INTERGENERATIONAL URBAN DYNAMICS: TERRITORIALITY AND COVID-19

Authors

  • Thais Debli Libardoni Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil
  • Lígia Maria Ávila Chiarelli Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil

Keywords:

Latin America, Urban Dynamics, Covid-19 pandemic, Environment-behavior relationships, Age territories

Abstract

The context of the Covid-19 pandemic requires safe and inclusive cities to reestablish community cohesion and intergenerational contact, both weakened by social distancing. Urban spaces, which are a source of social relations for young people and older adults, lose heterogeneity in this process due to differential access. Seeking to propose design guidelines for intergenerational spaces potentially adaptable to the pandemic context in Latin America, an analysis of the action of territorial elements in the permeability of age micro-territories was carried out. A case study conducted behavioral mapping in areas of group appropriation and rejection, resulting in recommendations on visual contact, distinctive ambiances, temporal layers, potential use, flow/permanence separation, and diversity of activities. Such recommendations in the Latin American context aim at endogenous processes of intervention, supported by urban theory and praxis. They explore the attractive potential of territories in intergenerational urban dynamics while following guidelines necessary for social distancing. It stands out that territories must be considered altogether, in a context that is fragmented by age specificities, but connected and permeable by intergenerational similarities. This scenario requires greater coordination of actions in Latin American countries, promoting physical and visual connections in urban fragmented structures.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Thais Debli Libardoni, Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil

she is an Architect and Urban Planner and has a Master's degree in Architecture and Urbanism. She is currently a collaborating researcher at the Laboratory of Behavioral Studies at the Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil, where she investigates environmental-behavioral relationships in promoting more sustainable and healthier cities for aging.

Lígia Maria Ávila Chiarelli, Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil

She is an Architect and a Doctor of History. She is a retired professor at the Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil, and the Graduate Program in Architecture and Urbanism at the same university. She guides research on user perception of the environment, age-friendly cities, social housing and gender, and feminism. She is a researcher at the PlaceAge project, a partnership between the United Kingdom, India and Brazil, on seniors and a sense of place.

Published

2021-07-17