CFP: Designing Environments: Layers, Scopes, and Closures

Lorna Zukas's picture
Type: 
Call for Papers
Date: 
January 3, 2023 to February 1, 2023
Subject Fields: 
Architecture and Architectural History, Area Studies, Environmental History / Studies, Literature, Urban Design and Planning

18th Annual Conference
The International Association for the Study of Environment, Space, and Place

The International Association for the Study of Environment, Space, and Place (IASESP) welcomes paper proposals from interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary scholars researching the nature of place/space and the geographical moment of experience.

Conference Theme: Designing Environments: Layers, Scopes, and Closures

Proposals Due: February 1, 2023

Converence Venue and Dates: Pforzheim University, School of Design, April 28-30, 2023, Pforzheim, Germany

https://www.hs-pforzheim.de/en/news_detailansicht/news/call_for_papers

Human beings work with, alter, and manipulate their environments, transforming “natural,” or “neutral,” space into a place designed to meet specific needs or goals. The scale and type of manipulation of environments depend on whether the agent is an individual, family, or larger community and on goals and intentions. Over the course of time, some designed environments become obsolete, are repurposed, or are simply built over. For example, the ancient city of Troy has nine archeological layers dating from 3600 BCE to 500 CE. Further, designs can be communal—e.g., open source codes allow and encourage individuals to add to code to improve performance—or open-ended, enabling others to fill in the “blank” space in a design.

In the 21st century, humanized environments can take many forms and can be designed physically, virtually, textually, or in any number of other ways. Spaces and places can be inclusive or exclusive depending on the intent and biases of the designers and the society they inhabit. Environments can be built in cooperation with or over existing structures. Uninhabited environments can be made suitable for human habitation; mismanagement of inhabited environments can make them uninhabitable. Some designs no longer occupy any physical space at all. With these turns come a host of questions worth exploring: What will designed environments look like in the future? How do memorials shape contemporary understanding of past events? What would that look like? What role will sustainability play in design? Can urban planning and design be more inclusive? How will virtual and non-virtual designs or environments interact? How do future designs work with and within existing environments? How does GIS impact our understanding of environmental designs? How does VR design impact the lived experience? How do we understand design to influence the narrative that is presented?

This interdisciplinary conference seeks to explore a wide range of questions related to designing environments. We invite papers from any discipline that deals with the theme of this conference. Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Environments in space and time

  • Urban planning and architecture

  • Scopic regimes designing the conception of space

  • Historical (temporal) layers in environments

  • Virtual realities

  • Environmental politics in the interest of humans and non-humans alike

  • Environmental studies

  • Sustainability in environmental design

  • Ecosystems

  • Environmental justice

  • Environments of labor

  • Economical environments

  • Mapping environments

  • Virtual environments of layers, scopes, and closures

  • Heterotopian or utopian ideas of environments

  • Ideas of environments in literature, designing spaces in literature

  • Designing environments in, for and through visual arts, film, theatre, dance

  • Natural designs/designing nature

  • Inclusive environments

  • Layered environments

  • Natural selection in design

  • Architectural or landscape palimpsests

  • Structure of territories: extensions, distentions, and closures

    Please send your abstract as a Word or PDF attachment (300 word limit) by February 1, 2023, to Jodie Hayob-Matzke at jhayob@umw.edu.

Contact Info: 

Jodie Hayob-Matzke

University of Mary Washington

Contact Email: