4. A Taxonomy of Socio-Environmental Indicators
Building on and developing the proposal of using unobtrusive indicators to study habitation made by
Zeisel (
1984)—who in turn made extensive use of the proposal of
Webb et al. (
1966)—in this paper, we propose a taxonomy of socio-environmental indicators derived from extensive research conducted over several years, focusing on the intricate interplay between individuals and their surrounding spaces. This taxonomy organizes socio-environmental indicators into five categories: traces, alterations, adaptations, signs, and routines (
Figure 3), each of them including a series of subcategories.
It should be noted that this taxonomy is a heuristic rather than an epistemological device. Classifying the elements observed does not have the classical aim of epistemological taxonomies, that is making sense of the world by construing order—as in the case of botany or zoology. Rather, this heuristic taxonomy is a tool for finding, a means to sharpen sight rather than organize thoughts, a tool to increase the observer’s capacity to discover evidence for their research purposes—not so much to ensure they have understood the structure that governs the world. Therefore, this taxonomy is bound to less strict rules than those for classic taxonomies, such as the unicity of the
fundamentum divisionis (i.e., its criterion), or the mutual exclusiveness of its classes: in some instances, for example, defining whether a specific case belongs to a certain class of indicator or to another will be difficult. However, in the next sections, it will be clearer how such difficulty to respect the criterium of the mutual exclusiveness of classes increases rather than diminishes the heuristic potential of the classification, as for all non-rigid classifications generated by fuzzy logic (see, e.g.,
Kosko 1993).
4.1. Traces
The first class of socio-environmental indicators we propose includes traces, namely the unintentional effects of behavior that are unaware products of actions situated in space (
Figure 4). The designed forms oppose any degeneration and, in most cases, maximizing the strength of this opposition is the purpose of many design choices, as is the case with the choice of materials. Nevertheless, the constant and prolonged use of the designed form over time leaves traces. Habitation, if considered from the proposed perspective, turns designed space into a palimpsest on which inhabitants continuously rewrite a text that can be interpreted by the researcher.
The most evident of these traces are erosions, which result from repeated behaviors that alter the integrity of a designed space. Walking, for example, represents an unrestricted practice of spatial appropriation, where the maximum degree of liberty is expressed, as de Certeau wrote, to integrate those “pedestrian rhetorics” and “tracing a speech with one’s feet” (
de Certeau 1980, pp. 150–58). De Certeau, in fact, built on Roland Barthes’ comparison between walking and speaking: “we speak our city […] simply by living in it, by wandering through it, by looking at it” (ibid., p. 151). The succession of steps, “the modern art of everyday expression” (ibid., p. 156), therefore becomes a real “form of organization of the space, [and] represents the complexity of the places” (ibid., pp. 150–51; on walking, see also
Solnit 2000;
Careri 2002).
Walking, together with resting, sitting, climbing, etc., leaves observable traces which allow us to reconstruct space needs, first in terms of movements and use. For example, we could estimate the popularity of the rooms in a museum and the consequent number of visits from the public through the wear and tear of the flooring. In the case of the Science Museum in Chicago, for example, the vinyl floor covering around an exhibit of live chicks had to be replaced every six months, while in other parts of the museum it lasted for a year (
Corbetta 1999). However, traces can also express something about the relationships between regions of space: often the design includes barriers—impediments to passage, the overall organization of routes, etc.—which are altered by the inhabitants to best meet their requirements and to appropriate spaces that are negated or protected by the design.
Some of the activities undertaken by inhabitants leave residues, another type of trace. Residues, being unintentional by-products of such activities, can help us to formulate certain hypotheses on the range of activities undertaken by inhabitants. In certain cases, for example, residues can be useful in analyzing negatively sanctioned behaviors, or ones that are difficult to observe directly: cigarette butts, for example, can be used to estimate the smoking habits of underage students in a school environment. One type of residue that can be eloquent is waste, and since 1971, the Garbage Project at the University of Arizona has explored the possibilities of analyzing this type of trace (
Rathje and Murphy 1992). The analysis of garbage has been used profitably since then in numerous research contexts, from the study of behaviors in public space to the analysis of recycling behaviors and of the territorial dissemination and social stratification of the habit of drinking alcohol (e.g.,
see Zimring and Rathje 2012).
