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by kemiller 2627 days ago
I was in the neighborhood the weekend it opened and strolled through. Thing that struck me was that there was no seating almost anywhere. People were sitting on the floor and it felt like a weird refugee area.
3 comments

There's no seating because you're not meant to sit. A lot of public space these days is designed to be hostile for that use, so that undesirables like the homeless don't linger, but in the process it becomes hostile to everybody.

A lot of public-facing plazas are meant to be ornamental or monumental and nothing more, which is quite sad.

There was a time when this concept was revolutionary.

https://www.pps.org/article/wwhyte

He literally filmed what people actually did in public spaces, and came up with great guidelines to make them enjoyable.

Architects study this is school. As you say, whenever it isn't implemented, it is because they specifically chose not to, not because they don't know better.

It's not really the architects' fault if their clients don't want free enjoyment of the space by the public.
I documented this. It's pretty crazy: https://www.instagram.com/p/BvXMeLSBZ5Q/
There's hardly any public seating in New York City other in major parks.
Central Park and Union Square have plenty of seating. So does Washington Square Park.

The plazas at Herald Square and Times Square also have limited seating, but there the main limit is space.

And the parks will give you a ticket if you sit on a bench after sunset. I've gotten them for taking a rest on the way to walking between work and my parking garage.
What on earth? America truly is a dystopia