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- @aaizemberg me encantaría. Este año por ahí lo veo muy difícil, pero estemos en contacto. | 2 weeks ago
- @raphaelschaad erstaunlich! | 2 weeks ago
shared items in Google Reader
- Dune House by Jarmund/Vigsnæs AS Architects | October 2011
- Barcode House by David Jameson | October 2011
- On the Corner | October 2011
- Looks Cool, But What Does It Actually Shelter? | October 2011
- Wall Photos | Facebook | October 2011
- La Fontaine Apartment \ Esrawe Studio | October 2011
- The HI-MACS® House in Bavaria, Germany | October 2011
- Ravenscroft Desk by Leonhard Pfeifer | October 2011
- Coldwater Studio by Casey Hughes Architects | September 2011
- A Unique LA Home With Arcade Wall Graphics | September 2011
recent photos on flickr
recent trips
- Returned from a trip to Prescott. | February 2010
- Started a trip to Prescott. | February 2010
- Returned from a trip to Los Angeles. | October 2009
- Started a trip to Los Angeles. | October 2009
- Returned from a trip to New York. | February 2009
news / Space and Place, The perspective of experience
April 18, 2003
Space and Place, The perspective of experience
This book seems to have been around for 25 years already. I was in the midst of an internal brainstorming ecstasy about the reasons why we become so emotionally attached to places (either geographical or virtual), when I suddenly run into this book in a bookstore in San Francisco. The author, Yi-Fu Tuan, in the first chapters covers a whole spectrum of different interpretations of "space" and "place", how different cultures view, experience and understand them. Later on he adds the concept of time and how the three of them interact with each other. It talks very cleverly about how we are oriented in space, place and time, how is it that culture influence our conception of that. Tuan suggests that "space" is freedom and "place" safety. Although space will be eventually transformed into a concrete place as it acquires definition and meaning. A big factor he points out that will contribute in that transformation is how intensive, sometimes intimate and valuable are the experiences we live in those spaces - not how long we stay in them. It is definitively a very inspiring piece and although it wasn't written contemplating virtual spaces, you can clearly see the big connection throughout every chapter. more at amazon more on Yi-Fu Tuan



