4.2. Alterations
The second class of socio-environmental indicators is that of alterations, which we define as self-designed and semi-permanent modifications to space. Alterations represent attempts through which inhabitants transform the environment to meet their necessities: alterations are therefore actions of spontaneous redesign of the space, through which they appropriate such space and adapt it to their spatial requirements. Similar to the other indicators, alterations can also be categorized into several subtypes (
Figure 5). First and foremost are connections and barriers, i.e., the changes that alter the relationship between areas of the designed space, responding to very common needs that sometimes produce traces. In some cases, alterations connect portions of space which the design planned to keep separate: for example, when the fencing of a public playground is modified in order to open an access that, for instance, could only be reached going the long way around, on the other side of the playground; or when inhabitants use improvised devices to keep open a door that would otherwise close automatically. In other cases, alterations separate elements originally connected by the design: for example, to increase the intimacy of a private or semi-private space, such as a workspace, collective residence, or domestic space, where a different regulation of the space segmentation is needed; or, in other cases, to assert one’s rights over a space and delimit its boundaries, even temporarily, such as when placing object on the desk in a study place in a library (see also below, about territorialization).
A third form of alteration is the result of the repositioning inhabitants undertake of a designed object or space from its original location, or the change in its layout. These repositionings demonstrate an attempt to directly alter the opportunities for action offered by a designed space to create spaces suited to specific activities, or to allow for the performance of behaviors otherwise denied by the designed space. One interesting case that can be easily observed is that of the repositioning of chairs or seats, with which inhabitants of a space redesign its layout in order to create more centripetal or centrifugal configurations that, respectively, encourage or inhibit their social relationships. These two concepts were originally coined by
Osmond (
1957), a psychiatrist interested in the relationships between the environment and the use of space: he observed how patients and their visiting family members would reposition the chairs of the ward on a daily basis, in order to form “collection and interaction centers”. At the end of the day, the hospital staff would put them back to their original position. This study, a classic of environmental psychology, is also an example of how repositioning—and other socio-environmental indicators—can reveal conflicts over the use of space, and in particular conflicts between users and those who have the authority to rule and change it (see also
Sommer 1969—who studied under Osmond).
4.3. Adaptations
The concept of affordance is owed to
James Gibson (
1979). Gibson proposed a radical hypothesis with broad implications which revolutionized the psychology of perception: although orthodox psychology asserted that we perceive space and objects discriminating their properties or qualities, he suggested that what we perceive when we observe them are affordances—i.e., opportunities for behavior—and not their qualities, and that we perceive such affordances directly, not mediated by cognition. There are many empirical results that support Gibson’s intuition (see, e.g.,
Blakeslee and Blakeslee 2007), with many consequences in terms of design culture, as it defines a dominant way in which an individual relates to the surrounding space. Specifically, the concept of affordance is gaining significant attention today as it proves useful in redefining a theory of design in an interactionist sense, following a trend that has become more precise in specific design fields, beginning with software design, where studying human–machine interaction is central. According to
Maier et al. (
2009), the attention given to the concept of affordance is a chance to provide an ecological approach to perception and behavior that is crucial for architecture and design, fields that Gibson believed lacked a satisfactory theoretical framework. In this regard, the construct of affordance can serve as a conceptual framework for comprehending the relationship between built or designed spaces and human beings, and as an evaluative tool for exploring the relationship between the initial intentions or objectives of a project and its actual use. This approach can lead to the accumulation of knowledge for better design and minimizing the risks of a wide range of design failures (
Maier et al. 2009, pp. 1–2).
A manifestation of such a relationship can be investigated through adaptations, the third type of socio-environmental indicators, which result from a non-trivial interpretation by inhabitants of the sense of a designed form, rather than from its transformation. Therefore, adaptations are realizations of non-designed affordances. In other words, when people perform an adaptive use of a space or object, they identify in it opportunities (i.e., affordances) that were not originally incorporated by those who designed it, thereby expanding the catalog of possibilities for action commonly associated with such space or object across different scales. The adaptations reveal a social creativity in that they exhibit how we imaginatively construe the world around us. This capacity is particularly prominent in children, but with aging and socialization with conventional uses of spaces and objects, the creativity in imagining new uses of them tends to diminish (
Defeyter and German 2003).
