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Spaces & Stories Personal navigation as personal experience

Spaces & Stories Personal navigation as personal experience. Alan Blackwell. SENSE OF PLACE. From Kevin Lynch (e.g. The Image of the City ). How do people experience urban spaces? Accessibility is psychological, not just physical

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Spaces & Stories Personal navigation as personal experience

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  1. Spaces & StoriesPersonal navigation as personal experience Alan Blackwell

  2. SENSE OF PLACE

  3. From Kevin Lynch (e.g. The Image of the City) • How do people experience urban spaces? • Accessibility is psychological, not just physical • The sense of a place links elements via coherent representations of non-spatial concepts and values • Perception of space is a creative act, not just reception • People learn islands of activity, oriented by iconic structures, with axes/routes between them • Anyone can ‘read’ a place, but they see different things: • comfort, identity, meaning, stimulus, attachment ...

  4. SITE LINES

  5. “Site Lines”… Considers how spaces become structured with landmarks and orientation axes Exploits visual cues to integrate immediate perceptions and experience into a cognitive map

  6. “I’M OVER HERE!”

  7. “I’m over here!” … Expresses navigation as a personal problem Exploits existing ecology of SMS usage Provides a quick win for the ‘site lines’ scenario Could be right time to develop novel opportunity for 2012 Olympics

  8. “WHERE WAS I?”

  9. “Where was I?” … • Addresses a common pedestrian navigational challenge - back-tracking • Provides a connection to narrative cognitive representation of journeys • Can be pitched to technologists in terms of familiar location service scenarios • Finding car in car park • Looking for lost key • Offers opportunity of simple play/rewind metaphor

  10. LOCAL SECRETS

  11. “Local Secrets” … • Emphasises the intimacy of personal devices • Supports social currency and community, but less crudely than ‘friend-finder’ applications. • Connects to experiences of space such as stimulus, comfort and attachment • Can be pitched to technologists in terms of familiar location service scenarios • Geogaching • Location-specific advertising • Customer loyalty schemes

  12. “WHILE YOU’RE THERE ...”

  13. “While you’re there …” • References social obligation and/or recommendation • Is casual and informal, suggesting serendipity • Acknowledges varying priorities and interpretations of possible navigation ‘goals’ • Major directions with local branching corresponds to the axis and island models identified by Lynch

  14. A DESIGN SKETCH

  15. “heads-up” “head-down”

  16. “head-down” “heads-up”

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