Public Space Between Crisis, Innovation, and Utopia | Sabine Knierbein | TEDxViennaSalon

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  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
  • Public space is much more than parks and plazas. It is where the crisis bites, where needed social innovation happens, and where capitalist restructuring manifests.
    For more information visit www.tedxvienna.at
    Sabine Knierbein is an international expert on public space. She studied landscape design before concluding her Ph.D. in urban studies at Bauhaus Universität Weimar, where she started exploring relations between public space, the philosophy of science, and research as action with impact. Sabine is an innovator who (re)designs academic curricula and research fields for engaged urban professionals. As director of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Urban Culture and Public Space (TU Wien), her fields include urban theory, urban governance, spatial resistance, and urban emancipation. Her lecture addresses spatial dilemmas between crisis and innovation and offers a different utopian approach to the city by relocating public space in the spatial presence of our own actions.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Komentáře • 4

  • @AForce4Change
    @AForce4Change Před 9 lety +1

    Your Presentation Connects with Professional Environmental Studies work at Lehman. (CUNY-Herbet)
    V. LeBlanc

  • @kayem3824
    @kayem3824 Před 4 lety

    No aesthetically meaningful public space has been created, let's say since Siena. You can call it "public space" as much as you like, backed by "recent studies", but that's just a label like the rest of urban design jargon.

  • @perceptondesignconsultants9455

    Wauw, too many difficult, yet interesting, topics/words/definitions for me to understand the lecture. This to me is a typical scientist talking and not understanding her audience....or it’s just me not being intelligent enough.

    • @kayem3824
      @kayem3824 Před 4 lety

      It's a typical boring planner. They haven't made anything meaningful since the organic medieval public spaces.