urban stud 2013 koch 6 21
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http://usj.sagepub.com/content/50/1/6The online version of this article can be found at:
DOI: 10.1177/0042098012447001
2013 50: 6 originally published online 6 June 2012Urban StudRegan Koch and Alan Latham
On the Hard Work of Domesticating a Public Space
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On the Hard Work of Domesticatinga Public SpaceRegan Koch and Alan Latham
[Paper first received, December 2011; in final form, March 2012]
Abstract
This paper explores the concept of domestication as a way of attending to urbanpublic spaces and the ways in which they come to be inhabited. It argues against thetendency in urban scholarship to use the term pejoratively and interchangeably withwords like pacification or taming to express concerns relating to the corrosion ofpublic life. Rather, the aim here is to develop domestication as a concept attentive tothe processes by which people go about making a home in the city. Given the tre-mendous investment, enthusiasm and amount of policy directed towards urbandevelopment and regeneration over the past decade, it is argued that it is vital thaturban scholarship continues to develop tools and concepts for offering fine-grainedattention to the spaces that get produced by these interventions and to the socialdynamics within them. These arguments are developed through a case study of thePrince of Wales Junction in London.
Introduction
The piano had been sitting in front of the
cafe for not quite a week. An old upright,
the sort you might find in a parlour ordrawing room, it had been painted bright
blue to match the newly decorated store-
front. Beside it, four local residents loungedat the Parisian-style tables spread across a
patch of artificial grass. As they sipped their
coffee, the group seemed transfixed by thebustle of the traders setting up their stalls
at the new market on the plaza. Is it okay
if we have a go on this?, the young couple
asked, gesturing towards the piano. See
the sign?, one of the group members
replied with a smile, It says Play Me. ImYours!. The young man sat down on the
bench to play. What you wanna sing? heasked his friend. After a brief discussion,
the duo launched into a rendition of Stevie
Wonders Isnt She Lovely. As the songunfolded, they gained in swagger and
volume. Passers-by stopped to listen, a few
Regan Koch and Alan Latham (corresponding author) are in the Department of Geography, UCL,
Pearson Building, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT, UK. E-mail: [email protected] [email protected].
Urban Studiesat 5050(1) 621, January 2013
0042-0980 Print/1360-063X Online 2012 Urban Studies Journal Limited
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people came out of the cafeand several tra-ders left their stalls to get a better view ofthe performance. As they finished, the smallcrowd applauded and whooped. Despite
pleas for an encore, the couple bowed gra-ciously and left to browse the market.
Moments such as these are indicative ofthe pleasurable encounters that public spacesoften afford and of convivial forms of social-ity they can offer (Peattie, 1998; Laurier andPhilo, 2006; Watson, 2006). What is remark-able about this event, however, is where ittook place. The five-way intersection, knownas the Prince of Wales Junction, situated
along a stretch of Harrow Road in central-west London was known for generating verydifferent sorts of atmospheres. Over the pre-vious decade it had become a regular site ofstreet drinking, aggressive begging, prostitu-tion and drug dealing. Lacking amenitiesbeyond a set of public toilets, for most resi-dents the space was somewhere to avoid orpass through quickly even though it was
located at a central point in the neighbour-hood. The transformations that led to theestablishment of a market and other com-munity activities on the site were not acci-dental. Rather, they were part of a deliberatestrategy to re-imagine and reconfigure theJunction as a public space. The aim was toprovide a set of interventions that mightmake it more habitable and attractive forlocal residents, and which might ultimately
help to reinvigorate commercial activityalong this troubled retail stretch. In no smallsense, these actions were about trying todomesticatea space troubled by social prob-lems and economic failures.1
The term domesticationalong with arange of related words such as taming andpacificationis often used by critical urbanscholars as a shorthand to evoke concernsrelated to public space, particularly those of
privatisation and commercialisation (seeZukin, 1995, 1998, 2010; Jackson, 1998;Atkinson, 2003; Munoz, 2003; Krase, 2005;
Allen, 2006; Kaltmeier, 2011). In what fol-lows, we make an argument against thischaracterisation. Rather than understandingthe domestic as existing in opposition to
public life, and viewing domestication as acorrosive of it, we want to use the conceptto think more carefully about the qualitiesthat enable spaces to become collectively
inhabited. Drawing on three alternative dis-ciplinary perspectives, we suggest that
domestication provides a productive way toattend to the processes by which people
come to inhabit public spaces and make asort of home in the city. To focus on suchmatters is to connect with a diverse tradi-tion of scholarship and activism concernedwith the practical possibilities of publicspace. It is to speak of the progressive tradi-tion of Jane Addams, John Dewey and thenotion of civic housekeeping (Jackson,2001); the activist scholarship of Jane Jacobs(1961) and William H. Whyte (1988) andtheir concern with the micro orderings of
public life; urban designers such as Jan Gehl(2010) who attend to the role that objects ofall different kinds play in the fostering ofeveryday urban life; and more recent scho-larship by urbanists such as Richard Sennett(1994, 2010), Gary Bridge (2005, 2008) andAsh Amin (2006, 2008) who, in variousways, theorise public life as a collectivegrammar of social interaction. Through acase study of the Prince of Wales Junction,
our aim is to explore how a set of materialinterventions and the altering of routinepractices helped to reorient a troubled siteinto a space marked not only by a studiedsense of trust (Amin, 2008) but by convivialforms of inclusion, mutual interaction andpleasurable surprise.
