UCL logo

UCL Discovery

UCL home » Library Services » Electronic resources » UCL Discovery

Analysing the visual dynamics of spatial morphology

Turner, A (2003) Analysing the visual dynamics of spatial morphology. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design , 30 (5) 657 - 676. 10.1068/b12962.

An open access version is available from UCL Discovery

[img]
Preview
PDF - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
404Kb

Abstract

Recently there has been a revival of interest in visibility analysis of architectural configurations. The new analyses rely heavily on computing power and statistical analysis, two factors which, according to the postpositivist school of geography, should immediately cause us to be wary. Thedanger, they would suggest, is in the application of a reductionist formal mathematical description in order to `explain' multilayered sociospatial phenomena. The author presents an attempt to rationalise how we can use visibility analysis to explore architecture in this multilayered context by considering the dynamics that lead to the visual experience. In particular, it is recommended that we assess the visualprocess of inhabitation, rather than assess the visibility in vacuo. In order to investigate the possibilities and limitations of the methodology, an urban environment is analysed by means of an agent-based model of visual actors within the configuration. The results obtained from the model are compared with actual pedestrian movement and other analytic measurements of the area: the agents correlate well both with human movement patterns and with configurational relationship as analysed by space-syntax methods. The application of both methods in combination improves on the correlation with observed movement of either, which in turn implies that an understanding of both the process of inhabitation and the principles of configuration may play a crucial role in determining the social usage of space.

Type:Article
Title:Analysing the visual dynamics of spatial morphology
Open access status:An open access version is available from UCL Discovery
DOI:10.1068/b12962
Additional information:Imported via OAI, 16:54:26 4th May 2005
UCL classification:UCL > School of BEAMS > Faculty of the Built Environment > Bartlett School > Bartlett School of Graduate Studies

View download statistics for this item

Archive Staff Only: edit this record