Available Formats
She City: Designing Out Womens Inequity in Cities
By (Author) Nicole Kalms
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
7th March 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Gender studies: women and girls
Urban and municipal planning and policy
305.42
Paperback
312
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Combining practical design strategies with urban theory, She City explores how gender inequity is materialized in cities worldwide, providing an activist toolkit for architects and urban designers to challenge gender bias, sexual harassment, and violence against women through their designs. Part I provides a contemporary survey of the current state of gender inequity in cities, revealing how ones gender impacts mobility, safety, and the ability to occupy public space. Focussing on the intersectional experiences of women and girls in the urban domain, this eye-opening theoretical groundwork exposes the impact of gender stereotypes and systemic power dynamics as they intersect with the architectural and urban fabric. Part II moves from theory to practice, examining a range of contemporary case studies from positioning benches in public spaces to large-scale projects ensuring safety for sex workers to show how better urban design can positively challenge gender inequity. Case studies are global including New York, New Orleans, London, Zurich, Delhi, Cairo, Tokyo, and Bangkok and range from collaborative co-designs with local women and girls, through to cutting-edge urban designs which actively contribute to womens access, security, and empowerment in the city. Case studies are critiqued and evaluated, to show what works and why, and to provide innovative and thought-provoking ideas for the designer wishing to make a positive impact.
Nicole Kalms is Associate Professor in the Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture at Monash University in Australia, and founding Director of the Monash University XYX Lab a research laboratory committed to understanding the ways that gender contributes to shaping behaviour in cities.