Domestication and Public Space
The writer most closely associated with cri-tiques related to the domestication of public
space is the urban sociologist Sharon Zukin
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(1995, 1998, 2010). In her analysis of NewYorks Bryant Park during the late 1980sand 1990s, she details how a city park notor-ious for crime, drug dealing and the gather-
ing of homeless persons was transformedwhen private actors were given responsibil-ity for its redesign and management. Upontaking it over, the Bryant Park BusinessImprovement District set up a subsidiarytasked with reconfiguring the space to makeit more attractive to surrounding officeworkers. This included extensive relands-caping and the lowering of perimeter wallsto make the park more inviting. New secu-
rity measures included the prominent post-ing of rules banning alcohol and drug use,fixed hours of operation and the introduc-tion of private security guards. The interiorof the park was redeveloped following prin-ciples developed by William H. Whyte andpopularised by the Project for Public Spaceswhich included the provisioning of movabletables and chairs, kiosks selling coffee and
sandwiches, and entertainment programmesincluding live music, films and specialevents. These changes dramatically alteredthe use of the park. Having been a no-goarea for most women, even in the daytime,the four-hectare open space became regu-larly populated by thousands of men andwomen each day. By this and many othermeasures, the new Bryant Park could beconsidered a success. Zukin, however, is
more circumspect. Although the park isfilled with many more people, she takesissue with the vision of civility (1995, p.31) being promoted, whereby the presenceand practices of normal users gives lessspace for vagrants and criminals to maneu-ver (p. 28). For Zukin, this process, oneshe first terms pacification by cappuccino(1995, p. 28) and later domestication bycappuccino (1998, p. 2; 2010, p. 4) presents
both an indicative trend and a worryingmodel for the provisioning of urban publicspace more generally.
This argument related to the domestica-tion of public space has been picked up by avariety of urban scholars in other contexts.Jackson (1998) describes how the design
and management strategies of shoppingmalls present a domesticated version of theBritish high street, offering an aestheticisedand fully self-contained environment wherethe anxieties of public encounter are largelyabsent. Bondi similarly evokes a sense ofpacification in her description of gentrifica-tion as a process that turns history into heri-tage, and untamed urban wilderness intodomesticated urban landscapes (Bondi,
1998, p. 195). Domestication, for Bondi, isan outcome of heterosexual femininity subtlyresisting the wild uncertainty of urban spacewhile at the same time being part of its con-quest. Atkinson uses domestication by cap-puccino as an analytical frame to questionmechanisms of control being deployed inBritish cities, whereby
residential desires for safety and relative socialhomogeneity [influence] the choices made
about public spaces in order to enjoy the
experience of the street without its dangers
(Atkinson, 2003, p. 1841).
Munoz (2003) is concerned not with cappuc-cino, but rather with domestication by bar-beque as a force that threatens traditionalforms of public space in Mediterranean cities
by turning city life inwards towards thehome. Domestication also plays a key role inAllens (2006) consideration of BerlinsPotsdamer Platz as an insidious form ofpower that underpins the logic behind manynew urban public spaces. However, in con-trast to highlighting the exclusive qualities ofsome domesticating amenities, Allen detailsthe emergence of aninclusivemodel of publicspace dependent upon a staged version of
publicness (p. 453).Zukins most recent work Naked
City (2010) further develops her idea of
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domestication to describe a generalisedcondition of authentic public space beingdiminished. In this account, what is hap-pening in neighbourhoods all over New
York is that
wilder places [are] getting an aesthetic
upgrading by the opening of a Starbucks or
another new coffee bar. The tastes behind
these new spaces of consumption are power-
ful because they move longtime residents
outside their comfort zone, gradually shifting
places that support their way of life to life
supports for a different cultural community
(Zukin, 2010, p. 4).
In summary, for Zukinand to some extent
Jackson, Atkinson and Allen (although per-haps not for Bondi)domestication supportsa macro narrative about cities being graduallystripped of the more authentic forms ofpublic life that have historically defined them.The term therefore sits together with a whole
range of words like securitisation, pacifica-tion, ordering, disciplining, homogenising,
commercialising and controlling to describethe perilous state of contemporary public
space (see Kohn, 2004; Low and Smith, 2006).On the whole, we do not disagree that there issomething pernicious about many of thesetrends. However, we want to emphasise thatdomestication can also beand, we willargue, should bemade sense of in a rather
different way. For precisely what troublesmany public spaces is that they are lacking in
certain domestic qualities. That is, they fail toprovide a sense of trust, comfort or amenity
that might invite multiple publics to inhabitthem. This was certainly the case at the Princeof Wales Junction.
