MINDING THE CITY WORKSHOP
Karakaş, T., & Dumlu, B. N. (2019). Minding the City / Famagusta on Vimeo. https://vimeo.com/335675094
WORKSHOP LEADERS
TÜLAY KARAKAS
BURCU NIMET DUMLU
WORKSHOP PARTICIPANTS
AKIF EMRE TASDEMIR
EBRAR KARAGUL
GIZEM YAPA
LÜTFIYE KARAASLAN
MELEK S E N A NAYIR
MUSTAFA KILINÇ
ODAI ABELDALOADER
SERRA KIZMAZ
SUNANUR ISIK
YUSUF ARIK
JOURNAL ARTICLE PUBLICATION FROM THE WORKSHOP
Minding the city: A case study on the new conceptualizations of human experience in the built environment
Abstract
The study intends to mind the city by taking the information gathered through the senses and processed in the human brain as the primary concern in understanding the human experience in the built environment. This refreshing approach deals with human behavior, perception, cognition, sensation, and emotion that requires a well-defined conceptual framework. Therefore, as the study's primary objective, minding the city investigates the conceptualizations based on human evolutionary cognitive tendencies: biophilia, bilateral symmetry, mirror neurons, pareidolia, proxemics, thigmotaxis, curvilinearity and rectilinearity. The human experience is investigated considering it as an individual human self, interpersonal human beings, human-built environment interactions, and human-nature interactions. The paper was designed as qualitative research employing a case study strategy to develop explanatory and exploratory empirical inquiry. The conceptualizations were studied through fieldwork using observational measurements, mapping techniques, and the declaration of participants' own experiences. The fieldwork was conducted through a serial workshop entitled 'Minding the city: Bring your brain into the built environment’ in İstanbul and Famagusta in 2019. As the output of the study, the visual and verbal representations of conceptualizations and urban codes were presented and discussed with the related literature. Ultimately, the acquired knowledge applied to a theory-building structure expands the theory of human experience investigated through the idea of minding the city. In sum, the study presented evolutionary aspects of human experience in a new way by identifying generalizable patterns, presented as urban codes, occurring in the daily experience of individuals and groups.
Keywords: cognitive sciences, human-built environment interaction, human-nature interaction, human evolutionary cognitive tendencies, neuroscience