Adaptations have implications for understanding how people appropriate space, and they are having a profound impact on the world of object design (
Maier et al. 2009) and public space design. Product designers have also focused on adaptations, sometimes using the inappropriate label of non-intentional design to describe them (
Brandes and Erlhoff 2006). On the contrary, as some of the examples in
Figure 6 demonstrate, these adaptive forms are imbued with design intent, although not through the mediation of a professional designer.
4.4. Signs
While the forms of evidence analyzed thus far represent transformations of the physical form of a designed space, signs are additions to the form which do not change its function but alter its communicative value. A sign is “everything which can be taken as significantly substituting for something else” (
Eco 1976, p. 7) in the sense that there are, as we define them, additions to the form which refer to meaning. Therefore, signs are observable elements which, rather than being the effects of the use of space (as with the case of traces, alterations, and adaptations), refer to the need to attribute a meaning to the space and to communicate it.
The first type of sign as a socio-environmental indicator is territorialization, which arises from the need to affirm one’s rights over a portion of space. According to the anthropologist Edward T. Hall, territoriality “is usually defined as behavior by which an organism characteristically lays claim to an area and defends it against members of its own species” (
Hall 1966, p. 7). Therefore, territorializations refer to a primal need, phylogenetically inscribed in the behaviors of our species since its origin, but that can also be detected in many other animal species. Given that the life cycle through which a space becomes an inhabited place can be schematized in the sequence of the phases of settlement, territorialization, use, and abandonment (
Tuan 1974), it is precisely in the phase of territorialization that migrants—in the broad sense of those who start a process of new settlement in a place—begin to transform into inhabitants, i.e., taking possession of a space and starting to put down roots. This sequence of phases is actually the same at different levels of scale and time: for example, when founding a new city but also when placing our belongings when we arrive at a crowded beach, in a train seat for a long trip, or at a concert in a crowded stadium. In such cases, our need to territorialize space can be observed through the marking of boundaries of space with signs which affirm—and communicate to others—a form of belonging or ownership. A similar process also happens when moving to a new home with our family, when we start to use a newly installed kitchen, or even a new computer or mobile phone. In all of these cases, we use signs to express our appropriation of such spaces, regardless of these signs being intended for others or just for ourselves.
In other cases, similar meanings are encoded in space through personalizations and individualizations. Personalizations are signs that inscribe the identity of the inhabitant in space. Thus, these indicate an attempt to communicate the presence of a singularity that inhabits a space, its needs, attitudes, and values, expressing its symbolic capital by injecting it into the surrounding environment. Individualizations, instead, are additions to a designed form or space that signal the presence of subjectivity through features that interrupt the uniformity of a place and break up its anonymous seriality.
As
Figure 7 shows, signs embedded by inhabitants in a space can convey a wide variety of meanings. Thus, signs represent significant data for researchers: as we will also see in one of the examples analyzed in the discussion session, they can be interpreted as indicators of different kinds of appropriation, offering insights, for example, on the degree of attachment of inhabitants to a place, a designed space, or a form, and of their sense of belonging to a community, a group, or a subculture. In some cases, some of these dimensions can be even useful to evaluate other properties such as, for example, the perceived safety of a place or its vitality (see, e.g.,
Tuan 1974).
4.5. Routines
While we have focused on the effects of behaviors, it is also important to consider the behaviors themselves. The four socio-environmental indicators illustrated thus far are in fact the results of regularities of behavior that are locally situated and not indifferent to space, which we may call routines.
According to
Bronfenbrenner (
1979), while studying human behavior, we must distinguish between “molecular” behaviors, that is simple, free of purpose, and timely (e.g., sitting), and “molar” behaviors, namely behaviors that are complex, structured, articulated over time, and purpose driven (e.g., sitting on a park bench to watch people passing by, waiting for someone to come along to chat with). In this framework, routines can be considered as repeated, not occasional, molar behaviors which characterize the habitation of a designed space (
Figure 8).