Struggling with Disorder on the
JunctionPrior to 1995, the Junction was not much
of a recognisable public space but rather a
busy five-way traffic intersection with a setof public toilets at the centre. When aLondon Transport study identified the siteas a major pedestrian hazard, Westminster
council chose not to close the toilets but toreconfigure the space around them. Trafficwas diverted along one side of the Junctionto allow for a small stretch of pavement toconnect with the toilets, in effect creating asmall piazza along the intersection. Newguardrails installed along the surroundingfootpaths meant that drivers no longer hadto worry about pedestrians entering theroad, but this allowed cars to travel faster
through the Junction. Speed bumps werethen added to calm traffic and the roadrunning directly alongside the new pave-ment was converted to one-way. Thesechanges met the goal of improving pedes-trian safety. They also transformed how thespace was used. Busy with traffic during thedaytime, pavement use was typically lim-ited to those passing through. At night,
however, when things calmed, it offered anattractive spot for some people to gatherand drink. Before long, the new stretch ofpavement also proved to be well-suited fordrug dealing and for prostitutes to solicitclients, as cars were now forced to driveslowly past the pavement with the optionof then heading off in any of five directionsin west London.
That persons involved in illicit activity
made a home on the Junction was notcompletely surprising. The surroundingward had since the 1950s been one of themost deprived in London. In the 1980s, ithad been at the centre of the homes forvotes scandal in which council membersintentionally neglected ward services andstrategically relocated persons in shelteredaccommodationincluding those withmental health and addiction problems
into the ward.2 Around the same time asthe physical changes already described,stringent policing in the neighbouring
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borough of Kensington and Chelsea pusheddrug dealing and street solicitation there tothe north of Harrow Road. In the late1990s, retail in the area also began to shift
gradually down-market to a repetition ofmostly low-end discount shops, takeawayfood outlets and betting agents. Over 20per cent of storefronts sat vacant. As theseaspects came together, the Junction becamea place where the atmosphere and modes ofinhabitation recognisably expressed theprevalence of illicit practices, while materi-ally offering few affordances for much else.
Troubles at the Junction came to a flash
point in the spring of 2004. When a well-known elderly woman was badly injured onthe site as her handbag was snatched, localresidents expressed outrage in phone callsand letter campaigns. The councils responsewas to establish a governance group bringingtogether local officials, housing providers,business owners and the police. The measuresfirst enacted were very much in line those
that Zukin, Jackson and Atkinson identifywith the general securitisation of publicspace. Priority was given to dispersing illicitbehaviour from the Junction through heigh-tened surveillance and policing. AdditionalCCTV cameras and civic watch forums wereput in place. A series of target hardeninginterventions saw blind spots, alleyways andoverhangs in the surrounding area fitted withsecurity gates and additional lighting, while
phone boxes were removed. Anti-social beha-viour orders (ASBOs) were given to at least10 persons convicted of drug dealing on theJunction, barring them from being within aset radius of the space for a period of four
years. Their names, pictures and violationswere posted on a display nearby.
These measures substantially loweredvisible instances of illicit activity on theJunction. Police surveys and community
consultations, however, indicated that neg-ative perceptions of the area remainedunchanged. The security measures also
seemed to have little impact on bringingabout new uses to the space or attractingnew businesses. Thus, while the Junctioncould be described as having its unruly ele-
ments pacified or tamed, it failed to pro-vide much sense of trust. It was not a place
where many people felt at home. In manyways, we can see parallels with the condi-
tions that characterised Bryant Park priorto its transformation as described by Zukin.Having failed to solve the problem of theJunction through interventions aimed atexclusion, the council and a range of otheractors alighted on the idea of transformingthe space by making it more inviting.
Sometimes Moreis More:Experimenting with Public Space
The understanding that policing would notnecessarily create a more inhabitable spacewas not lost on the governance group. Yetwhat exactly might be done was an open
question. How do you shift perceptions andpractices associated with fear and avoidanceto ones of everyday use, trust and a sense of
well-being? The governance group decidedto apply a national funding stream that waschannelling money into wards with highlevels of deprivation through Local AreaRenewal Partnerships. In December 2004,the group was awarded a three-year grant toenact a comprehensive programme of local
area renewal and the Harrow RoadNeighbourhood Partnerhsip (HRNP) wasformed. After extensive local consultation, itwas clear that many residents felt strongly
about the need for changes at the Junction,describing it variously as an eyesore and a
black eye for the community. The actionplan the Partnership eventually produced
called for the development of a quality civicspace that would create a destination for
a wide cross-section of the local public. Thiswas to be done in part through physical
improvements and in part by encouraging
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temporary uses and greater communityactivity on the site (HRNP, 2007, pp. 2529). As plans went through various stagesof proposal and consultation, the idea of
establishing a regular market on the sitefound favour as a viable option for meetingthese goals. The idea fitted with a prevailingethos of experimentation and adding-to thatthe Partnership developed. As project man-ager for the council Martin Whittles explains
We tried to come at this from lots of different
angles. So, in addition to the improvements in
social services, were really just trying to make
this space look better, feel safer and support a
whole bunch of new activity. Which ideas might
really take off, whether the market will work,
whether well eventually get a major developer
interested in this area, we dont really know
(Martin Whittles, interview, 13 May 2009).
