Skip to main content

2020 | Buch

Suburban Retail Spaces

Formative and Transformative Process

insite
SUCHEN

Über dieses Buch

This book derives from observations of the contemporary built environment and its contradictions. The suburban retail spaces, specifically the suburban shopping mall, and the changes caused by them within urban organisms are the object of the investigation synthesized in the volume. The topic is very crucial for the development of the contemporary city. It constitutes at the same time a problem (large commercial structures' spread is 'destroying' traditional commercial urban fabrics) and an opportunity (shopping malls are the most vital parts of the new suburbs and can play the role of community nucleus in urban and suburban areas). Furthermore, the spread of e-commerce forces these structures to functional and spatial transformations that brings also a new relationship with the city.

The analytical reading, supplemented by generative and design projections, is carried out by using the conceptual and methodological tools of urban morphology, specifically those of the typological processual approach. From this specific point of view, the suburban shopping mall is read as an organism (a complex system characterized by mutual solidarity and interdependence among component elements) in itself, and as a sub-organisms belonging to the largest territorial organism.

The book is intended to offer, to operators, scholars, researchers, professionals and students, a reading and design method, to interpret an important aspect of the contemporary built environment by analyzing the suburban commercial space case. It offers at the same time a model applicable to other specific not-commercial cases, to defining paths for further research and design developments.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Methodological Introduction, Research Structure and State of the Art
Abstract
The present research aims at interpreting the formative and transformative process of shopping environments and spaces, seen as aggregates/fabrics and investigated by using urban morphology scientific tools.
Vincenzo Buongiorno
Chapter 2. Suburban Shopping Mall as an Urban Fabric
Abstract
In order to read a very complex phenomenon, some concepts that proved to be fundamental in the study of historical urban fabrics are used here. Their use, although mediated and updated in relation to a particular study object, is justified by the conviction that even though changing the study object, some expressions and settlement modalities, the anthropic behavior in living and transforming the territory can be traced back to a general nucleus that is common and shared by men of all times and places. This concept is meaningful in the diatopic and diachronic sense.
Vincenzo Buongiorno
Chapter 3. Suburban Commercial Fabric Formative Process
Abstract
The development of specialized routes dedicated to a specific transport modality has only recently gained a significant acceleration. The railway, motorway and airway networks development has revolutionized a millenary tradition of transport and movement mainly based on human animal motive power transport (Hindley 1972, 2–6).
Vincenzo Buongiorno
Chapter 4. Retail Spaces Crisis and Future Transformative Process
Abstract
Further specialization and/or de-specialization.
The formative and transformative process described so far led to the mature form of the commercial suburban fabric type. A long and complex process characterized for its specialized character and for realizing the conditions for a further future specialization of use of the aggregates/fabrics.
Vincenzo Buongiorno
Chapter 5. Conclusions
Abstract
The research proposed here, as mentioned in the introductory Chap. 1, has the goal of contributing to fill an important gap on the morphological investigation of the contemporary city and territory’s fabrics (Strappa, U + D Urbanform and design, L’Erma di Bretschneider, Roma, 2017, 2–5).
Vincenzo Buongiorno
Metadaten
Titel
Suburban Retail Spaces
verfasst von
Prof. Vincenzo Buongiorno
Copyright-Jahr
2020
Electronic ISBN
978-3-030-54991-6
Print ISBN
978-3-030-54990-9
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-54991-6