Observing routines contributes to the study of the relationship between designed and inhabited space; in a sense, routines are superordinate to the traces, alterations, adaptations, and signs, as these are all the very effects of routines. However, investigating such relationships through routines has some methodological disadvantages: routines are much more difficult to observe than the other four socio-environmental indicators. On the one hand, studying routines requires either the simultaneous presence of the observer and the observed, or the use of recording devices, with all of their limitations and costs, both technical and ethical. On the other hand, some routines are socially sanctioned and therefore individuals implement dissimulation strategies to prevent being observed while performing them: this makes this object of research even more elusive. For this reason, we have chosen to discuss routines after socio-environmental indicators: despite being superordinate in regards to the other forms of evidence we are discussing here, they are also the most methodologically challenging to observe.
As the examples in
Figure 8 show, routines document how inhabitants take possession of the designed space, and they represent life inhabiting the space. Moreover, observing behavior as it actually unfolds allows for the appreciation of the proxemic relationship between the body and designed space (
Hall 1959,
1966), i.e., the relationship the body establishes with the bodies of other individuals and with the environment through mediation of the organization of the surrounding space. Analyzing routines allows us to assess, for example, whether the space is organized according to sociofugal or sociopetal lines (i.e., respectively, inhibiting or promoting relationships); to understand whether the space respects the ergonomic rules of the body or, on the contrary, whether it is the body that adapts to unsuitable or insufficient proxemic proposals. Proxemic relationships only apparently represent a detailed and micro-scale phenomenon: on the contrary, it is the very uses of the body and body–space dynamics that actually hatch the defining conditions of social life, therefore determining it (
de Certeau 1980).
5. Discussion: What Indicators Reveal
From a sociological perspective, socio-environmental indicators are tools that can be used in several research contexts. Firstly, analyzing a possible gap between potential and actual spaces can be useful to learn something related to the specific space where we found the indicator, to intervene on such a gap, or to improve the design of that very same object or, when that is the case, to fine tune a new version of it. Secondly, indicators permit us to gather knowledge that can be an input for future design of other instances of the same typology. Lastly, as we will see, socio-environmental indicators can provide insights that are useful at a higher and more general level, to improve knowledge and sensitivity about the complex relationship between people and space, knowledge that should always play a crucial role in every act of design.
In this section, some examples will illustrate and discuss how indicators can be analyzed and the different kinds of insights they provide in various research frameworks.
5.1. Interpreting Indicators as Circumstantial Evidence
Finding socio-environmental indicators in space sometimes requires a trained eye. This is the case in a specific type of trace, a deformation, found in the Museo Novecento, a museum in Florence dedicated to Italian art of the 20th and 21st centuries. One of its main halls is a long room hosting numerous artworks, representing a central moment in the entire museum visit experience. During the day, the hall receives natural light from a series of large windows located on one side. However, such windows are equipped with large curtains that control the access of natural light but that also prevent the view towards the outside. To a trained eye, it is evident that some of these curtains have lost their original, rectangular shape, due to slight deformations on each of their sides, as shown in
Figure 9. These deformations, all at the same height and slightly more evident on the right side of each curtain, are the effect of a repeated behavior (i.e., a routine) by the museum visitors: shifting the curtain of the last windows of the hall in order to see the external view. It should be clarified, in fact, that the hall overlooks a square with one of the city’s most important churches, Santa Maria Novella, whose facade, by Leon Battista Alberti, is considered one of the finest examples of the Florentine Renaissance. Shifting the curtain is probably a way to view the church from an elevated perspective, an uncommon one compared to the typical view available from the square.
From the indicator, it is unclear whether the installation of the curtains was intended precisely to prevent the view of the exterior or of the church facade, maybe to concentrate visitors’ attention on the displayed artworks; or, instead, the denial of the church view was only an unintended consequence of a device primarily aiming at controlling the lighting of the artworks. Nevertheless, the traces found suggest that there is a discrepancy between how the hall was designed—at least in this specific aspect—and how visitors use it: for whatever reason they were installed, the curtains do not allow a view of the church or of the exteriors that certain visitors are undoubtably searching for. This case demonstrates how a trace is not relevant per se but, rather, as an indicator revealing a possible gap between potential space and actual space. In other words, a trace may be used as a tool to highlight a disparity between how the visit experience of the hall was designed, at least in one of its aspects, and the actual habitation of that place.
