Litcius/Paper detail

Urban voids: identifying and optimizing urban voids potential as a revitalization source in enhancing developing countries’ city income

Omnia Mamdouh Hashem, Sherine Wahba, Tarek Ibrahim Nasr-Eldin

2022Journal of Engineering and Applied Science19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This study attempts to remedy the issue of urban voids, which are one of the possible choices for extra interactive spaces. As a city with a great civilization history, Egypt is also home to many urban voids, mainly buffer zones. This generates the research problem that urban voids result from managing isolated planning sites irrespective of the context and away from the community. Few studies tackled the impact of public spaces on city life; they were mainly theoretically oriented and focused on piazzas without highlighting other spaces or conducting empirical investigations. The study determines that voids could be a testing ground to establish a framework of how these spaces can be reused. Revitalizing urban voids goal is to reconnect these useless spaces with context, achieve users’ needs, integrate technologies with the space to revitalize the city, and increase its income through combining theoretical findings, empirical study, and questionnaires, which generate a framework that helps the planners and designers in developing urban voids and maximizing its efficiency. Currently, adaptive redesign is a hot topic to discuss, and this may be the moment to realize that following the updated design components, meeting community needs, and using technology will always reinvigorate the void.

Topics & Concepts

Context (archaeology)Urban planningEmpirical researchArchitectural engineeringVoid (composites)CivilizationEnvironmental planningPublic spaceBusinessSpace (punctuation)Built environmentEmpirical evidenceCivil engineeringComputer scienceGeographyEngineeringArchaeologyMathematicsComposite materialEpistemologyOperating systemPhilosophyMaterials scienceStatisticsUrban Design and Spatial AnalysisArchitecture and Cultural InfluencesPlace Attachment and Urban Studies