An Architecture_MPS Special Issue.
Cities at this moment in the 21st century are seeing the latest significant disrupting force for change at a global scale in the Covid-19 pandemic. How this change will play out remains to be seen, but the early indicators are that it is not leading to the demise of the city as some forecasted, but instead is serving as a catalyst for re-imagining and adaptation. This special issue explores the theme of re-imagining the city through historical and contemporary analysis, design, and advocacy.
New York provides a particularly potent case for studying change, with numerous critical events in its history stressing the city to a maximum degree. These were followed in each case by its recovery, adaptation, and the evolution of a new New York. While New York is a great example of a changing city, other cities equally are exploring adaptation to address longer term sustainability by focusing on stresses and challenges that the pandemic has served to highlight in the public consciousness. The articles in this special issue take up this question of re-imaging the city to explore the city’s changing nature from several perspectives on public space and its critical position for urban life.
The first article links a historical view of public space to our current moment, where death and remembrance perhaps should revive the urban cemetery as a critical component of public space, where the city of the dead serves a critical cultural role in the city of the living. A second article explores the critical re-alignment of the street as public space for everyday life after years of domination by the private vehicle, analyzing the human response to New York City’s Open Streets initiative. The third article continues the examination of public space in the city by looking at active lifestyles of urban living, in this case in Rome and Montreal, especially in regard to walkability/mobility, seeking to promote improved health through the design of the public realm in public spaces linking to existing and new civic infrastructure. The fourth article considers the production and culture of public space in the city, with a case study of the evolution of a 19th century public square in Brooklyn, exploring its central position in the city’s life, its subsequent disruption and loss of heritage, and its potential to re-emerge as a meaning place in the 21st century city.
Publication date: From September - December 2022.
Guest Editor
Jason Montgomery, City University of New York, USA.
Article list
Research article
The production and destiny of public space in an American city: examining the emergence and disruption of Brooklyn City Hall Square
Jason Montgomery
2022-12-01 Volume 23 • Issue 1 • 2022
Also a part of:
Collection: Re-imagining the City: Urban Space in the Post-Covid City
Lifestyles and cities of the future – Rome and Montreal: comparing two realities
Alessandra Capuano and Federica Morgia
2022-11-01 Volume 23 • Issue 1 • 2022
Also a part of:
Collection: Re-imagining the City: Urban Space in the Post-Covid City
Rethinking New York’s “dark shadow”: managing the unclaimed dead on Hart Island, 1869 to the present day
Catriona Byers
2022-09-21 Volume 23 • Issue 1 • 2022
Also a part of:
Collection: Re-imagining the City: Urban Space in the Post-Covid City
The designed and the ad hoc: dynamic remakings of street space in New York City
Alison B Snyder
2022-10-18 Volume 23 • Issue 1 • 2022
Also a part of:
Collection: Re-imagining the City: Urban Space in the Post-Covid City