TY - JOUR
T1 - Reclaiming site analysis from co-sensing to co-ideation
T2 - A collective cartography strategy and tactical trajectories
AU - Heyik, Muhammet ali
AU - OZER, Derya Gulec
AU - Abarca-Alvarez, Francisco Javier
AU - Romero-Martínez, José María
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/6
Y1 - 2024/6
N2 - This study introduces a collective cartography strategy for analyzing complex urban spaces. It was applied during a 7-day Erasmus + workshop with 46 participants from universities in Spain, Turkey, Portugal, and Poland, representing various backgrounds such as urban planning, architecture, heritage, information technologies, and tourism. The workshop's objective was to identify critical urban issues and generate sustainable and multisensory urban space concepts. The impact of this strategy, from co-sensing to co-ideation, was evaluated by its influence on collaboration and the development of self-generated tactics during the process. Within this context, we explored various group tactics, including multisensor data collection, multi-criteria-based analysis, crowdsourcing for site diagnosis, and distributed collaboration to enhance diverse perspectives and narratives. The findings, outputs, and reflections from participants indicate highly interactive, productive, and inclusive co-creation settings. These were facilitated through a web-based virtual collective space (Doyoucity) and a crowdsourcing mobile app for on-site data collection and analysis (Fulcrum).
AB - This study introduces a collective cartography strategy for analyzing complex urban spaces. It was applied during a 7-day Erasmus + workshop with 46 participants from universities in Spain, Turkey, Portugal, and Poland, representing various backgrounds such as urban planning, architecture, heritage, information technologies, and tourism. The workshop's objective was to identify critical urban issues and generate sustainable and multisensory urban space concepts. The impact of this strategy, from co-sensing to co-ideation, was evaluated by its influence on collaboration and the development of self-generated tactics during the process. Within this context, we explored various group tactics, including multisensor data collection, multi-criteria-based analysis, crowdsourcing for site diagnosis, and distributed collaboration to enhance diverse perspectives and narratives. The findings, outputs, and reflections from participants indicate highly interactive, productive, and inclusive co-creation settings. These were facilitated through a web-based virtual collective space (Doyoucity) and a crowdsourcing mobile app for on-site data collection and analysis (Fulcrum).
KW - Crowdsourcing
KW - co-ideation
KW - co-sensing
KW - collective cartography
KW - urban space
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85181514460&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/14780771231225699
DO - 10.1177/14780771231225699
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85181514460
SN - 1478-0771
VL - 22
SP - 238
EP - 256
JO - International Journal of Architectural Computing
JF - International Journal of Architectural Computing
IS - 2
ER -