The newly designed Junction that emergedfrom this process roughly quadrupled the
paved area available for pedestrians. It fea-tured new granite paving stones, permanentbenches, electricity and water points, bicycleracks, ground lighting and two rows of newlyplanted trees (see Figure 1). The centre-pieceof the project was a market licensed to oper-ate three days a week and during specialevents. Funds were also earmarked to hire amember of staff for three months to organiseevent licensing and promote activities. Some
of these funds are what covered the initialcosts of opening the small cafeand decorat-ing the piano to match.
The cafeand the piano were not part ofthe official plan for the Junction. Rather,their almost accidental arrival was madepossible by the re-imagining and reconfi-guring of this formerly dysfunctional site.On the markets opening weekend, a resi-dent named Alice passed through and
noticed an unmet demand for coffee.Having just been made redundant, shespoke with the market manager about
opening a drinks stall, which then led to aconversation with the partnerships direc-tor. The partnership had been trying toconvince the council to do something
about the vacant and unsightly council-owned properties along the Junction. Thedirectors idea had been to open an art gal-lery to showcase local talent, but Alice sug-gested setting up a cafe. If they would lether have the space rent-free on a trial basis,she would be happy to display art as well.Given the go-ahead from the partnership,Alice spent the next week clearing years ofaccumulated debris from the doorway and
windows, and having it repainted insideand out. Furnishing the space with tables,chairs and an artificial grass patio, she alsoadded a range of small touches to make theplace comfortable: reading materials, fliersfor local events, a guestbook, a chalkboardfor comments and drawings, and a waterbowl for dogs. Alice also worked with thepartnerships event organiser to promote
activities on the Junction including livemusic on Fridays, an Irish Festival, aCarnival drum display, salsa dance lessonsand an Old Folks Tea. The first artistselected to exhibit in the cafe knew aboutthe city-wide Play Me Im Yours pianoproject and, when Alice agreed to takeresponsibility for securing it at the end ofeach day, the artist was able to get theJunction a piano of its own. Alices efforts
can be understood as both entrepreneurialand community-minded, but what interestsus in particular is the way her actions paral-lelled the general aims of the partnershipand the council. By taking ownership of aformerly vacant storefront, routinely popu-lating the space with mundane forms ofsocialitygreeting, eating, drinking, watch-ing, gossiping, readingand spilling thisactivity out onto the pavement, Alice
helped to extend the broader set of changestaking place at the Junction, bringing a newkind of public life to the space. In a whole
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range of ways, this process was about a
public space becoming domesticated.
Rethinking Domestication and
Public SpaceThe critical use of the term domestication
in urban scholarship has arguably been
useful in drawing attention to ways in
which public life can be dampened or
dulled in certain ways. However, we want
to argue that this usage comes at the
expense of registering other processes that
may be taking place. We want to movebeyond the use of the term in the sense of
pacification or taming. There are at least
Figure 1. New configurations of materials and practices on the transformed Junction: a spon-
taneous performance on the piano; granite paving stones provide a plaza surface; tables andchairs offer an invitation to stay, bikes stands and benches provide practical furnishings; land-scaping softens the space; morning coffee at the cafe; setting up stalls becomes a daily routine;eye-catching displays invite people to browse; occasional events draw large crowds; routinepractices of caring for the Junction.
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three reasons for doing so. First, such userelies upon an organicist metaphor ofurban space that needs closer examination.The notion that real public space was once
wild but is now being tamed (Zukin,1995, 1998; Bondi, 1998; Atkinson, 2003),or that an entire city could lose its soul(Zukin 2010, p. 1) provides a seductivenarrative but not much analytical purchase.In part, this is because such overarchingstories depend upon a necessarily narrowreading of the multiple spatio-temporalitiesthat define a given space, much less anentire city. Such thinking also draws upon
an idea of a natural order (the wild beingtamed) artificially suppressed when in facturban space is always defined by the collec-tive negotiation of multiple claims onspace. We would prefer to work with amore hybridised conceptualisation of citiesas always and already comprised of socio-material assemblages which can be var-iously configured to enhance or constrain
human capabilities (Amin and Thrift,2002). Even were we to accept the meta-phor, the assumption that wild cities areinherently better than tamed ones seemsrather dubious. Secondly, to automaticallyposition domestication as a form of domi-nation ignores the continuous becoming ofurban space. New developments that oftenseem sterile or tightly scripted at theironset often take some time to settle in, to
become inhabited, and for new norms ofuse to be negotiated. Indeed, our own visitsto Bryant Park over the past several yearsfound a much looser and more inclusive setof users and uses than Zukins initialdescription. Implicit within much urbancriticism is a sense that cities are more real,or at least more authentic, when they areedgy or dirty; and that cities used to bemuch more interesting but are now being
made boring. These positions seem steepedin a sort of nostalgia which can not onlysuck the life out of the present (Berman,
2006, p. 217) but also leave urban scholar-ship ill-equipped at registering instanceswhere urban spaces might be becomingmore inclusive and generally better for the
people who inhabit them. Thirdly, mobili-sations of domestication as pacification areunderpinned by an implicit narrative of adecline in public life. Such a narrative isrestrictive at best and at its worst simplywrong (see Crawford, 1999; Sheller andUrry, 2003; Lathamet al., 2009).