It is worth considering what the implications of identifying this disparity might be. This identification could lead, for example, to modifications of the hall’s layout, to include somehow the possibility for visitors to see the church, thus enhancing the museum’s value. Alternatively, if denying the external view was an intentional choice—something that should be confirmed with further investigation, for example, interviewing the design team—then, the device used to achieve that intention (i.e., the curtains), given its failure, should be reconsidered, modified, or replaced with a different device that can achieve that intended goal.
Although this trace seems indicative only of something specific to this case, finding this kind of trace elsewhere provides further insights that are relevant beyond the spatial situation of the Florentine museum. As also shown in
Figure 9, the very same indicator, a deformation generated by the same behavior, was also found in a connecting space—with no artworks displayed—of the Van Gogh Museum, in Amsterdam. In this case, the curtains were not preventing the view of a famous monument, as in Florence, but, rather, just of an open space with houses that, at least on paper, did not express the magnetic potential similar to that of the facade of Santa Maria Novella. Here, observing the same trace could lead to different insights. For example, based on what was observed in Amsterdam, it can be hypothesized that when artworks are exhibited in spaces with no visual relationship with the exterior, visitors have the need to intersperse their visit experience with moments in which they have the opportunity to see open spaces with broader perspectives, allowing them to release the cognitive and aesthetic tension and relax their minds and eyes to continue the visit.
This kind of insight could suggest a site-specific intervention, as in the case of the museum in Florence. However, it could also be useful on a more general level. First, for the design of other museums, i.e., other spaces with the same function. However, it could also give the opportunity to reflect in a broader perspective on habitation beyond museums, in other spatial experiences, and acquire a stronger sensitivity about the relationship between people and designed spaces, and how the connection between interior and exterior spaces is perceived.
5.2. Adaptations as Indicators of Cultural Differences
As is well known, our relationship with space is also mediated by culture (see, e.g.,
Rapoport 2005). In some cases, in fact, spaces, objects, or even pieces of furniture are used differently in different cultures. Of all domestic spaces, the bathroom, with its layout and furnishings, is one of the spaces where cultural differences appear to be stronger. Due to the intimate and private nature of the practices hosted in bathrooms, cultural differences related to such spaces are more resistant to cultural homogenization than in other domestic spaces. For example, it is known that in certain European countries, both bodily functions and hygiene practices are performed in one single space, while in other countries these practices are performed in two separate spaces. These differences persist even when cultural groups are closer and closer, connected, or mixed.
In some cases, certain cultural patterns that are typical to one culture are imported elsewhere with a different meaning. This is the case, for example, for the so-called “Italian-style bathroom”: the series of elements or configurations of toilette furniture are imported in other cultures with a clear distinctive function. In this respect, the case of the bidet is particularly noteworthy. The bidet can be found in every Italian bathroom—by law each home must have at least one—and it is considered by Italians an essential and functional device that is used after using the toilet as part of the intimate hygiene routines. However, when imported in other cultures, this same device is most often adopted as a sign of status, and in many cases it is used in ways that are different from its actual hygiene function. In Albania, for example, a country where for historical and geographical reasons people have always been sensitive to influence from Italy, the bidet is a device that can be found only in affluent homes. The photo of the bidet shown above, in
Figure 6, was taken in a building for high-bourgeois families of the Albanian capital city, Tirana, and illustrates the different meanings given to the bidet in Albania compared to Italy. As was confirmed by a series of interviews with residents of this and other apartments, the bidet was included in the construction phase as one of the devices that could contribute to raising the value of the apartment and attracting affluent buyers who could decode this device as a sign of status. Once this attractive function was fulfilled, the bidet was never used to perform the hygiene practices it is used for in Italy and in other places where it is habitually used with this function. Rather, as the photo shows, it was used in an adaptive manner, realizing in it some affordances that made it suitable for draining wet objects, such as umbrellas, or for washing shoes, which no other space in the house offered. In other words, the adaptation observed in this apartment was an indicator that helped to define the differences in the meaning of an object in two cultures that are not far apart, and that were further analyzed with in-depth interviews.
