Space and Spatiality. What The Built Environment Needs From Social Theory
Space and Spatiality. What The Built Environment Needs From Social Theory
Space and Spatiality. What The Built Environment Needs From Social Theory
To foresee social outcomes from decisions about the physical and spatial form of the built environment, built
environment professionals need to make use of theory-like propositions linking the two domains. In the absence of
scientifically tested propositions, a shifting consensus of beliefs fills the need, and it can take decades of social costs to
show the inadequacy of these beliefs. The problem of social theory and the built environment is then defined for
the purposes of this paper in terms of the potential for testable propositions at the level at which one intervenes in
the built environment. This is called the need for design-level theories, defining design in the broad sense of all the
choices and decisions made by built environment professionals in creating and modifying the built environment.
Examining social theory under two broad headings, urban sociology and society and space, it is noted that both
approach the society environment relation society first, in that the form of the environment is sought as the product
of the spatial dimensions of social processes. This is called the spatiality paradigm, and note that such approaches
have never reached, and probably can never reach, the level of precision about the built environment which would be
needed to found testable propositions at the design level. The alternative is to turn the question the other way round
and through environment first studies look for evidence of social processes in the spatial forms of the built
environment. Recent work of this kind is outlined within the space syntax paradigm and it is shown how the greater
descriptive precision this brings to the built environment both permits linkages to mainline formulations in social
theory and leads to testable design-level propositions.
Keywords: built environment, conceptual frameworks, design, planning, social theory, space syntax, spatial
configuration, spatial theory, spatiality paradigm, theory-building
Pour prevoir les resultats sociaux de decisions relatives a` la forme physique et spatiale du milieu bati, les professionnels de
ce milieu doivent utiliser des propositions de type Theorie reliant les deux domaines. En labsence de propositions
testees sur le plan scientifique, un consensus mouvant de croyances comble cette lacune et il peut falloir des decennies
de couts sociaux pour montrer linadequation de ces croyances. Le proble`me de la theorie sociale et du milieu bati est
ensuite defini pour les objectifs aux fins de cet article en termes de potentiel des propositions pouvant etre testees au
niveau auquel on intervient dans le milieu bati. Cela sappelle la necessite de theorie au niveau de la conception qui
definit la conception dans le sens large de tous les choix et de toutes les decisions prises par les professionnels du
milieu bati en creant et en modifiant ce milieu. En examinant la theorie sociale sous deux grandes rubriques:
sociologie urbaine et societe et espace, on note quelles approchent toutes deux la societe dabord dans la relation
Environnement Societe en ce sens que la forme de lenvironnement est recherchee comme le produit des dimensions
spatiales des processus sociaux. Cest ce quon appelle le mode`le Spatialite et on note que de telles approches nont
jamais atteint et ne pourront probablement jamais atteindre le niveau de precision concernant le milieu bati qui serait
necessaire pour que les propositions soient soumises a` tests au niveau de la conception. Lalternative est de retourner
la question et par des etudes sur lenvironnement dabord de rechercher la preuve de processus sociaux dans les
formes spatiales du milieu bati. De recents travaux de cette nature sont brie`vement decrits dans le mode`le
de syntaxe spatiale et il est demontre que cela apporte une plus grande precision a` la description du milieu bati ce
qui a` la fois permet des articulations avec les formulations principales de la theorie sociale et conduit a` des
propositions pouvant etre testees au niveau de la conception.
Building Research & Information ISSN 0961-3218 print ISSN 1466-4321 online # 2008 Taylor & Francis
http: www.tandf.co.uk journals
DOI: 10.1080/09613210801928073
Mots-cles: milieu bati, cadres conceptuels, conception, planning, theorie sociale, syntaxe spatiale, configuration
spatiale, theorie spatiale, paradigme de spatialite, formulation de theories
Hillier
one tries to link the built environment to social outcomes with more testable and theoretically grounded
propositions which, at the stage at which the environment is created, are better able to reflect the realities of
social behaviour and outcomes. It is at this level of real
space that the relation between social theory and the
built environment becomes substantive rather than
contextual.
The argument in the paper takes the following form.
Social theory is first examined under two of its most
relevant headings: urban sociology and society and
space. It is noted that both approach the society
environment relation society first, in that the form
of the environment is sought as the product of the
spatial aspects of social processes. This is identified as
the spatiality paradigm, and it is argued that such
approaches have never reached, and probably can
never reach, the level of precision about the built
environment which would be needed to find testable
propositions at the design level. The alternative is to
turn the question the other way round and through
environment-first studies look for evidence of social
processes in the form of the built environment.
Recent work of this kind within the space syntax
paradigm is outlined to show how the greater descriptive precision this brings to the built environment both
permits linkages to mainline formulations in social
theory and leads to testable design-level propositions.
Urban sociology
The roots of a specifically urban sociology lie in the
fact that the founding fathers of modern social
science in the 19th century saw the emergence of
modern cities and urban societies from a pre-industrial
or tribal background as the decisive event in the formation of modern societies and so most in need of
description and explanation.1 Many of the most influential concepts that shaped the subsequent development of social theory were grounded in this problem.
For example, Ferdinand Tonnies (1887) believed that
pre-urban village societies were unified by a form of
social coherence he called Gemeinshaft (usually translated as community, but probably best left in the original German and explained), by which he meant a
system of common traditions and cooperative behaviours formed out of the warp and weft of kinship
and neighbourhood, and so providing an all-embracing
framework for a collective life that took precedence
over the individual. In contrast, he saw urban societies
as being based on Gesellshaft (usually translated as
association, but again best untranslated and
explained), which he saw as a more contractual form
of collective life based on competitive individuals,
each of whom provided a service to the whole, which
was then constructed out of artificial rather than
natural bonds.
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Figure 1 The gure on the left shows that as one moves an object from a corner to a central location, total inter-visibility in the ambient
space, shown on a scale from red to blue, decreases. On the right, the total metric distance from each point to all others, shown in red for
low through to blue for high, increases as the object is moved from corner to centre. In both cases, the interference effect of the object is
increased by a central rather than a peripheral location. Similar effects follow from changing the shape of the object: the more the areato-perimeter ratio is increased, the less visual and metric relations in the ambient space are obstructed. These simple mathematical
principles, which seem to be known to human intuition, are pervasively implicated in the evolution of complexity in human space, whether
at the building or urban level
225
Hillier
Figure 2 Space syntax analysis of Nicosia in Cyprus within the walls, showing the deformed wheel pattern that emerges from an
integration analysis of the street network in the red and orange colours. The approximation of real movement rates from these analyses
has been argued to be intuitively expected (on reection), mathematically necessary, and empirically the case. Source: Hillier and Iida
(2005)
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synthetic and less philosophically constrained interdisciplinary effort to find clear formulations for these problems and so some prospect of better resolutions. Space
syntax is not the inverse of the spatiality paradigm, but
its other half. As such, it is the means by which the
social study of space can engage fully both with its own
theoretical development and also with the real-world
issues which await its attention.
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Endnote
1
The same can be said of Ibn Khaldun, the 14th-century Arab historian whose introduction to the philosophy of history, The
Muqaddimah, can plausible be argued to be the first text of
modern social theory, centred as it was on the evolutionary
relations between nomadic and urban societies.