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Pedestrians as floating life - On the reinvention of the pedestrian city

Walking with its average speed of 5 km/h was for a very long period the primary mode of moving and engaging with the immediate material environment for humans. However, over the past half-century, the socio-technical systems of automobility as well as other forms of non-human powered mobility have c...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Emotion, space and society space and society, 2021-11, Vol.41, p.100846, Article 100846
Main Authors: Jensen, Ole B., Martin, Michael, Löchtefeld, Markus
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Walking with its average speed of 5 km/h was for a very long period the primary mode of moving and engaging with the immediate material environment for humans. However, over the past half-century, the socio-technical systems of automobility as well as other forms of non-human powered mobility have changed the ways in which cities are experienced. Most recently, however, the pedestrian mode has been reprioritised resulting in a shift of emphasis, particularly in European cities, toward recognising the destructive forces of automobility. This shift has been accompanied by a variety of pedestrian reprioritisation strategies including the pedestrianisation of city streets as well as restricted vehicular access to particular inner city zones at prescribed times. The challenge for many cities is how to legitimately change mindsets, from automobility to walking. This paper explores the reprioritisation of urban walking not as ‘infrastructure’ or an ‘intervention’ but as transitory, ‘floating life’ across space and time. We conceptualise walking as a multi-sensorial, effective, and mobile engagement with the material environment. In doing so, we ask how the ‘floating life’ of pedestrianism may be reflected upon as part of the so-called ‘mobilities turn’ and in particular how theories of materiality, embodiment, design and experience interlink with walking. In this paper walking as a pedestrian is therefore a particular quality of mobility. The way in which we ‘inhabit’ the city is significant when we walk, and turning to walking as ‘floating life’ pays attention to this underemphasised ontological dimension. •Sustainable mobility must include more sensitivity to the ontological dimension of walking.•Our focus is on walking as a ‘mode of being’ and quality of mobility.•We explore pedestrianism as transitory, ‘floating life’ across space and time.•We conceptualise walking as a multi-sensorial, effective, and mobile engagement with the material environment.•Our paper encourages a more holistic picture of pedestrians in planning policy and urban design.
ISSN:1755-4586
1878-0040
DOI:10.1016/j.emospa.2021.100846