arguing for an approach that addresses how lighting is experienced, understood and valued by people. Across a range of new case studies from Australia, Germany, Denmark, and the United Kingdom, the authors account for lighting design's crucial role in shaping our dynamic and messy experiential worlds. With many turning to innovative ethnographic methodologies, they powerfully demonstrate how feelings of comfort, safety, security, vulnerability, care and well-being can configure in and through how people experience and manipulate light and dark. By focusing on how lighting is improvised, arranged, avoided and composed in relation to the people and things it acts upon, the book advances understandings of lighting design by showing how improved experiences of the built environment can result from more sensitive and context-specific illumination.
The book is intended for social scientists who are interested in the lit or sensory world, as well as designers, architects, urban planners and others concerned with how the experience of light, dark and lighting might be both better understood and implemented in our shared public spaces.
Table of Contents
1. Light, dark and lighting design for shared public spaces: new perspectives on experiences of the lit world Shanti Sumartojo 2. Illuminating experiences: lighting design as an epistemic approach Nona Schulte-Roemer 3. Light and Value: A Design Anthropology of Light and Wellbeing in Hospital Building Sarah Pink, Melisa Duque, Shanti Sumartojo and Laurene Vaughan 4. The Midwifery Feel of Light Stine Louring Nielsen 5. Perceptions of safety in cities after dark Hoa Yang, Jess Berry and Nicole Kalms 6. How the city feels: workshopping lighting design in public space Shanti Sumartojo 7. At the margins of attention: Security lighting and luminous art interventions in Copenhagen Mikkel Bille and Olivia Norma Jorgensen 8. Lights out? Lowering urban lighting levels and increasing atmosphere at a Danish tram station Mette Hvass, Karen Waltorp and Ellen Kathrine Hansen 9. Towers for the night Casper Laing Ebbensgaard 10. Dark Designs: Creating Shadow, Gloomy Spaces and Enchanting Light Tim Edensor
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