Thursday, May 13, 2021

Graffiti, tags and street art


I started filming graffiti around Downtown Kitchener on a near daily basis in April.   By early May I had covered most of the territory and saw little in the way of new graffiti. This was a good time to stop and reflect.

From the outset, I had ambivalent feelings about graffiti.  I adopted the position nicely summarized by  McAuliffe and Iveson  (2011):

"To this end, we have chosen a series of interrogations of common dialectical positions in talk of graffiti: is it art or crime; is it public or private expression; is it necessarily ephemeral, or does it seek permanence; is it a purely cultural practice, or is it economic? Our list is by no means exhaustive, but it does go some way to uncovering the complexity of graffiti’s dynamic and contested geographies."     

Asking these questions over this period led me to appreciate the variation in markings I had collectively called graffiti.  There is clearly a difference in style and motivation between the recognizable and recurrent 'tags' on posts and walls throughout DTK, and the scribbled writing and defacing paint in prominent locations.  Furthermore, there is a substantial presence of 'street art' in the DTK, much of which complements the many authorized murals in humanizing the downtown.  For the most part, however, these paintings are less often on the street, and more often on the channel walls of Schneider Creek, or old foundation walls in less travelled areas.  I believe there may be good intention as well as practical considerations on the part of the City in removing defacing graffiti as soon as possible, while allowing street art to flourish.   

McAuliffe, C. and K. Iveson  (2011)  Art and Crime (and Other Things Besides...): Conceptualising Graffiti in the City.  Geography  Compass  5/3 (2011): 128–143, 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2011.00414.x



Thursday, May 6, 2021

The Art of Wandering: The Writer as Walker

 

Coverley, Martin.  The Art of Wandering: The Writer as Walker  Oldcastle Books, 2012




"The Art of Wandering is a history of that curious hybrid, the writer as walker. From the peripatetic philosophers of Ancient Greece to the streets of twenty-first century London, Paris and New York, this figure has evolved through the centuries, the philosopher and the Romantic giving way to the experimentalist and radical. From pilgrim to pedestrian, flaneur to stalker, the names may change but the activity of walking remains constant, creating a literary tradition encompassing philosophy and poetry, the novel and the manifesto; a tradition which this book explores in detail. Today, as the figure of the wanderer returns to the forefront of the public imagination, writers and walkers from around the world are re-engaging with the ideas which animated earlier generations. For the walker is once again on the march, mapping new territory and recording new visions of the landscape."

Monday, May 3, 2021

StoryMap: The Cannons of Victoria Park

A StoryMap about the origins and meanings of the two cannons in Victoria Park, Kitchener:

The Cannons of Victoria Park









Readings

Hagen J. (2021) The City as a Composition: Working Through Geographies of Identity, Belonging, and Memory. In: Blair G., Bronstein N. (eds) The Politics of Spatial Transgressions in the Arts. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-55389-0_5

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Space Syntax Fun

Many cities have a distinct urban form evident in their street pattern. The spatial properties of that form, such as street density and connectivity are identifiable and measurable.  This is known as space syntax. 

There is a substantive literature on space syntax in architecture and urban planning.  Recent research uses space syntax measures to examine how urban form is related to routine walking, showing that street layout is a primary factor influencing pedestrian movement.  (Koohsari, et al, 2019). 

Quiz

How many of the following 15 cities you can identify from their urban form or street layout alone.  Answers are on the next page.


https://entornoalpatio.wordpress.com/tag/urbanismo/


No peeking!

Monday, April 26, 2021

The New Urban Agenda

The New Urban Agenda, was adopted at Habitat III in Quito, Ecuador, on 20 October 2016.  The intent is to strengthen and implement the UN Sustainable Development Goals, in particular Goal 11.  A policy of increased walkability is affirmed as central to this goal that cities become inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable.  


The following guidebook to help foster action on the New Agenda was published in 2020.

The New Urban Agenda Illustrated: The New Urban Agenda, adopted at Habitat III in Quito, Ecuador, on 20 October 2016, presents a paradigm shift based on the science of cities and lays out standards and principles for the planning, construction, development, management and improvement of urban areas. The New Urban Agenda is intended as a resource for different actors in multiple levels of government and for civil society organizations, the private sector and all who reside in urban spaces of the world.

Sunday, April 25, 2021

How to take a walk

Few people know how to take a walk. The qualifications are endurance, plain clothes, old shoes, an eye for nature, good humor, vast curiosity, good speech, good silence and nothing too much.”
-   Ralph Waldo Emerson
Below is a draft list of guidelines for ensuring a safe and successful urban walk.
  • Wear proper shoes
  • Dress for the weather
  • Protect yourself from the sun and insects
  • Bring water and snacks
  • Know where you are:  carry a map, compass, GPS or smartphone
  • Keep track of the time and distance travelled
  • Walk with a partner
  • Respect private property
  • When in environmentally sensitive areas, stay on the marked trails
  • Bring a communications device: mobile phone, walkie-talkie  
  • Bring a simple first-aid kit
  • Bring tools to help collect information: notepad, camera, GPS

Anything else?