To develop a more open-ended andnuanced conception of domestication, wewant to turn to three alternative perspec-
tives outside urban studies. The first,coming from cultural anthropology, con-ceives of domestication not as a formof imposition, but as the cultivation ofa whole range of intimate relationshipsbetween humans and other forms of life,artifacts and environments. Ingold (2000),for example, writes of the way hunter-gather peoples frame the process of culti-
vating their environment not as an act ofseparation from the natural world but askind of working-with. Similarly, Vitebskysstudy of Eveny reindeer herders poses thequestion of whether the Eveny have domes-ticated their reindeer or the reindeer theEveny. For Vitebsky
Domestication [is] an arrangement of mutual
benefit to both sides . even . a social con-
tract between reindeer and humans (Vitebsky,2006, p. 27).
A second perspective on domestication,based in the sociology of technology andmedia studies comes from research detail-ing the processes by which new technologiesbecome accepted and used. Here, the con-cept has provided a theoretical frameworkand a practical approach for considering
technology within the dynamic routines,rituals and patterns of everyday life(Silverstone and Hirsch, 1992; Srenson,
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2006). A key idea is that when technologieshave been successful they are
not regarded as cold, lifeless, problematic
and challenging consumer goods.
but ascomfortable, useful toolsfunctional and/or
symbolicthat are reliable and trustworthy
(Berkeret al., 2006, p. 3).
A third perspective, coming from post-socialist studies, has understood domestica-tion as a process through which big politi-cal and social projectslargely the ideas ofpoliticians, experts and social institutions
become enmeshed within everyday practicesand processes of social reproduction. In thecontext of both state socialism (Creed,1998) and neo-liberalism (Stenning et al.,2010), this positioning of domestication hashelped to highlight the processes throughwhich these projects were understood,negotiated, contested and made tolerablethrough various forms of economic practice
and consumption.Each of these perspectives shares acommon sense that domestication is notsimply a relationship of domination. Rather,it is a process in the formation of certainkinds of (variably) beneficial relationshipsbetween humans and other thingsbe theyobjects, sets of ideas or other forms of life.These relationships, which maybe first bealien, novel or incomprehensible, evolve over
time and in various non-determinate ways tobecome familiar, ordinary, routine and mostof all useful. This framing provides a way ofthinking about the domestication of publicspace in terms beyond that of a straightfor-ward imposition of alien norms and conven-tions upon a site or its culture. That is,domestication does not constrain public life,but rather is an essential part of the processthrough which people come to inhabit urban
spaces and, indeed, is part of the way inwhich publics of all different sorts come tofind a home in the city.
In moving to the notion of domestication
in the sense of making a home, we are notsuggesting that public space is, or should be,
the same as the domestic space of the house
or apartment. We are, however, attemptingto move beyond conceptualisations of
public and private that pose them as dis-tinct opposites. Our intention is to take seri-
ously the complex and fluid hybridizing of
public-and-private life (Sheller and Urry,
2003, p. 108) that characterises the urban
everyday. Rather than thinking about urbanspaces as being either public or private, we
want to understand the public-ness of a
space as defined by how the relationship
between the two is configured. Much of
what goes on within public space is in factprivately directedit is about people get-
ting from A to B, shopping, eating, relaxing,
meeting friends and so on. The public qual-
ity of these activities arises out of the degreeto which they involve some sort of orienta-
tion towards, involvement with, perhaps
even responsibility for, the others withwhom one collectively inhabits space. When
public spaces work well, these relationshipsare inclusive, convivial and democratic. In
short, they are shared. For the key actors
behind the Junctions transformation, the
general intention was to re-orient the space
along these lines and transform a site thatwas failing to support public life in many
ways.
Bringing the Domestic to PublicSpace
To make sense of the processes by which a
different set of public qualities were brought
to the Junction and to think about broader
lessons for attending to the difficult work ofcreating and managing public spaces, we
would like to engage with the metaphor ofhome-making. Although just one way of
thinking about domestication, an extensive
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literature on the concept of home recog-nises it as an expansive (although not unpro-blematic) spatial imaginary (Blunt andDowling, 2006; Blunt and Varley, 2004).
