2019
DOI: 10.1080/14649365.2019.1597152
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Multi-sensory ethnography and vertical urban transformation: ascending the Peckham Skyline

Abstract: Multi-sensory ethnography and vertical urban transformation: Ascending the Peckham SkylineIn this paper, we offer a conceptual and methodological intervention that demonstrates how multi-sensory ethnography might enrich critical analysis of vertical urban transformation. Through the lens of two sites in Peckham, southeast London-a multistory car park and an ex-industrial warehouse complex-recently remade as leisure and retail spaces, we examine how processes and practices by which these spaces at height are de… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
(32 reference statements)
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“…Proximity to other residents can manifest in sounds and smells, such that specific social norms develop, articulating what is acceptable, when and what behaviours should be avoided (Shilon and Eizenberg, 2021). The process of regularly moving between the street level and apartments crafts a specific type of material engagement within towers as well as a relationship with the city itself (Jackson et al, 2021; Shilon and Eizenberg, 2021). This repetitive technology-enabled passage provides a physical separation; an intermediary step linking home and street.…”
Section: High-rise Living In the Multidimensional Citymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Proximity to other residents can manifest in sounds and smells, such that specific social norms develop, articulating what is acceptable, when and what behaviours should be avoided (Shilon and Eizenberg, 2021). The process of regularly moving between the street level and apartments crafts a specific type of material engagement within towers as well as a relationship with the city itself (Jackson et al, 2021; Shilon and Eizenberg, 2021). This repetitive technology-enabled passage provides a physical separation; an intermediary step linking home and street.…”
Section: High-rise Living In the Multidimensional Citymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sensory minutia of sights, sounds and movements frame life for tower residents, making tangible the separation from below and the proximity of other residents (Jackson et al, 2021; Shilon and Eizenberg, 2021). The textured richness of verticality is made meaningful through activities that are not reducible merely to ‘something that takes place in vertical landscapes’ (Baxter, 2017: 350) – like the smells that waft through hallways and the flags that mark apartments.…”
Section: The Rhythms Of Vertical Lifementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scientists are exploring the impact of urban night tourism and studentification for urban transformations [53]. Jackson et al [54] analyzed how multi-sensory ethnography might influence and, at the same time, enrich urban transformation [54]. Balikci and Koylanm [55], meanwhile, explored the transformation of the city using the concepts of evolutionary economics as a process driven by people's desire to move up the social hierarchy through "costly signaling" or noticeable consumption rather than the desire to improve the functional quality of their housing [55].…”
Section: Urban Transformationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such was the level of noise that Yogarise didn't open on a Sunday for the first year. (Wolfson, 2017) The sound of the churches is portrayed here as threatening the ambience that the yoga studio owners are trying to conjure in a way that does not seem to apply to the other sounds of the building, the loud bass of the Saturday night sound checks from the venue below or the chatter that wafts up from the ground level bars (Jackson, Benson and Calafate-Faria, 2019).…”
Section: Xenophonophobia -Unsettling Soundsmentioning
confidence: 99%