Architectural sites of discrimination: Positive to negative

Architecture and interior settings are important aspects of everyday life for people with disabilities. An environmental situation consists of the contextually located architectural envelope, the interior – as well as constituent parts such as furniture – as well as its occupants. The physical envir...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Smith, Dianne
Format: Book Chapter
Published: 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73709
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author Smith, Dianne
author_facet Smith, Dianne
author_sort Smith, Dianne
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Architecture and interior settings are important aspects of everyday life for people with disabilities. An environmental situation consists of the contextually located architectural envelope, the interior – as well as constituent parts such as furniture – as well as its occupants. The physical environment can be an enabler for those who have impairments – the environmental concepts of space and place are thus implicated in the discourse of disability. Architecture and interior settings are important aspects of everyday life for people with disabilities. Places where author reside, study, shop, recuperate and play provide a multitude of possibilities for each and every one of them. Concurrently, these same places are sites of differentiation and discrimination – opportunities to interpret and judge are inherent. In the field of design for people with disabilities, these assumptions and expectations are underpinned by the same principles, and are just as important.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-737092019-04-10T05:27:13Z Architectural sites of discrimination: Positive to negative Smith, Dianne Architecture and interior settings are important aspects of everyday life for people with disabilities. An environmental situation consists of the contextually located architectural envelope, the interior – as well as constituent parts such as furniture – as well as its occupants. The physical environment can be an enabler for those who have impairments – the environmental concepts of space and place are thus implicated in the discourse of disability. Architecture and interior settings are important aspects of everyday life for people with disabilities. Places where author reside, study, shop, recuperate and play provide a multitude of possibilities for each and every one of them. Concurrently, these same places are sites of differentiation and discrimination – opportunities to interpret and judge are inherent. In the field of design for people with disabilities, these assumptions and expectations are underpinned by the same principles, and are just as important. 2018 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73709 10.4324/9781351053341-13 restricted
spellingShingle Smith, Dianne
Architectural sites of discrimination: Positive to negative
title Architectural sites of discrimination: Positive to negative
title_full Architectural sites of discrimination: Positive to negative
title_fullStr Architectural sites of discrimination: Positive to negative
title_full_unstemmed Architectural sites of discrimination: Positive to negative
title_short Architectural sites of discrimination: Positive to negative
title_sort architectural sites of discrimination: positive to negative
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73709