Title: The Social Psychology of Architectural Design
1The Social Psychology of Architectural Design
- Faye Braithwaite
- APSY610
- 16 September 2005
2Overview
- Very brief history of the relationship between
social psychology and architecture - Newmans theory of Defensible Space
- Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design
- High-Density Living
- Proposed taxonomy of architectural dimensions
that influence psychological processes
3Historical Relationship between Social Psychology
and Architectural Design
- During the 18th century the architecture of
classical antiquity came to represent civic
virtue as well as social order. To be able to
order space was to be able to order society (at
least theoretically). - The elevated status of the architect, which
emerged in England with the rebuilding of London
after the Great Fire in 1666, represented the
need for new models of ordering. The architect
was seen a great designer with knowledge of the
classical arts who was able to translate ideas
about the ordering of space into the ordering of
society.
4Defensible Space (Newman, 1972)
- In the evolution of human habitat, different
cultures have developed mechanisms to defend the
territorial realm of their dwellings, which have
evolved through change and adaptation. - In architectural history there is ample evidence
of territorial definition and symbolization in
the forms of previous residential environments.
Newman (1972) claims that residential
environments of 20th century cities broke with
tradition simply because needs seem to change
dramatically, particularly in developing high
density housing to keep up with high population
growth rates. - Present urban environments may encourage criminal
behaviour.
5Some explanations of Defensible Space
- Defensible space is a model for residential
environments which inhibits crime by creating the
physical expression of a community that defends
itself. - Defensible space is a surrogate term for a range
of mechanisms real and symbolic barriers,
strongly defined areas of influence, and improved
opportunities for surveillance that combine to
bring an environment under the control of its
residents. - A defensible space is a living residential
environment which can be employed by inhabitants
for the enhancement of their lives, while
providing security for their families, neighbours
and friends. - Newman, 1972
64 elements of defensible space (Newman, 1972)
- The territorial definition of space in
developments reflecting the areas of influence of
the inhabitants. This works by subdividing the
residential environment into zones toward which
residents adopt territorial attitudes - 2. The positioning of windows to allow residents
natural surveillance of the public areas of their
living environment. - 3. The adoption of building forms which avoid
the stigma of peculiarity that allows others to
perceive the vulnerability and isolation of the
inhabitants. - 4. The enhancement of safety by locating
residential developments, in functionally
sympathetic urban areas immediately adjacent to
activities which do not provide continued threat.
7- The four elements of defensible space have one
common goal an environment in which latent
territoriality and sense of community convert
into responsibility for ensuring a safe and
well-maintained living space. - Newman attacks the design of housing projects in
the United Sates society may have contributed
to the victimisation of project residentssaying
with every status symbol available in the
architectural language of our culture, that
living here is falling short of the human state.
(Newman, 1972, p12) - Architecture is not just about style, image and
comfort. Architecture can create encounter and
prevent it. An architect with some understanding
of the structure of criminal encounter can simply
avoid providing the spaces which supports it.
8Chicagos Public Housing Projects
- Architecture, racism and even good intentions
have conspired to create a poverty trap in
Chicago's housing projects. As elsewhere in the
United States, public housing was first designed
in the 1930s as transitional housing for the
working poor. The problems began in the 1950s
when local politicians, began to use public
housing to segregate the city's rapidly growing
black population. Meanwhile, city builders had
become fixated with Le Corbusier's vision of
urban buildings. The result was huge high-rises
in poor black neighbourhoods, the worst of which
is an uninterrupted four-mile stretch of public
housing. - The Economist, 11 July 1998
9Defensible Space Research (Merry, 1981)
- Merry (1981), examined the pattern of
intervention in crimes in a modern American
housing development. The research was carried out
over an 18-moth period and included the
distribution of a questionnaire which examined
attitudes towards crime and danger and
experiences of victimization. The questionnaire
included a series of photos of the housing
project and participants were asked to categorise
each place as safe or dangerous. - The New York City project selected consisted of
500 apartments and 100 units and was surrounded
by vacant lots, industry and parking lots, and a
major highway. At the time the area had one of
the highest crime rates in the city, with police
statistics indicating the highest per capita rate
of robberies and assaults in the city. - Superficially the project was well-designed for
defensible space it was small, only four
families share a single entrance area, apartments
are closely associated with public space in front
and private fenced space in the rear, and the
windows are well-positioned for surveillance.
10Results
- Over 50 of the robberies reported in the survey
occurred in areas which are architecturally
defensible representing approximately
two-thirds of the project area. The remainder
occurred in areas characterised by Newman as
supporting crime (secluded, complicated lobbies,
narrow, poorly lit areas between buildings,
hidden crevices that serve as short cuts, and
sidewalks along streets cluttered with concrete
pillars and recessed alcoves) - Why were the defensible spaces not defended?
- Why is the crime rate in these areas as high as
in obviously poorly designed places?