Friday, April 23, 2021

Graffiti


A montage and contemplation of graffiti in downtown Kitchener, April 2021.   This material is preparatory for an episode of My 15 Minute City.  This version is Graffiti 3, updated April 24th, 2021



I update this video as I collect additional clips of graffiti.  The video is over 2 minutes in length with a file size of 180 mb.  Larger files like this  cannot be uploaded to Blogger, so further updates to this video are posted on Youtube and linked here:


Thursday, April 22, 2021

How often is the term 'walk' used in English?

"When you enter phrases into the Google Books Ngram Viewer, it displays a graph showing how those phrases have occurred in a corpus of books (e.g., "British English", "English Fiction", "French") over the selected years."

Below are a few Ngrams plotting the frequency of the word 'walk" in the Google corpus called English(2019) during the period, 1830-2019. 

The first chart plots 'walk' in comparison to 'urban' and 'rural'.  It is evident that the word walk is a frequently occurring word in English.  'Walk' occurred more frequently than urban and rural in the periods 1830-1910, and then again after 2010. 


The second chart shows an inflection search on the word 'walk'.  According to Google, "An inflection is the modification of a word to represent various grammatical categories such as aspect, case, gender, mood, number, person, tense and voice. You can search for them by appending _INF to an ngram."  

The corpus today uses 'walked', 'walk', 'walking' and 'walks' in that order.  Interestingly, the predominance of 'walked' is new since 2000.  


The third chart disentangles 'walk' as a verb from 'walk' as a noun.  Walk is used as a verb more often throughout the entire period, and since 2000 more than twice as often as a verb than a noun.


Overall, the word 'walk' has occurred frequently in the English (2019) corpus since 1830.  Its usage dropped slowly from 1830 to about 1990, but since then the word has been used at a growing rate.  


Sunday, April 18, 2021

How to use Walkscore

 This is a short video and trial voiceover for 'How to Use Walkscore".  This material is preparatory for an episode of My 15 Minute City.  

Friday, April 16, 2021

Walkability within the Waterloo Region

 The Region of Waterloo provides a nice interactive map of walkability in the Region




  

The website provides a brief description of how the walkability index is calculated. 

"Walkability rankings are relative to neighborhoods in Cambridge, Kitchener and Waterloo. The ratings combine 4 neighborhood characteristics: 1) Residential density 2) Number of intersections 3) Variety of places to visit and 4) Design of retail stores."

A walkability rating is calculated and assigned to each cell on the map.  It looks to me that each cell represents 100 X 100 metres on the ground. The higher the walkability rating of the cell, the darker the shading of green.   

Downtown Kitchener is shown to be the most walkable district in the Region.   It is affirming to note that the spatial extent of this green district is very close to that of My 15 Minute City.  


The added benefit of this map is that it shows variations, although rather coarsely, in walkability within DTK.







Wednesday, April 14, 2021

A Philosophy of Walking

 








A Philosophy of Walking by  Frédéric Gros, (Verso, 2014) is a beautifully written, reflective, and insightful collection of essays about walking.  

That said, the author has a penchant for long walks in the countryside, and doesn't much like the urban walk.  Among 25 short essays, only one is focused on the urban walking experience.  He comments that "Walking in town is torture to the lover of long rambles in nature, because it imposes, as we shall see, an interrupted, uneven rhythm." (175).   His perspective on the urban walk is through the emergence of the urban flaneur.   Urban concentration, the crowd, and capitalism, or more exactly consumerism, enabled the urban stroller to appear, and moreover are at the root of interruptive nature of walking in the city.  The urban walker "... just lays himself open to scattered visual impacts.  The walker is fulfilled in the abyss of fusion, the stroller in a firework-like explosion of successive flashes." (181).  

Strong, colourful and critical language of the urban walk.  Rarely, however, is downtown Kitchener that exciting.  Even so, encounters with the city, crowds and consumerism provide students with learning opportunities to see how the city is infused with power, inequity, and injustice.  Such insights make for a good urban walk.



  

Saturday, April 10, 2021

My Research Interests

This schematic illustrates my major research interests and how they fit together.  

 

Walking in the European City


Walking in the European City: Quotidian Mobility and Urban Ethnography
Edited By Timothy Shortell, Evrick Brown, 1st edition Routledge, 2016

Friday, April 9, 2021

Walking Pedagogy/Andragogy - 1

Over a few posts I will elaborate on my ideas of teaching and learning about walking.  
 
A walking pedagogy/andragogy is essentially a set of approaches to teaching and learning that is built around the activity and subject of walking.  Approaches to teaching and learning differ between children and adults, hence the distinction between Pedagogy = paidi (child) + ago (guide), and Andragogy = andras (man) + ago (guide).  Working mostly with adult learners, my approach is rightly called a walking andragogy, and I'm a walking andragogue!  A future post will discuss experiential learning as a key component of the adult learning model.

Like other approaches to teaching and learning, a walking andragogy includes the following elements: 

  • A methodology and practice of teaching 
  • A strong theoretical foundation 
  • A curriculum of content 
  • A research domain

Monday, April 5, 2021