Have you ever been walking through the cities of Port of Spain or San Fernando and happen to pass by areas with benches and tables? Have you ever wondered what these places are? Or what is their significance?
Places like these are considered to be public spaces. Public spaces include areas such as parks, streets even sidewalks. We also tend to recognize certain buildings as "public" namely, schools, libraries and shopping malls. However, many places that we consider public are really “privatized” public spaces or “publicized” private spaces. A public space can be defined as all areas that are open and accessible to all members of the public in a society, in principle, though not necessarily in practice (Orum and Neal 2010: p.1). From this definition, three perspectives on public spaces are derived:
1. The Legal-Economic Perspective
2. The Social-Spatial Perspective
3. The Political Perspective
In his paper, "Seeking common ground: three perspectives on public space", Dr. Zachary Neal of the Institute of Civil Engineers, summarized these three perspectives as follows:
(a) The legal–economic perspective seeks to answer the most concrete questions about public space (what is it and who pays for it?), thereby laying the definition and institutional groundwork for other inquiries.
(b) The socio-spatial perspective takes the existence of public space for granted and is more concerned with questions of design and application: what does it look like and how is it used?
(c) The political perspective asks about public space’s role in democracy, both abstractly as a site for discursive activities and concretely as a site of exclusion or empowerment.
Look at the picture below, do you see any public spaces?