Our aim is not to recast domestication ashome-making in order to continue to framegrand narratives about public space. Rather,we think that the concept evokes a numberof modest metaphors for attending to thefine-grained details of everyday forms ofinhabiation. Hence, and in what follows, we
would like to offer four heuristics for think-ing through a notion of home-making in
relation to the domestication of publicspaces: foundations, furnishings, invitationsand accommodations.
Foundations
To start, we can think of how the changesenacted at the Junction in 1995 literallypaved the way for illicit activities to find ahome there. Adding a stretch of pavementsomewhat extended its capacity for peopleto congretate. Yet its smallness, proximityto unpleasant traffic and the absence ofamenities limited its usage. At night, how-ever, traffic died down and the pavementwas consistently populated by groups of
three to five people, typically drinking pur-chases from the nearby off-licence. The
partnerships redesign attempted to expandthe range of affordances for public activity
by imagining it as a plaza. This new concep-tualisation provided a checklist of necessaryfeatures: plazas need to have open space,enough to allow a crowd of people to con-gregate and mingle; they need an appropri-ate surface and ideally landscaping andseating; they need to be relatively free oftraffic; they need to provide facilities likepower and water for events and festivals;and they need lighting to be useable after
nightfall. At a most basic level, thesechangesand the re-imagining of the
Junction as a plazaprovided what can be
understood as a sort of foundation beinglaid down. A foundation is not the same as
a script or a tight programme, but rather anenabling set of features that underpin the
building of a home. The laying of a founda-tion can be done with varying degrees offlexibility, adaptability and openness(Sennett, 2010) and, importantly, it involvesmore than just physical infrastructure. Newsocial and legal frameworks (permits, licen-sing, management contracts, leasing agree-ments, service provisions) are foundationalfor things like a market and other tempo-rary events to take place. Important here is
the idea that foundations are not only aboutthe material. They are also about a kind of
ethosa way of thinking about the kind ofpublic space that might be put together.
Rebuilding the Junction as a kind of plazainvolved the recognition that making agood public space is not quite the same assimply making a safe one. Important here isthe notion that filling the space with activi-
ties and people is preferable to focusing onthe exclusion of that which is less desirable.To do this one has to learn to live with (tosome extent at least) the wild or untamedelements that are outside the official pro-
gramme of the site. Thus, part of theJunctions domestication involved the rec-
ognition that in some senses it will never befully tamed. Crucially, and contra to
Zukin (2010), this is not some kind of
Machiavellian trick through which themajority comes to discipline the minority.Rather, it is a pragmatic realisation thatgood public spaces need to find ways ofaccommodating and living with the widediversity of demands placed upon them.
Furnishings
If infrastructural changes provided new
foundations for expanding public inhabita-tion, what actually came to populate the
Junction was practical activity. The end of
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the nine-month construction project meanta return to regular pedestrian traffic, therhythms of which where enhanced by theadditional set of footpaths now connected
up with the newly created plaza. The redeve-lopment also encouraged daytime users todo more than just pass throughbut howexactly? Engagement with a range of mate-rial objects, or what we might think of asfur-nishings, played a key role. Recall that theredesign introduced a number of additions tothe stripped-down space: granite pavingstones, benches, landscaping, recessed groundlighting and bike racks (see Figure 1). These
permanent features were complemented bymore temporally variable amenities such asthe market, live music events and the range ofcommunity gatherings that were organised.Of all these furnishings, the movable furnitureoffered a consistent and easily observable setof engagements. Each day during summer, sixplastic tables and thirty matching chairs wereset out by the markets manager. There was
no branding or labelling to indicate proprietyor expectation of purchase. Rather, they weremade available for people to use, rearrangeand cluster as they pleased. These inexpensiveitems were recognised as practical and theywere used in a variety of perhaps unforeseenways. People who purchased food at themarket used them, but so too did elderly resi-dents who needed a rest, men who scannedthe days horse races before heading into the
booking agent, people from the nearby carehome who brought packed lunches outwhen the weather was sunny and occasion-ally people taking quick naps used themtoo. Borrowing from studies of technologyand media discussed earlier, we can outlinea process of domestication here consistingof several general features. First, there isthe construction of regular, predictableroutines associated with the use of these
furnishings. Secondly, there is the estab-lishment of roles for taking responsibilityfor the space and its furnishings. Thirdly,
there is the on-going mix of events takingplace whereby the Junction becomes routi-nely perceived as a site of situated multi-
plicity (Amin, 2008, p. 8) rather than as
merely a space for passing through or asthe exclusive territory of those involved inillicit activity. Amins reflection on howsuch practical activity can generate collec-tive affects captures precisely what seemed
to be taking place
The movement of humans and non-humans
in public spaces is not random but guided by
habit, purposeful orientation, and the instruc-
tions of objects and signs. The repetition of
these rhythms results in the conversion of
public space into a patterned ground that
proves essential for actors to make sense of
the space, their place within it and their way
through it. Such patterning is the way in
which a public space is domesticated, not only
as a social map of the possible and the permis-
sible, but also as an experience of freedom
through the neutralization of antipathies ofdemarcation and divisionfrom gating to
surveillanceby naturalizations of repetition.
