Virtual places and real spaces.

Dan Learmonth | | Jan 4, 08:06 PM

The smaller world brought about by transport and communication infrastructure has increased the division of labour. It is now economically sane to manufacture a car in 11 different countries using raw materials from another 9 countries and sell the car all around the world.

Émile Durkheim saw the increasing division of labour in the 1890’s and was scared of the rapidly changing world. He predicted a social disorder he called Anomie. Whereby the impersonal, individualistic and mechanistic workings of the post industrial revolution society would lead to confusion and abandonment of social norms and the self regulating controls of a society.

Perhaps anomie has increased somewhat since Durkheim’s time. A lot of society is less personal now, there are less opportunities for casual interaction with people in the community. The infrastructure we have has taken away the routines of rural community life that once acted as community glue. We no longer have to collect water from the village well, it arrives straight into our homes. Fuel for heating is the same. Waste is automatically carried out. Food is collected once a week from the supermarket where it is such an automated and efficient process there is no time for casual banter with the staff, and the chance of seeing your friends and neighbours is small due to the scale of the operation. Casual encounter is disappearing and although purposeful encounter is increasing it is often through phones and email. Whatever the advantages it is a poor alternative to face to face. The world has become increasingly connected, increasingly efficient and increasingly impersonal. When you are meeting someone over some kind of long distance communication you loose some sense of place, you are no longer as firmly rooted in your own environment. You have joined some kind of third place, a ‘non space’. Or a non spatial place.

Perhaps this is something that needs addressing. How do we reconcile the new world of virtual space within a more humane framework?

One option is to recreate the real world online. Perhaps position the intangible arrangement of online spaces within a spatial framework that we are used to… A replication of the spatial language we are used to in daily life. After all we have an innate sense of the qualities of space, and we have learnt the cultural norms that are embedded within the environments around us. The school and the home have different meanings, systems of operation and rules of behaviour contained within the walls and rooms that define them. What if we used the cultural meaning of different spatial environment to define the meaning and expectations on behaviour on different social places online?

Even if it was possible to position online social groups within a spatial framework would it be desirable? The direction and beauty of the internet is the mashing and mixing of content and the interconnectedness of these different places. Physical space is not supportive of these qualities, a primary function of architecture is privacy and security. The contents of a room are only available to the selected who are allowed within it, even within a public space you can only access it if you are sharing the same space with it, at the time it is available. The web is generally free of time restrictions, but in terms of access it is gated and barricaded no less than any other part of the built environment. It is only the public zone of the internet that creates the utopian notion of freedom of information for all.


http://www.paintings-art.com/Anomie.html

Theoretical framework.

Dan Learmonth | | Jan 3, 10:14 PM

Distance = Time.

You can think of it as a ratio. D/T.
As a pedestrian, 1Meter=1Second.
In a car, 20M=1S.

Improvements in transport technology and infrastructure have increased the distance/time ratio. 1/1, 5/1, 20/1, 1000/1 etc as we move into planes and satellites. The successor of transport is information communication technology. If we consider information as an entity that traverses a distance then the ratio increases to infinity. Fibre optics transmit information at the speed of light, Quantuum antanglement theoretically allows instantaneous transmission.

Instantaneous transmission means that distance is collapsed. One end of a line is connected to the other end without seemingly traversing the distance in between.

Social-space and physical-space are seperated.

So, what is a social space without street corners, supermarket queues, bus stops, pubs? What happens to the social environment when it is removed from the physical ‘stage’ of streets, buildings and rooms?

No Sense of Place

Dan Learmonth | | Jan 1, 06:42 PM

I’ve been looking at ‘No Sense of Place’ by Joshua Meyrowitz. A fantastic and well written book on the effects that new forms of media have in shaping our perception of places and the relationship between all sorts of different people in a society.

“a television is like a new doorway to the home and through it rush many welcome and unwelcome visitors. Television and its visitors take children across the globe before parents give them permission to cross the street.” (Meyrowitz 1995)

Meyrowitz proposes that electronic media has an amalgamating effect on places and culture. It seperates the physical spaces we inhabit; the school, the home, the workplace, from the people we meet and the social activities that can take place.

Before telephone, radio, tv and the internet, you could only talk with someone if you shared the same space, control money by visiting the bank, do shopping by entering a shop etc. These activities no longer have a ‘place’ in which they occur.

If you wanted to see a politican you would have to visit him at some venue making a speech and even then you would probably only see him at a distance, Now they are broadcast into our homes at larger than life sizes. Despite being recorded, transmitted and recreated we still claim to have ‘seen’ the person or event that is playing on our screens. It doesn’t matter if it happened 4000 miles away or even if it happened 4 days ago, it is recreated for us here and now. What is happening anywhere in the world can be happening wherever we are. “Yet when we are everywhere, we are in no place in particular” – Meyrowitz

“Nothing can be further from the spirit of the new technology than “a place for everything and everything in it’s place”“ – Marshall McLuhan

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