5.3. Heuristic Value of Socio-Environmental Indicators
This last case demonstrates the potential of socio-environmental indicators as a heuristic tool. The city of Venice is known for its intricate network of narrow streets, known as “calli”, which can be challenging to navigate for those unfamiliar with the city. To aid visitors in finding their way around, typical yellow directional signs are commonly placed at street corners, guiding the large tourist flows visiting the city to the most significant points of interest. In this context, the modifications made to the arrows on the signposts in
Figure 7 become significant socio-environmental indicators that could reveal insights into the complex relationship between the city and tourism.
It is interesting to formulate hypotheses on the intentions behind those who modified the signs and whether this act carries a deeper meaning beyond a mere vandalistic act or a form of street art. One possible hypothesis is that the modification was a prank played by locals on the primary users of the signs, tourists. Secondly, the act may also have a more critical dimension, and could have been carried out by a resident who wanted to address the impact of tourism creating a moment of disorientation for tourists, both geographically and mentally. This gesture could symbolize the need to interrupt those who visit the city quickly and superficially. Alternatively, a resident living along the path originally indicated by the sign may have modified the sign to reduce tourist pressure on their street, given that in such an intricate network of streets, alternative routes are practically equivalent in terms of distance and travel time. Lastly, with an opposite intention, the modification might have been made by a merchant or restaurateur from the street not indicated by the official sign, in order to attract part of the tourist flow to their street, which is otherwise mainly used only by locals.
What matters here is not to determine which hypothesis is most likely but, rather, to emphasize how a simple socio-environmental indicator can help generate a series of hypotheses. Such hypotheses, in a framework of an exploratory phase of a study, could reveal a critical and conflicting scenario that is significant, for example, to design new wayfinding strategies for city users, or to understand the socioeconomic dynamics of the city, or even to propose a new graphic model of wayfinding. Depending on the topic of the research, the hypotheses generated through socio-environmental indicators would need to be further investigated with the triangulation of other research tools such as, for example, behavioral mapping or interviews.
6. Conclusions
It is appropriate to undertake a short methodological evaluation of socio-environmental indicators as a research technique and of the research framework we are proposing. Indeed, as with all other techniques, socio-environmental indicators have limitations that must be understood and managed in order to minimize their effects and maximize the analytical potential of the technique.
We have already highlighted how this technique contributes to addressing the chronic underestimation of observation in social sciences, building on the potential of vision to investigate habitation in space. Specifically, we have demonstrated the heuristic potential and the efficiency of this technique, how it generates useful data in a short amount of time and with less resources than other techniques, and how it permits the immediate definition and testing of contextualized sets of hypotheses on the relationships between people and designed spaces. As we have seen, socio-environmental indicators can be useful at various levels: to improve a specific design case, or to gather knowledge that can be an input for future design of other instances of the same typology or, at a higher level, to improve general knowledge about the relationship between people and space. We have also highlighted how its unobtrusive nature addresses the gap between what people claim to do and what they actually do, thus avoiding social desirability issues that are typical of text-based techniques.
Regarding the scope of the technique, it should be first noted that socio-environmental indicators only allow for a limited recognition of the sense that subjects attribute to the space they live in. For example, such indicators often permit a reconstruction of how subjects directly recognize the affordances they see in the environment they inhabit, enabling an in-depth and often thorough investigation of this specific mode of interaction with space; other aspects—such as, for example, the semantic domain—often require further study using other techniques. A particularly appropriate technique for studying meaning in relation to designed space, for example, is that of semantic maps. With this technique, which derives from anthropology and, in particular, from the school of semantic ethnography (
Spradley and McCurdy 1972;
Denzin 1998;
Cranz 2016), it is possible to investigate the domain of meaning associated with designed forms, and especially their mutual relations, as they are related to specific populations, communities, cultures, or subcultures. As we have seen in some of the examples discussed above, socio-environmental indicators, and specifically signs, still allow for the definition of hypotheses also related to the semantic and cultural domain of habitation. However, it is undoubtable that this technique is particularly effective to study those domains of the relationship with space that are less mediated by cognition, such as those related to affordances.
