2009
DOI: 10.1068/d3306
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The Public Nature of High-Rise Buildings in Taiwan

Abstract: The public nature of a high-rise building can be understood in two ways. Visually, it is an expression of architectural imagery. Physically, it is a layout of attached public spaces in which people can interact. Recently, high-rise buildings in Taiwan have grown in terms of their aesthetics as well as their height. With the aid of a survey of the aesthetics and layouts of high-rise buildings in Taiwan, the symbolic representation and public nature of high-rise buildings are examined. In addition, the Taipei 10… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…4D BIM, LEED) conducted by suppliers could improve the social sustainability and appearance of buildings. Advanced technologies and improved construction standards are imperative for improving human's living environment and aesthetics and layouts of construction projects (Chen & Shih, 2009;Leonard et al, 2019), as they could integrate visualisation, simulation, and dynamic analysis into the design process or even the whole lifecycle (Fanning et al, 2015;Leonard et al, 2019).…”
Section: Relationships Among Innovation Outcomesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4D BIM, LEED) conducted by suppliers could improve the social sustainability and appearance of buildings. Advanced technologies and improved construction standards are imperative for improving human's living environment and aesthetics and layouts of construction projects (Chen & Shih, 2009;Leonard et al, 2019), as they could integrate visualisation, simulation, and dynamic analysis into the design process or even the whole lifecycle (Fanning et al, 2015;Leonard et al, 2019).…”
Section: Relationships Among Innovation Outcomesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For visitors approaching the city, the height and the facade design render it a distinguished eye-catcher. As such the building acquires an additional ‘public dimension’ (Chen and Shih, 2009). The awareness of this centralised security feature – symbolised by the bridges and the panoptic tower – surfaced in the interviews with the residents who report feeling generally safe, not only because of ubiquitous surveillance inside the city but also because of the spatio-technological filtering at the city’s boundaries.…”
Section: Fabricated Island Citymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Anne Power describes, the fact that high-rises in the UK did not blend in to town or country 'made it easier to attach social "myths" to them'. 58 Environmental planners Chen and Shih describe how the high-rise 'emerges as a powerful site and symbol for collective aspirations and imaginations', 59 a popular pervasive symbolic value, that transforms the 'high-rise' into a shared cultural artefact. This image of the 'high-rise' is an expression of the myths, the fears, and the experiences of vertical living, and its extrapolation in SF exaggerates and makes visible the imagined impact of living at height.…”
Section: As Reality: 'It Changes Your Outlook'mentioning
confidence: 99%