Reproducing Tradition: Everyday Public Space in Popular Neighbourhoods in Mexico
Abstract
In Latin American cities a great part of the urban environment has grown through self-help processes leading to informal settlements. In the Mexican context, informal settlements are called “colonias populares” which means people’s or popular neighbourhoods. In the late 1960s Turner (1969) argued that popular neighbourhoods should be reconsidered as environments which are socially and culturally responsive to the needs of the inhabitants, as the architecture produced by low-income settlers is based on a system responsive to the changing needs and demands of the users. In these settlements the built environment is the result of the freedom available to inhabitants to take decisions and shape their own environment. This in turn gives place to a myriad of spatial expressions in which culture, identity and popular character are imprinted in both the private and public spaces. This paper explores these issues in the spaces between the dwellings in the public realm.
Keywords
Citation
Bonilla, M.H. (2006), "Reproducing Tradition: Everyday Public Space in Popular Neighbourhoods in Mexico", Open House International, Vol. 31 No. 4, pp. 49-57. https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-04-2006-B0007
Publisher
:Open House International
Copyright © 2006 Open House International