A further limitation of socio-environmental indicators is in their possible indetermination. A socio-environmental indicator is indeterminate when the analysis of the indicator itself does not allow us to reconstruct the process that led to its existence. In some cases, for example, it is impossible to know the role of intentionality in the origin of an indicator. In other words, it is not possible to say whether an indicator is a trace—unintentional by definition—or an alteration, i.e., the product of an intentional effort of self-design of space. As such, there are cases in which it is impossible for the researcher to grasp the link between intention, behavior, or the meaning itself of an indicator. On occasion, it is hard to advance even a single conjectural hypothesis, while in others multiple hypotheses are equally plausible. In such cases, the researcher is forced to acknowledge the impossibility of using the evidence by itself, and she can only rely on other evidence produced, for example, by the analysis of its context, of other adjacent or related indicators, or by triangulation with data produced with different techniques. This was the case, for example, in the modification of the Venetian signposts reproduced in the photo in
Figure 7 and discussed above. However, as that case showed, this limit of socio-environmental indicators also forces the researcher to conduct a further investigation, which often produces a deeper understanding of the relationship between people and space.
Finally, it should be highlighted that most designed spaces offer a certain degree of resistance to socio-environmental cues. Most designed spaces and objects, in fact, are designed to maintain their integrity through time, often opposing the manifestation of socio-environmental indicators: this is often pursued through the resistance of the materials they are made of. However, from the perspective of inhabited design, it is relevant that once such resistance is overcome, it rapidly tends to degenerate, allowing for an increase in indicators. In other words, resistance to socio-environmental indicators is marginally decreasing, in the sense that a space that accommodates or allows for the emergence and consolidation of an indicator progressively becomes a catalyst for the repetition of the practice that produced such an indicator, in a self-feeding increasing cycle. For example, as seen in
Figure 4, once an erosion in a lawn or flowerbed—produced by the shortcut taken by few people—starts to become visible, more and more people will use that shortcut. This, in turn, will make the trace of the shortcut more and more visible, consequently attracting more people. Thus, the researcher must carefully evaluate the frequency and intensity of indicators found in a space on a case-by-case basis. He must be aware that such tenor is not only a function of the time since the production and habitation of the designed space, of its usage degree, and, when applicable, of its maintenance but also of this self-feeding increasing nature of socio-environmental indicators. As such, the English proverb “litter begets litter” encapsulates this nature of many socio-environmental indicators, and specifically of those we defined as residues.
Even with these limitations, we believe that the observation of socio-environmental indicators can be useful in different research frameworks, before or after design phases and at different levels of scale. For example, it can be used as an exploratory research tool to investigate users’ needs in the context of product or service design; or to research the relationship between people and a public space which is to be redesigned. Socio-environmental indicators can also be used productively within the framework of Post-Occupancy Evaluations (
Li et al. 2018;
Costa and Chiesi 2023).
In conclusion, we would like to return to analyzing the relationship between designed space vs. inhabited space through observation and design evaluation. By observing behaviors and their effects in designed space, we may come to an understanding of design as a dialogic practice, where the designer and inhabitant participate in a conversation modulated by mutual respect and attention. In this regard, the linguistic metaphor of a “conversation” can be taken further, and the distinction between proposition and enunciation introduced by
Bachtin (
1988, p. 253) within the field of literary criticism is useful in comprehending design as a discursive practice in which the designer does not affirm a proposition but rather issues an enunciation. Unlike a proposition, which is self-referentially closed and complete in itself, an enunciation is incomplete—in that it always implicitly contains a question waiting for an answer. Within itself, an enunciation always contains two subjects—the so-called dialogical minimum—as it is capable of assuming that the minimum unit necessary to make sense of the communication is made up of “the I in relation to You” (ibid.). In a proposition, on the contrary, it is “the I without the You” which is self-referentially complete in itself (ibid.). In this sense, the difference between design as dialogue through an enunciation and design as self-affirmation through a proposition lies in the fact that the former finds its specific completeness in the alternation of the subjects of the discussion, the possibility of responding, and of assuming a responsive position with respect to the other. In this view, design only makes sense when it looks for the dialogical minimum with the inhabitant.