11- Several factors account for this failure to
intervene in space that appears architecturally
defensible. For a bystander to intervene in an
emergency they must first notice that an
emergency is taking place, then must interpret
the event as an emergency, assume the
responsibility to act, decide what form of
assistance to provide, and finally, decide how to
implement this intervention. - Aspects of physical design as well as features of
the social organisation of the project interfere
with this sequence. - First, many subtle features of design violate
principles of defensible space and prevent easy
surveillance, even though in general the project
contains many of the characteristics of good
defensible space. For example, the exterior
stairwell is actually not easily subject to
surveillance. Although it is not enclosed in the
building, the outer wall is translucent not
transparent and since it makes four turns before
arriving at the landing of the apartment
entrances, it is impossible, from the bottom to
see who is in it .
12- Furthermore, if spaces are observable, this
feature is only effective in reducing crime when
crime is observed. Even when residents observe
intruders or witness criminal, disorderly, or
destructive behaviour, they rarely intervene. - One reason is residents inability to distinguish
intruders from neighbours who are strangers to
them. - A second reason is the lack of effective methods
of intervention. Most believe there is little
point in calling the police because they come too
slowly and rarely catch the culprit or recover
the property. - A third reason residents do not intervene to
defend the spaces they observe is the pervasive
fear of crime and retaliation. And fourth,
residents are much less likely to intervene to
help strangers than people they know personally
or close friends.
13Conclusions
- Architectural design is necessary to create
spaces that can be defended, but actual
intervention seems to depend on a sense of
responsibility and control over territory, access
to effective methods of intervention, and
commitment and involvement in the neighbourhood
community. - Discrepancies between the sense of danger and the
objective incidence of crime at a specific
location suggest that places appear dangerous not
simply because of the frequency of crime but also
because of their design, their familiarity,
residents anticipation that someone will
intervene to help them, and the behaviour and
reputations of their habitual users. - Poor design can create spaces which are widely
perceived as dangerous where intervention does
not occur, but good defensible space design
neither guarantees that a space will appear safe
or that it will become part of a territory which
residents defend effectively. The presence of
dangerous individuals can make architecturally
safe places seem dangerous.
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18Walkup Building (source Newman, 1972)
19Highrise Building (source Newman, 1972)
20Location of Crime in Walkups and Highrises
(source Newman, 1972)
21- A familys claim to a territory diminishes
proportionally as the number of families who
share that claim increases. The larger the number
of people who share a territory, the less each
individual feels rights to it. Therefore, with
only a few families sharing an area, whether it
be the interior circulation areas of a building
or the grounds outside, it is relatively easy for
an informal understanding to be reached among the
families as to what constitutes acceptable usage.
22- When the numbers increase, the opportunity for
reaching such an implicit understanding
diminishes to the point that no usage other than
walking through the area is really possible, but
any use is permissible. The larger the number of
people who share a communal space, the more
difficult it is for people to identify it as
theirs or to feel they have a right to control or
determine the activity taking place within it. It
is easier for outsiders to gain access to and
linger in the interior areas of a building
23Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design
- CPTED the proper design and effective use of
the built environment which can lead to a
reduction in the fear of crime and the incidence
of crime, and to an improvement in the quality of
life (Crowe, 2000, cited by Cozens, 2002). - CPTED has emerged as a socio-physical perspective
within both criminology and urban planning. - Newmans theory of defensible space is behind
modern CPTED initiatives worldwide. - CPTED adds another dimension to Newmans 4
elements of defensible space the effective and
continuous maintenance and management of urban
space.
24Three-D Approach to CPTED
- Designation establishing the intended use of the
area and the behaviours that will be accepted. - Definition identifying the physical limits of
the area, including planning for potential risks
and misuse. - Design using architectural design to support the
intended use of the space safely and efficiently.
25High-Density Living
- Crowding (the perception of unwanted high
density) is associated with increased blood
pressure, arousal and discomfort, as well as
alienation, withdrawal, helplessness and death. - Baum and Valins (1977) found that some interior
design variables mediate the effects of high
density by affecting the degree to which groups
from or that individuals are able to control
their social experience. - Control over social experience appears to be an
important aspect of response to high density
when such control is threatened or reduced,
crowding and its associated consequences are more
likely to occur. - Group formation in these settings is an
influential component of this control the
structures provided by the group reinforce
individual members ability to regulate
interaction.
26High-Density Living Research (Baum Davis, 1980)
- Baum and Davis (1980) conducted field studies in
university dormitories and three settings were
compared a standard long-corridor (housing one
group of 40 students, a short-corridor (housing
three groups of 20 students), and an
architecturally modified long-corridor (housing
two groups of 20 students). The groups were
separated by lounge areas and unlocked doors in
the modified long-corridor and the short-corridor
conditions however, the residents of the standard
long-corridor condition had no dividing lounge
areas. - Survey and observational data was collected from
the residents.