The lines of power and separation somehow
disappear in a heavily patterned ground, as
the ground springs back as a space of multiple
uses, multiple trajectories and multiple pub-
lics, simultaneously freeing and circumscrib-
ing social experience of the urban commons
(Amin, 2008, p. 12).
Invitations
Amins description gives a sense of the back-
ground hum of activity in spaces that havecome to be widely inhabited. Yet the ways in
which these collective achievements are pro-duced is left largely unexamined. The hardwork of domesticating a public spacecreating a new patterned ground as Amin
terms itis a particular achievement of agiven site. The domestication of the
Junction began by laying out a new
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foundation and furnishing it with variousamenities, but the routines alreadydescribed did not magically happen on theirown. People needed to be invited to make
themselves at home. These invitations wereattempted through a strategic set of experi-ments and interventions. They includedplanned events, activities and performances,but they also emerged through the moremundane aspects of the markets operation.Drawing on pragmatist philosophy, Bridge(2005, 2008) has described how the inhabi-tation of public spaces involves urban dwell-ers in an on-going conversation about
norms, conventions, expectations, appro-priate forms of behaviour and so forth.Through these communicative transactions,certain spaces come to possess a kind of col-lective legibility. This happens throughmore than just face-to-face dialogue andincludes a broad spectrum of communica-tive registers which emerge from the assem-blage of bodies, objects and atmospheres
that constitute a given public space. Thepartnerships idea of establishing a marketto transform perceptions and practicesmade sense precisely because of the constel-lation of invitations a market provides. Thatis, markets are about the provision and saleof objects which can offer, simultaneously: acertain functionality, amenity, comfort,sociability, pleasure and employment(Watson, 2009). The market is an obvious
example of how people were being invitedin to the Junction, but we also need tounderstand such invitations as workingacross a range of spatio-temporal registers.It is not just that the market provided anattractive spectacle; it is that the individualstalls offer invitations to browse, buy, eat,drink and linger in the space. That theseinvitations gradually shifted the collectivelegibility of the Junction was observable in
how some people began making a regularhabit of attending the live music playedthere on Friday evenings and by the way
food and drink were consumed during theperformances. At first, consumption waslimited to food bought from the stalls sellingready-to-eat items such as roast pork, paella
or sandwich wraps. Soon, however, someresidents began the habit of purchasingcheaper options from the high street to eatat the outdoor tables. Within a few weeks,some regular attendees began bringingpicnic baskets with food prepared at home.Although this caused some consternationamong the traders, these practices evidencea collective re-orientation of the site as aplace where consuming food was a recogni-
sably valid practice. Alcohol started makinga presence at the Junction in new ways too.
Long a site for street drinking, events likemusical performances and art shows meant
that less marginalised people occasionallydrank there too. Importantly, these practicesdid not preclude the existing public culture,but expanded it to a wider public. Awarethat alcohol consumption on the site was
illegal given that the market lacked properlicensing, the market manager handled thisby asking anyone drinkingthose drinkingthere as part of the event and those whomight normally be considered street
drinkersto keep their beverages inunmarked cups or wrapped in paper. This
small normative intervention represents acertain democratisation of the space.
Persons openly drinking on the Junction
were asked to make a slight compromise intheir behaviour, yet in doing so becamelegitimised as valid users of the space andpart of the normal goings-on of a typicalFriday at the Junction.
Accommodation
Closely following this example, a fourth ele-ment in the domestication of public space
is accommodation: the process of adaptingor adjusting to others in order to get on
with living. Good spaces can, of course,
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accommodate a diverse variety of peopleand their needs. Yet we can also considerthis metaphor in the sense of topdownvisions for spaces having to accommodate
the publics that inhabit them. Consider theupscale vision of the Junction envisionedby the council and the partnership in theearly days of the redevelopment. Bothgroups wanted to see higher-end retailbeing offered in comparison with the shopsalong Harrow Road. This vision was givenfurther support by consultants who sug-gested that the market should be tailored tosatisfy the needs of the middle- and higher-
income residents in the area. It many ways,the policy adopted could be read as a neo-liberal strategy of gentrification: neo-liberalin the assumption that social problemsshould be addressed by fostering economicactivity; gentrification in that there was adeliberate attempt to recast the area as suit-able and safe for higher-income residents.The market traders first selected by the
management company were purveyors ofupmarket goods such as organic produce,gourmet cheeses, cured meats, homemadetoys and fresh fruit smoothies.
