Quality of Life in Urban Landscapes pp 349-355 | Cite as
Urbanscape Emanation vs. Types of Landscape
Abstract
Emanation is the effect that any system has on its environment. Emanation is an emission that generates an act of emitting, causing something to flow forth.The concept of urban emanation is seen as the impact of the city system on its own environment. The design models are associative landscape, walkspace, soundscape and touristscape, all of them forming high quality of urban lifescape.The design mode of a city is the choreography of motion, visual illusions and soundscape anticipation. The aim is to create a paradigm that is independent of location, content, scale, time and technology. It presents a network of key terms and concepts. It takes into account the context and program, and the consequence is a quality lifescape.
References
- Australia ICOMOS (2013) The Burra Charter, ICOMOSGoogle Scholar
- Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci B (2015) Perceiving heritage vs. awareness of heritage, cultural heritage – possibilities for spatial and economic development – Proceedings ISBN 978-953-8042-10-2, 212–215Google Scholar
- Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci B, Marić T (2012) Walkspace linearno povezivanje prostora na primjeru Splita/Linear Space – motion in the city of split, Prostor, 20, 1(43), Zagreb, Arhitektonski fakultet, pp 118–131Google Scholar
- Cartier C, Lew AA (2005) Seductions of place: geographical perspectives on globalization and touristed landscapes (critical geographies). Routledge, London and New YorkGoogle Scholar
- Marić T, Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci B, Richard S (2014) Re-creating human scaled streets, “SGEM conference on arts, performing arts, architecture and design – conference proceedings”. SGEM, Albena, pp 917–924Google Scholar
- McNulty B (2014) Cultural heritage tourism. Partners for Livable Communities, Washington DCGoogle Scholar
- Metro-Roland MM (2011) Tourists, signs and the city: the semiotics of culture in an urban landscape. Ashgate Publishing, FarnhamGoogle Scholar
- Mrđa A, Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci B (2014) The importance of the concept of tourism carrying capacity for spatial planning – previous research, development and methodological approaches. Prostor 22(2):212–227Google Scholar
- Mrđa A, Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci B (2016) Heritage touristscapes: a case study of the island of Hvar. Ann Ser Hist Sociol 26(3):553–572Google Scholar
- Oberman T, Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci B, Jambrošić K (2014) Enhancement of urban soundscape – influence on urbanism and landscape architecture. Prostor (Zagreb, ISSN 1330-0652), 22, 2(48), pp 201–211Google Scholar
- Oberman T, Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci B, Jambrošić K (2015) Integral approach to enhancement of soundscape in urban open space. Prostor 23(1):118–129Google Scholar
- Rogers Stirk Harbour and Partners (2008–2013) Grand Paris, masterplanGoogle Scholar
- Rudolph von Laban (1966) ChoreuticsGoogle Scholar
- Samsudin PY, Maliki NZ (2015) Preserving cultural landscape in homestay programme towards sustainable tourism: brief critical review concept. Procedia Soc Behav Sci 170:433–441CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Shuib KB, Hashim H (2011) Cultural landscape values of a rural landscape: perception of outsiders and tourists. In: IFLA APR Congress – hospitality: the interaction with land, Bangkok, ThailandGoogle Scholar
- Sopina A, Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci B (2015) Asocijativna obilježja krajolika/associative features of landscapes, Prostor, 23, 2(50), Zagreb, Arhitektonski fakultet, pp 304–313Google Scholar
- Von Haaren C (2002) Landscape planning facing the challenge of the development of cultural landscape. Landsc Urban Plan 60:73–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar