In his book, Streets for People, Vienna-born Bernard Rudofsky describes the role of pavements as existing for the people who walk along them. He suggests that they have become a reality full of human meaning, and since they encompass volume rather than area,pavements should foster the unique life of an urban community.
Using the landscape as a canvas for art does not mean employing street performers or placing two-dimensional art along the roadside. Rather it involves “landscape design flow”in which public and private pavement areas are comprehensively designed as three-dimensional spaces.
Using the landscape as a canvas for art does not mean employing street performers or placing two-dimensional art along the roadside.Rather it involves “landscape design flow” in which public and private pavement areas are comprehensively designed as three-dimensional spaces.
This involves listening to the earth, and employing a design concept that is in agreement with the total landscape philosophy called genius loci, or spirit of place. We must unearth the characteristics that every location possesses, and use the artistic elements that comprise the total landscape, which is the creation of “design relationships” with humankind.Herein lie the roots of creative expression to design oases in the landscape.
In his book, Streets for People, Vienna-born Bernard Rudofsky describes the role of pavements as existing for the people who walk along them. He suggests that they have become a reality full of human meaning, and since they encompass volume rather than area,pavements should foster the unique life of an urban community.
In the streets and squares of Italian cities, residents gather in a daily ritual to create a kind of scene, as if to celebrate life.Pavements serve as places for social interaction much like a living room.When considering this, the packaging artist Christo Javacheff expressed the same kind of nuance. Namely, that field art is indeed a socia activity, and a form of communication. By increasing awareness of pavements as communication art and an urban stage where all kinds of human drama is carried out, they will become more diverse places.
The words of R. Halprin further emphasize and deepen this point.Just as an outstanding piece of theater is not dependent solely on the stage equipment, simply having good buildings will not create an enjoyable urban area. The element that supports both buildings and stages is human interaction. It is essential for people to create harmony for an ideal environment.
Elements & Total Concept of Urban Pavement Design
Introduction Pavement in Landscape Experience Garrett Eckbo
Word From The Supervisor: The Floorscape as Seen in Total Landscape Design Tooru Miyakoda
Preface: Possibilities of Floorscape Design Kiyofusa Hiramatsu
Yamashita Park’s Renewal Project and Urban Design Toshio Nishiwaki
Chapter 1. Total Landscape Design and Pavement: The Concept
Renewal of Yamashita Park
Pavement of the Yokohama Expo. 89
The International Culture City “Future Harbor 21”
Makuhari Messe
Shinjuku MOA Streets
Historical Promnade
Shin-Tokigawa Bridge
Tokyo Technical College
Nagoya City Museum
Contemporary Museum Zone, Hijiyama Park
Tamagawa Takashima-ya SC Pavement
Sendal Paseo & Pavement
Tadeshina Plateau Artistic Forest
Kosaka Community Forest
Belle Park City & Pavement
Forest Park for All Seasons
Tokyo Port Wild Bird Park
Katabiragawa River Park
Otonashigawa River Park
Chapter 2. Total Landscape Design and Pavement: The Multifarious Roles
Road
Bridge & Pedestrian Bridge
Station Plaza
School
Museum
Group Houses
Building/Commercial Building
Park
Garden & Pavement
Turf & Pavement
Others
Index
Cooperation
Postscript