“…Such conceptions draw on ideas of Lefebvre who, Fusco (2004) asserts, critiques the neglect of what space is by introducing the concept of ‘social space’. The social space, as described by Stella in this excerpt, reflects the experiences of engagement and interaction within space and is extended on in Lefebrve’s oeuvre, whose work positions space not as ‘simply “there”, a neutral container waiting to be filled’ (Lefebvre, 1991: 24, cited in Marfell, 2017: 4), but rather as ‘a social product[…]a dynamic, humanly constructed means of control, and hence of domination, of power’ (Lefebvre, 1991: 24, cited in Marfell, 2017: 4). In the modern era, suggests Lefebvre (cited in Fusco, 2004), the complexities of space have been condensed to abstraction, manipulated and homogenised for the imposition of power.…”