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posted by hubie on Sunday June 19 2022, @01:23PM   Printer-friendly
from the sweet-smell-of-the-country dept.

The growing field of sensory urbanism is changing the way we assess neighborhoods and projects:

When David Howes thinks of his home city of Montreal, he thinks of the harmonious tones of carillon bells and the smell of bagels being cooked over wood fires. But when he stopped in at his local tourism office to ask where they recommend that visitors go to smell, taste, and listen to the city, he just received blank stares.

"They only know about things to see, not about the city's other sensory attractions, its soundmarks and smellmarks," says Howes, the author of the forthcoming book The Sensory Studies Manifesto and director of Concordia University's Centre for Sensory Studies, a hub for the growing field often referred to as "sensory urbanism."

Around the world, researchers like Howes are investigating how nonvisual information defines the character of a city and affects its livability. Using methods ranging from low-tech sound walks and smell maps to data scraping, wearables, and virtual reality, they're fighting what they see as a limiting visual bias in urban planning.

[...] The best way to determine how people react to different sensory environments is a subject of some debate within the field. Howes and his colleagues are taking a more ethnographic approach, using observation and interviews to develop a set of best practices for good sensory design in public spaces. Other researchers are going more high-tech, using wearables to track biometric data like heart-rate variability as a proxy for emotional responses to different sensory experiences. The EU-funded GoGreenRoutes project is looking to that approach as it studies how nature can be integrated into urban spaces in a way that improves both human and environmental health.

[...] "Sensory perceptions are not neutral, or simply biological; whether we find something pleasant or not has been shaped culturally and socially," says Monica Montserrat Degen, an urban cultural sociologist at Brunel University London. Civic planners in both London and Barcelona are using her research on public-space perceptions and how "sensory hierarchies," as she refers to them, include or exclude different groups of people.

Degen cites the example of a London neighborhood where inexpensive eateries that served as hangouts for local youth were displaced by trendy cafes. "It used to smell like fried chicken," she says, but newer residents found that aroma off-­putting rather than welcoming. "Now it smells like cappuccinos."


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  • (Score: 2) by istartedi on Monday June 20 2022, @04:01PM

    by istartedi (123) on Monday June 20 2022, @04:01PM (#1254647) Journal

    When I first visited San Francisco in 2007, I was struck by how much better it smelled than DC. Despite being known as a repository of literal human feces and dirty needles in some quarters, I suspect that this is still true. San Francisco is scoured by wind-driven fog from the ocean and bay. DC is a humid sub tropical swamp. Trash left out in alleys festers in DC in ways that are probably not possible in San Francisco.

    San Francisco however, even before full-blown legalization would sometimes waft the smell of marijuana smoke in your direction. DC almost never did that.

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