Place

Wikipedia: Sense of place

(Memo, Sep 9th 2011) After 3rd place, we are going to cultivate non-place to place. Place making effort(definition needed). This is not going to be Landscape design. Landscape is heavily visual idea and we just look at. We are goingh to make a place… where is safer than spacce(in definition of yee foo tuan)

Space and Place: The Perspective of Experience, Yi-Fu Tuan, 1977 Space is freedom. Place is security.(from Wikipedia)a space requires a movement from a place to another place. Similarly, a place requires a space to be a place. Hence, the two notions are co-dependent.  Definition of Space and Place as co-dependent notion
PLACE a short introduction, Tim Cresswell, 2004  3rd paragraphSpace and Place
P10
Space, then, has been seen in distinction to place as a realm without meaning..When humans invest meaning in a portion of space and then become attached to it in some way(naming is one such way) it becomes a place.Place and Landscape
P10
Landscape is an intensely visual idea.In most definitions of landscape the viewer is outside of it. This is the primary way which it differs from place.
P11
We do not live in landscapes – we look at themPlace as a Way of Understanding
..place is also a way of seeing, knowing and understanding the world.
(Cahapter 1) Define Space,Place and Landscape
Non-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity, Marc Augé, 1995 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Aug%C3%A9Marc Augé (born 1935 in Poitiers) is a French anthropologist.In an essay and book of the same title, Non-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity (1995), Marc Augé coined the phrase “non-place” to refer to places of transience that do not hold enough significance to be regarded as “places”. Examples of a non-place would be a motorway, a hotel room, an airport or a supermarket.[1]
Related?Transit Space: No Place is Nowhere, Kirsten Marie Raahauge, From the issue entitled “Reconceptualizing Cities”,2008
Non-Place: places of transience
Celebrating the Third Place: Inspiring Stories About the “Great Good Places” at the Heart of Our Communities,
Ray Oldenburg,
2002
http://www.amazon.com/Celebrating-Third-Place-Inspiring-Communities/dp/1569246122/ref=pd_sim_b_1

From Publishers Weekly

Sociologist Oldenburg (The Great, Good Place) offers a compilation of essays on those places in America “where everybody knows your name.” What Oldenburg calls “the third place” is different from home and work (the first and second places respectively) it’s somewhere people can relax in good company on a regular basis.

3rd Place
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