雅加达儿童友好型公共空间中的城市公共空间中的政治代表(Ruang Publik Terpadu Ramah Anak - RPTRA)

Pub Date : 2019-04-30 DOI:10.11113/IJBES.V6.N2.351
Eka Permanasari, Sahid Mochtar, R. Purisari
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引用次数: 4

摘要

公共空间的设计往往体现了特定政权的权力和政治代表性。由于城市建筑象征并确立了一个政权的身份,当局经常使用自上而下的方法来实施城市建筑计划。因此,所构建的空间往往显示出权力和身份,但缺乏对公共用途的考虑。公共空间通常是排斥性的,供公众使用。他们只是代表权威。因此,政府建造的许多公共空间在推出后不久就被废弃了。大型仪式和公共空间展示只持续几天,然后这些空间对公众关闭或用于不同用途。大多数自上而下的方法侧重于物理开发,忽略了用户在决策中的参与。本研究分析了雅加达南部RPTRA Bahari公共空间设计的政治表现。分析了雅加达RPTRA发展背后的政治原因,以及在设计过程中采用参与式设计方法以获得公众参与公共空间的方式。因此,它通过分析公共空间自推出三年以来的使用情况,调查了人们在日常生活中对政治代表性的看法。通过观察和访谈,本文探讨了城市形式中的政治代表性,以及公共空间如何成为政府意图和日常用途交汇的舞台。它的结论是,参与性的、自下而上的方法会导致更多的公众使用和参与。
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Political Representation In Urban Public Space In Jakarta Child-Friendly Public Space (Ruang Publik Terpadu Ramah Anak – RPTRA)
The design of public space often embodies the power and political representation of a specific regime. As urban architecture symbolizes and establishes the identity of a regime, authorities often use a top-down approach to implement urban architectural programs. As a result, the spaces constructed often display power and identity, but lack consideration of public use. Public spaces are often exclusionary for public use. They merely stand for the representation of the authority. Accordingly, many public spaces built by the government are abandoned soon after their launch. Big ceremonies and public space displays only last a few days before these spaces are then closed to the public or appropriated for different uses. Most top-down approaches focus on the physical development, overlooking the users’ inclusion in decision making. This research analyses the political representation of public space design in RPTRA Bahari located in the South Jakarta. It analyses the political reason behind the development of RPTRA in Jakarta and the way participative design approach is employed during the design process to get public engagement in public space. Therefore, it investigates how the political representation is perceived in everyday life by analysing how the public space has been used three years since its launch. Through observation and interviews, this paper interrogates the political representation in urban forms and how public spaces become an arena where the government’s intentions and everyday uses meet. It concludes that a participative, bottom-up approach leads to more public use and engagement.
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