Pop-ups can be ugly: temporary architecture built with emotions
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Date
2024
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Publisher
Routledge
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
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No
Abstract
Pop-ups are temporary installations constructions or structures that suddenly appear in urban contexts to draw attention for commercial artistic or social purposes. Temporary pavilions whose existence is bound to their capability to engage with unknown citizens or passers-by and offer them a spatial experience are also identified as pop-ups. However what are the features that make a temporary structure a pop-up? What architectural elements do designers outsource when conceiving and materialising pop-up architecture? At what point does a pop-up become something else? This paper aims to answer these questions by providing insights into design explorations that extend the meaning of pop-ups and enquiring through a survey and interviews the boundaries of what can be understood as pop-up architecture. Collective definitions address the fundamental role of human emotions in the conceptualisation and materialisation of these temporary structures suggesting the secondary role of aesthetics when engaging with users. © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A
Source
The Journal of Architecture
Volume
29
Issue
4
Start Page
630
End Page
653
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Scopus : 0
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