Engaging Socio-Spatial Fragmentation Through Public Domain

Gated Communities in the Greater Metropolitan Area, San Jose, Costa Rica

Master Thesis (2018)
Contributor(s)

B Hausleitner – Mentor

Dominic Stead – Mentor

Alvise Pagnacco – Mentor

Faculty
Architecture and the Built Environment
Copyright
© 2018 Maricruz Gazel Ferraro
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 Maricruz Gazel Ferraro
Graduation Date
27-06-2018
Awarding Institution
Delft University of Technology
Programme
European Master in Urbanism (EMU)
Faculty
Architecture and the Built Environment
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Abstract

Gated communities exist in most urbanized contexts around the world and San José, Costa Rica is not the exception. Following the discourse of insecurity and the claim of building community with-in the confinement of the gates, new developments are constructed with a peripheral wall. As gated communities diversify to all available markets they have self-segregated from the city.
The result is a city composed by clusters of enclaves separated by functions thus, car dependent and in detriment of the public space. Under this condition this thesis research will focus on possible spatial strategies to modify public spaces with the aim to allow for and facilitate social interactions in areas that are dominated by gated communities. Using as a starting point the understanding that public spaces mediate between the private spaces, thus having an important role in the confronting process of socio-spatial fragmentation and that the promotion of public spaces can address the imbalance manifested by the privatization of public spaces (Madanipour, 1999).

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