1st Edition

Spaces for Highly Mobile People Emerging Practices of Mobility in Italy

By Bruna Vendemmia Copyright 2020
    110 Pages 23 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    110 Pages 23 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book explores how emerging mobility practices have transformed spaces in order to fit the needs of highly mobile people, as well as the changing relationship between people and territory.

    It establishes an interdisciplinary and a multiscalar approach to mobility analysis and mobility design through the application of a mobile method of research. Drawing on mobile people in Italy, the book highlights how influential movers appropriate and configure space for their own needs, centring their activities on continuous but distant places and configuring territories with uncertain and evolving limits. This change of perspective allows us to redefine the concept of mobility space, including all the spaces that support the development of emerging mobility practices. It also encourages new perspectives on the way in which the relationship between the individual and territory is evolving into a less sedentary way of inhabiting space.

    This book will be of interest to architects, urban scientists and sociologists, as well as postgraduate students who are interested in understanding how mobilities are transforming contemporary cities and territories.

    List of figures

    List of tables

    Acknowledgments

    Foreword

    PAOLA PUCCI

    Introduction

    1 Mobility and the spatial perspective

    2 Research method

    3 Mobility in the Italian context: Data and urban contexts

    4 Reversible mobility the length and breadth of Italy: Redefining rhythms and territories

    5 What spaces for highly mobile people?

    6 Conclusions

    7 Post-face opening: Working on mobility from people

    VONCENT KAUFMANN

    Bibliography

    Index

    Biography

    Bruna Vendemmia is an architect and urban designer, with a PhD in urbanism. She is post-doctoral fellowship at DAStU Department of Excellence (Politecnico di Milano). Her main research interest focuses on spatial transformations engendered by contemporary changes in mobility practices. In her research she combines qualitative methods with interpretative mapping and spatial analysis to explore the consequences of mobile lives on the configurations of spaces and territorial relations.