This international conference explores the mutual influence of urban culture and urban form.  The conference will feature presentations from researchers; urban planners, designers, and architects; and government and NGO representatives.

The deadline for abstracts is 28 February 2016, but to take advantage of early registration rates and ensure that you have time to seek funding from your institution or government, we recommend that you submit your abstract early.

The city cannot be understood in terms of its buildings, infrastructures, and physical geography alone. Urban materiality is inextricably linked with city life: Urban spaces are influenced by the cultures that inhabit them, and urban form shapes these cultures in turn. This conference brings together researchers, planners, designers, policymakers, and architects from around the globe to explore the mutual influence of urban culture and urban form.

Impacts of past urban planning reverberate long after original rationales have become obsolete: Fortifications (walls, moats, fortresses), transport infrastructure (railways, highways, city gates), and other elements of the built environment structure future development. Aspects of urban form contribute to dividing the city into neighbourhoods, determining which areas will flourish while others decay, encouraging shifts from industrial to tourism or leisure use. The city’s architectures affect the cultures of the people who use them: Different kinds of housing foster different forms of sociality or isolation, and different networked infrastructures promote different pathways to the internal cohesion and/or citywide integration of urban cultures. Whether urban cultural landscapes evolve gradually over time or result from decisive, top-down planning, they reflect and influence the city’s multitude of identities, industries, cultural politics, ethnic relations, and expressive cultures.

Presentations will address such issues as:

  • How do design philosophies influence lived culture?
  • How does urban morphology change over time alongside livelihoods and cultural expectations?
  • What forms of cultural resistance arise to challenge top-down urban design?
  • Why do neighbourhoods develop within urban space?
  • How are elements of the built environment re-purposed?
  • What can planners and designers do to promote cultural flexibility or sensitivity?
  • How is ethnic diversity reflected in urban form?
  • Should designers seek to reinforce or add flexibility to expressions of cultural difference in the city?

Keynote speakers.

  • Ronan Paddison (University of Glasgow)
  • Henriette Steiner (University of Copenhagen)

About the conference.

Culture in Urban Space is a ‘Community Explorations’ conference, allowing delegates to contextualise knowledge and engage with community members. On 22-24 August, delegates will explore Copenhagen’s morphological and cultural distinction, visiting neighbourhoods such as Nordvest (ethnically diverse and characterised by early-20th Century utopian urban planning); Nørrebro and Vesterbro (rapidly gentrifying neighbourhoods beyond the old city walls, with abiding reputations for ‘edginess’ and crime); Sydhavn (deindustrialising working-class neighbourhood, being transformed by land reclamation and construction of upper-middle class residences); City Centre (structured by the city’s former fortifications and coastlines, central Copenhagen has become the heart of Danish political, tourism, and retail culture); Christianshavn (former warehouse, industrial, and military zone, which has transformed into Copenhagen’s pre-eminent built heritage landscape, combining elite residences and workplaces with the countercultural stronghold of Christiania). Delegates will also visit Tivoli Gardens, a historic amusement park that has developed into a key site for Danish identity building and cultural expression. Conference presentations take place on 25-26 August at VerdensKulturCentret, Copenhagen’s multicultural community centre.

Proposing a presentation.

To propose a presentation, fill in all sections of the form1. If you have difficulty using the form, e-mail convenor Adam Grydehøj ([email protected]) for more information.

Submission Type: Select between two submission types.

  1. Standard Presentations last a maximum of 20 minutes, followed by around 10 minutes’ audience discussion. These talks may be accompanied by PowerPoint presentations.
  2. Organised Sessions are groups of 3-4 Standard Presentations concerning a single theme and organised by the presenters (rather than the conference’s scientific committee). To propose an organised session, the corresponding author must submit a title and abstract for the session as a whole, including the names of the authors. Each participating presenter must then submit the abstracts that form part of the Organised Session.

Abstract: The abstract of your talk must be between 150-200 words total, including title. Shorter or longer submissions may be ignored. Make sure to include a title for your abstract. Do not format the text using italics, bold, or underlined words, and avoid discipline-specific jargon and citations to other works.

Biographical Note: Your biographical note (maximum 100 words) should be written in complete sentences and include your research areas, job title, and affiliation as applicable. If the presentation has more than one author, the corresponding author should provide biographical notes for the other authors as well.

  • 1. http://www.islanddynamics.org/cultureurbanspace/cfp.html