Article
Spanish
ID: <
oai:doaj.org/article:2d317575a0744da7a43cf326a1292970>
Abstract
Una reflection that considers the essential concepts of the western city, without bypassing the city’s mutations at the end of the 20th century, should consider further diversification, integration and accessibility of public spaces as a “civic objective”. In the context of an ecological approach to human settlements, the ways in which citizens come into contact with their peers and their wider environment are of interest: physical and sensitive, but also social, economic, cultural. This means taking on the actual arrangements of the room, which are not limited to the ‘house’ or ‘apartment’, but also mean living a neighbourhood, neighbourhood, city, region, country, culture, nature. And the effective forms of socialisation, which are not limited to Community or labour membership, but include co-presences and unforeseen meetings in the wider territory. /A Reflection that considers the essential concepts of the western city, without ignoring the changes of the city of the late twentieth century, should raise a greater diversification and integration of public spaces, and accessibility to them as a “civic purpose”.