From opening day forward, the marketwas well attended, the special events weresuccessful and the new design was wellreceived. The traders, however, were notmaking much money and over the next fewmonths there was a great deal of turnover
among them. In the months following, allthe original traders except for the womanrunning the flower stall eventually left.Gradually, the market got both smaller andmore down-market; the contract with themanagement company was terminated andit became clear that if the market was to sur-vive it would have to work better for theactual people using the site. A local residentwas hired to set up and take down the
market. Stalls selling items such as pennysweets, plastic toys, soaps and incense, andstir-fried noodles gradually found a home
on the Junction and stayed on through the
winter. The traders pressed for an extra dayof trading on Wednesdays, arguing that
their profits were limited by only working
three days a week. In spring, the manage-ment began operating a weekly jumble sale
allowing local residents to set up a table and
sell unwanted items from their homes.
These adjustments, although perhaps not inline with the original ideal of the market,
evoke the fact that a period of settling-in can
be expected to follow any major intervention
into public space. This settling-in resonates
with processes of domestication in at leasttwo different registers. First, the partnership,
the manager and the stallholders needed to
to work with how the market was taken up
in practice. Their original plan had to be
both scaled down and expanded in certainways. Secondly, we can sense something like
a refusal of local publics to accept the origi-
nal vision of the market, bending it into a
more prosaic, less up-market entity than was
imaged by the partnership. This is a kind ofdomestication that feels rather like that
described by Creed (1998) and Stenning
et al. (2010) whereby abstract topdown
policies become to a greater or less degree
negotiated, contested and adaptedor inour words, accommodatedto circum-
stances on the ground.
Conclusion
Two years have passed since the redevelop-
ment of the Prince of Wales Junction. Theproblems associated with drug dealing and
prostitution have not been completely era-
dicated, but they no longer serve as the
defining element of the Junction. Five days
a week, from late morning to early evening,a handful of tradersall of them local
residentsearn money selling takeawayfoods, flowers and a range of relatively
inexpensive items. The offer is smaller and
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less up-market than the original vision, butthe way the space operates seems to fit withthe surrounding neighbourhood. The newtrees and landscaping have grown into their
places; an abandoned storefront is nowhome to a new bakery; and a national chaingrocery store has moved in diagonallyopposite the Junction. The partnership dis-solved when its three-year funding ended,but an offshoot continues to oversee themarket, sponsors occasional activities onsite and is working with the council todevelop a community centre and kitchen ina vacant storefront next to the cafe. Alice
no longer runs the cafe, but the new man-ager operates it much as she did. He hasexpanded the number of seats outside andstill wheels the piano out on sunny days.Most days at the Junction, however, aredefined simply by everyday routines ofpeople eating and drinking, shopping,meeting friends, resting on the benches, set-ting up and taking down stalls, and passing
through on the way to wherever is next.This brings us back to the concept ofdomestication. We are sympathetic tomany of the individual issues that Zukinand others address when they use the termdomestication in a critical sense. We sharea concern for encroachments upon thedemocratic nature of public space and, inparticular, that exaggerated concerns fororder and public safety threaten the open-
endedness of public life. However, we alsothink there is a tendency in urban scholar-ship to exaggerate the ubiquity and coher-ence of these forces. In much writing onurban public space, the impulse to connectwith larger narratives about public life anda concern for what might be lost meansthat there is a tendency to overlook muchof what actually goes on in public spaces(Koch and Latham, 2012). There is a need
to stop viewing domestication as implyinga loss of public life. Domestication is moreproductively understood as a fundamental
part of how people come to be at home in
cities. Thinking in this way opens up arange of analytical horizons. It allows us to
questionhowspaces are being domesticated
and the kinds of ethos that underpin agiven space or set of interventions. It offers
up new ways of thinking about how wemight help to produce urban public spaces
embedded with a greater sense of inclusive-
ness, conviviality and democracy.As we have seen with the Junction, creat-
ing public places that work well, which
allow a broad range of people to inhabit
them, is uncertain and often underappre-
ciated work. Those responsible for public
spaces regularly have to make difficult deci-sions and deal with seemingly irreconcilable
differences when it comes to provisioning/
managing various spaces. Urban scholars
have become proficient in critiquing how
these decisions can be manipulated by thepowerful. We are less skilled in offering
contributions that reflect carefully on these
decision-making processes, directly enga-ging with practices of intervention or being
actively involved in the production of
public spaces. By tracing the process of
domestication of public spaceshow cer-
tain networks of practice become routine;how relationships among those sharing
space are constituted; and how abstract
policies unfold when they hit the ground of
everyday practiceswe might better reflect
upon and contribute to the ways in whichmultiple publics come to make a home in
the city.
Notes
1. The material on which this case study is
based is derived from ethnographic research
conducted over a period of three months
in the summer of 2009. This included
interviews with local residents, police,
planners, business owners and community
actors involved in the redesign of the site,
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along with attending neighbourhood
partnership meetings. This work was
combined with participant observation on
the Junction, including one of the authors
assisting a market trader at his stall for aperiod of six weekends to allow for a
fine-grained analysis of the new Junctions
opening days. For an account that provides
more historical detail on the Junction and
gives greater detail to the policy driving the
transformation see Koch and Latham (2012).
2. For the full story of the crimes committed, see
Hoskens (2006) and Dimoldenberg (2006).
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