Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/handle/10219/3268
Full metadata record
DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorParr, Mackenzie-
dc.date.accessioned2019-05-15T18:06:33Z-
dc.date.available2019-05-15T18:06:33Z-
dc.date.issued2019-04-10-
dc.identifier.urihttps://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/handle/10219/3268-
dc.description.abstractThere’s a certain allure and poeticism to mass transit, from buses, to streetcars, and trains. It’s curious that a strictly infrastructural marvel of engineering houses such an honest and diverse application of shared architecture, mutual in it’s urban scope. In many ways, the architecture of these utilitarian transit spaces (subways most notably), are comparable in their role to that of the public square, court, or forum. There is an untold architectural relationship within these urban environments between subways as a space of movement, and as a place of activity. This thesis aims to re-examine subways under this lens. To posit that subways offer more to the urban fabric than a functional vessel for movement, and are indeed vital at providing opportunity for social life to flourish in an urban context. Questions of democratizing space, spatial legitimacy, functionalism, and the dichotomy between space and place, arise when examining these constructs of subterranean infrastructure. These relationships will be explored by studying and reimagining a particular site along the City of Toronto’s subway system, specifically; Spadina Station. It is the intersection of both the University-Yonge Line, the Bloor Line, as well as the terminal to the Spadina Avenue streetcar. The key methods of research for this study include studying, drawing, and photographing the space to better understand it’s prescriptive needs, and to inform a modified architectural response and proposal. Ultimately, this project aims to be didactic in its thinking with regards to infrastructural architecture through proposal work. The core of transit is the people who use it, and it must be understood that these people interact socially with their surroundings, far beyond just the isolated motions of coming and going. We must ask how utilitarian infrastructure can shift it’s functional role in cities to reclaim the public realm as a space of communal activity, and shared program.en_CA
dc.language.isoenen_CA
dc.subjectpublic transiten_CA
dc.subjecturban infrastructureen_CA
dc.subjectocial architectureen_CA
dc.subjectthe public realmen_CA
dc.subjectsubwaysen_CA
dc.subjectrapid mass transiten_CA
dc.subjectstation designen_CA
dc.subjectfunctionalismen_CA
dc.subjectsocial justiceen_CA
dc.subjecturban sociologyen_CA
dc.subjectunderground architectureen_CA
dc.subjectTorontoen_CA
dc.subjectevent spaceen_CA
dc.subjectbuskingen_CA
dc.subjectsocial accessibilityen_CA
dc.subjectJane Jacobsen_CA
dc.subjectRichard Sennetten_CA
dc.subjectNew York City Subwayen_CA
dc.titleInfrastructural architecture: social design for the public realm in underground transit systemsen_CA
dc.typeThesisen_CA
dc.description.degreeMaster of Architecture (M.Arch)en_CA
dc.publisher.grantorLaurentian University of Sudburyen_CA
Appears in Collections:Architecture - Master's Theses
Master's Theses



Items in LU|ZONE|UL are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.