ABSTRACT

Since its publication in 1976, Ted Relph’s Place and Placelessness has been an influential text in thinking about cities and city life across disciplines, including human geography, sociology, architecture, planning, and urban design. For four decades, ideas put forward by this seminal work have continued to spark debates, from the concept of placelessness itself through how it plays out in our societies to how city designers might respond to its challenge in practice.

Drawing on evidence from Australian, British, Japanese, and North and South American urban settings, Place and Placelessness Revisited is a collection of cutting edge empirical research and theoretical discussions of contemporary applications and interpretations of place and placelessness. It takes a multi-disciplinary approach, including contributions from across the breadth of disciplines in the built environment – architecture, environmental psychology, geography, landscape architecture, planning, sociology, and urban design – in critically re-visiting placelessness in theory and its relevance for twenty-first century contexts.

part 1|58 pages

Place/lessness in Design

chapter 2|13 pages

An Urban Designer's Perspective

Paradigms, Places and People

chapter 3|12 pages

Theory's Role in Placelessness

chapter 5|17 pages

Regulating Place Distinctiveness

A Critique of Approaches to the Protection of ‘Neighborhood Character' in Melbourne

part 2|58 pages

Place/lessness in Experience

part 3|70 pages

Place/lessness in Practice

chapter 10|16 pages

Examining Place-making in Practice

Observations from the Revitalization of Downtown Detroit

chapter 12|18 pages

Urban Squares

A Place for Social Life

chapter 13|17 pages

Placelessness and the Rigid Perception of Place Identities

Public Toilets as Multi-functional Places

part 4|48 pages

Place/lessness in Question

chapter 14|19 pages

Extraordinary Ordinariness

An Outsider's Perspective on Place and Placelessness in the Japanese City

chapter 15|15 pages

Extending Place

The Global South and Informal Urbanisms

chapter 16|12 pages

Place as Multiplicity

chapter |3 pages

Afterword