Lived, sensed and contested: ageing in a smart city

The growing number of seniors prefers to live in the city centres where the services they need are easily accessible by walking or using public transportation. Therefore urban places have become important environments for ageing citizens, too. Ageing urban citizens thus occupy many public spaces in...

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Main Author: Suopajärvi, Tiina
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Oulu School of Architecture, University of Oulu 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/atut/article/view/48116
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spelling fttsvojs:oai:journal.fi:article/48116 2023-05-15T17:42:45+02:00 Lived, sensed and contested: ageing in a smart city Suopajärvi, Tiina 2014-10-23 application/pdf https://journal.fi/atut/article/view/48116 eng eng Oulu School of Architecture, University of Oulu https://journal.fi/atut/article/view/48116/13947 https://journal.fi/atut/article/view/48116 Copyright (c) 2014 Proceedings of the 6th Symposium of Architectural Research in Finland 2014 Proceedings of the Annual Architectural Research Symposium in Finland; Proceedings of the 6th Symposium of Architectural Research 2014; 5-6 Proceedings of the 6th Symposium of Architectural Research in Finland 2014; Proceedings of the 6th Symposium of Architectural Research 2014; 5-6 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2014 fttsvojs 2020-05-29T22:29:28Z The growing number of seniors prefers to live in the city centres where the services they need are easily accessible by walking or using public transportation. Therefore urban places have become important environments for ageing citizens, too. Ageing urban citizens thus occupy many public spaces in their daily practices. They are mobile and active city dwellers but their ageing bodies affect the ways they use these spaces, as well as how they experience moving around in the city. Acting bodies are however more than physical entities; cultural beliefs and social norms are inscribed in them, and the shared norms are re-negotiated by individual experiences on “being in the body” (Joyce & Mamo 2006). The cities are often experienced through mobility, like walking, where walkers make spatial orders both to exist and to emerge (de Certeau 1988); and consequently these spatial practices express and even shape their identities. To understand how the ageing citizens of Oulu in northern Finland experience walking via their everyday routes in the city centre, I walked with five women and four men aged between 66–89 years in the spring 2013. In these kinds of walk-alongs “people weave previous knowledge and biography into immediate situated action” (Kusenbach 2003); thus multiple temporal layers and momentary sensory and other embodied experiences become unfolded during the walks. Through analysing our walks by following anthropologist Sarah Pink’s (2011) notions of emplacement, I will consider them as specific “place-events” but also as processes with histories. In addition, I will discuss how these entanglements disclose the complexity of spatial experiences of the seniors, which challenges the urban (computing) design. I will also raise the questions of the accountability of designers in the construction of power relations in public urban places. Article in Journal/Newspaper Northern Finland Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online
institution Open Polar
collection Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online
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language English
description The growing number of seniors prefers to live in the city centres where the services they need are easily accessible by walking or using public transportation. Therefore urban places have become important environments for ageing citizens, too. Ageing urban citizens thus occupy many public spaces in their daily practices. They are mobile and active city dwellers but their ageing bodies affect the ways they use these spaces, as well as how they experience moving around in the city. Acting bodies are however more than physical entities; cultural beliefs and social norms are inscribed in them, and the shared norms are re-negotiated by individual experiences on “being in the body” (Joyce & Mamo 2006). The cities are often experienced through mobility, like walking, where walkers make spatial orders both to exist and to emerge (de Certeau 1988); and consequently these spatial practices express and even shape their identities. To understand how the ageing citizens of Oulu in northern Finland experience walking via their everyday routes in the city centre, I walked with five women and four men aged between 66–89 years in the spring 2013. In these kinds of walk-alongs “people weave previous knowledge and biography into immediate situated action” (Kusenbach 2003); thus multiple temporal layers and momentary sensory and other embodied experiences become unfolded during the walks. Through analysing our walks by following anthropologist Sarah Pink’s (2011) notions of emplacement, I will consider them as specific “place-events” but also as processes with histories. In addition, I will discuss how these entanglements disclose the complexity of spatial experiences of the seniors, which challenges the urban (computing) design. I will also raise the questions of the accountability of designers in the construction of power relations in public urban places.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Suopajärvi, Tiina
spellingShingle Suopajärvi, Tiina
Lived, sensed and contested: ageing in a smart city
author_facet Suopajärvi, Tiina
author_sort Suopajärvi, Tiina
title Lived, sensed and contested: ageing in a smart city
title_short Lived, sensed and contested: ageing in a smart city
title_full Lived, sensed and contested: ageing in a smart city
title_fullStr Lived, sensed and contested: ageing in a smart city
title_full_unstemmed Lived, sensed and contested: ageing in a smart city
title_sort lived, sensed and contested: ageing in a smart city
publisher Oulu School of Architecture, University of Oulu
publishDate 2014
url https://journal.fi/atut/article/view/48116
genre Northern Finland
genre_facet Northern Finland
op_source Proceedings of the Annual Architectural Research Symposium in Finland; Proceedings of the 6th Symposium of Architectural Research 2014; 5-6
Proceedings of the 6th Symposium of Architectural Research in Finland 2014; Proceedings of the 6th Symposium of Architectural Research 2014; 5-6
op_relation https://journal.fi/atut/article/view/48116/13947
https://journal.fi/atut/article/view/48116
op_rights Copyright (c) 2014 Proceedings of the 6th Symposium of Architectural Research in Finland 2014
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