27Results
- Questionnaire data provided evidence of continued
stress and control-related problems among
residents of the standard long-corridor floor and
indicated that the intervention reduced these
problems on the modified long-corridor floor. - Standard long-corridor residents reported more
crowding and control related problems and less
small group development than did either of the
other two groups. - After 12 weeks of residence, standard
long-corridor residents reported increasing
difficulties in regulating social contact in the
dormitory and perceived dormitory life to be more
hectic and less controllable than residents in
the other two conditions. Standard long-corridor
residents were also more likely to attribute
problems to the large number of people they lived
with and reported knowing fewer friends.
28- Behaviours observed in the standard long-corridor
dorm after 12 weeks of residence were more
suggestive of withdrawal than the other two
conditions and less social activity was observed
overall. - Previous research has indicated that open bedroom
doors on the dormitory floor signal that the
occupants are willing to interact with their
neighbours. Counts of open doors indicated that
standard long-corridor residents were less likely
to leave their bedroom doors open than
short-corridor or modified long-corridor
residents.
29- Dividing the long-corridor with lounges and doors
resulted in more positive interaction on the
dormitory floor, more small group development,
more confidence among residents in their ability
to control events in the dormitory, and less
withdrawal. These residents actively developed
and used shared spaces for social purposes, were
able to effectively regulate social contact with
neighbours and experienced less crowding stress.
The modified long-corridor residents demonstrated
social patterns more similar to those observed in
the short-corridor dorm than in the standard
long-corridor dorm. - This study highlights the usefulness of
architectural intervention in high-density
residential settings and suggests that
behavioural data can be used in the design of
residential environments.
30Proposed Taxonomy
- Evans Mitchell-McCoy (1998) proposed a Taxonomy
of Architectural Dimensions that influence
Psychological Processes. - 5 architectural dimensions that influence
psychological processes - Stimulation
- Coherence
- Affordances
- Control
- 5. Restorative
31Stimulation
- Stimulation describes the amount of information
in a setting or object that impinges upon the
user. Intensity, variety, complexity, mystery and
novelty are specific design qualities that
influence stimulation. Too much stimulation
causes distraction and overload which interfere
with cognitive processes that demand effort of
concentration.
32Coherence
- Coherence refers to the clarity or
comprehensibility of building elements and form.
Ambiguity, disorganisation and disorientation
negatively impact on design coherence. Coherence
enables users to make reasonable deductions about
the identity, meaning and location of objects and
spaces inside of buildings. Stress can occur when
changes or disruptions in physical surroundings
makes prediction difficult. Conflicting
information from design elements or abrupt
changes in size, colour, texture or stimulation
levels can heighten stress. Highly ambiguous
spaces may also cause stress because people
cannot make sense of them.
33Affordances
- We utilize interior spaces according to our
understanding of the functions they provide us.
When we are unable to pick up on the functional
properties of a space or building misaffordances
occur. Ambiguities about the functions of design
elements can occur for several reasons and
usually involve vague or missing cues or too many
competing cues. Many accidents in buildings are
attributed to misaffordance. In addition, design
features that provide little or no feedback about
the consequences of their use can also elicit
negative reactions from users.
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35Control
- Control refers to the ability to either alter the
physical environment or to regulate exposure to
ones surroundings. Physical constraints,
flexibility, privacy, defensible space and
certain symbolic elements are key design concepts
salient to control. In addition to the amount of
available space, openness of the perimeter,
brightness and extent of view have all been shown
to moderate the effects of crowding on human
behaviour. Jurisdiction over space is enhanced by
actual or symbolic ownership which encourages
feelings of territoriality. Territoriality
enables regulated use and occupancy of space. It
also enhances the expression of personal or group
identity.
36Restorative
- Restorative qualities define the potential of
design elements to function therapeutically,
reducing cognitive fatigue and other source of
psychological stress. Design can function as a
coping resource that can help occupants of a
building alter the balance between environmental
demands and personal resources. Restorative
design elements include retreat, fascination,
exposure to nature and minimal opportunity for
distraction.
37Conclusions
- There are many ways in which architectural design
is influenced by social and other areas of
psychology, such as environmental and criminal
psychology. - Newmans Defensible Space theory has had a
substantial impact on contemporary architectural
design and urban planning. - The high-density living environment in large
cities worldwide may not be ideal living
environments, however design principles such as
defensible space may have a positive impact on
such environments.
38References
- Baum, A. Davis, G. E. (1980). Reducing the
Stress of High-Density Living An Architectural
Intervention. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 38(3). 471-481 - Cozens, P. M. (2002). Sustainable Urban
Development and Crime Prevention Through
Environmental Design for the British City.
Towards an Effective Urban Environmentalism for
the 21st Century. Cities, 19(2). 129-137 - Evans, W. G. Mitchell McCoy, J. (1998). When
buildings dont work the role of architecture in
human health. Journal of environmental
Psychology, 18. 85-94
39- Hetherington, K. (1997). The badlands of
modernity. Routledge. UK, London - Merry, S. E. (1981). Defensible Space Undefended
Social Factors in Crime Control Through
Environmental Design. Urban Affairs Quarterly,
16(4). 397-422 - Newman, O. (1972). Defensible Space.
Architectural Press. UK, London - The Economist. (11 July, 1998)