Article, 2024

Domesticating a redesigned square: an ethnography of Enghave Square, Copenhagen

Urban Geography, ISSN 0272-3638, 10.1080/02723638.2024.2313403

Contributors

Larsen J. 0000-0002-8208-8119 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Roskilde University
  2. [NORA names: RUC Roskilde University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

This paper argues that it is in the intersection between design affordances and diverse domestication practices that squares come to life. Contributing to discussions about social infrastructure and the domestication of public spaces, I explore, ethnographically, the domestication of the newly redesigned Enghave Square in Copenhagen. I also contribute to this literature with a novel, thick ethnography of how infrastructure enables social life and yet first becomes social when enacted through domestication practices that both supports, and breaks with, the design will. While this is not an entirely new argument, how this process takes place has not been discussed enough. This article argues for the need to unpack ethnographically how user practices and mundane objects domesticate social infrastructures and make them properly social. While the literature on social infrastructure acknowledges the role of users, this paper suggests paying closer attention to how social infrastructures become social through transformative, contingent domestication practices.

Keywords

Public square, domestication, ethnography, social infrastructure, user practices

Data Provider: Elsevier