“…These issues significantly affect placemaking. Considering that adolescents like to be part of a peer group, often chatting, laughing loudly and playing around in public (Strasburger et al, 2006;Healthy Children, n.d.), their behaviour is often treated as a threat by other users, and they are considered undesirable in sharing the public realm (Smaniotto Costa & Patrício, 2020). Such an understanding of adolescents does not conform to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UN, 1989), which acknowledges them as active participants in development and transmitters of positive values and resources of production (UN, 1989).…”