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  1. 28 de ene. de 2019 · Kevin Lynch’s The Image of the City (1960) identified five physical elements—path, edge, district, node, and landmark—that are the building blocks of place. Both the physical and sociocultural func...

  2. Lynch's five elements of city imageability (paths, nodes, edges, districts, and landmarks) provide the underlying structure for organizing visual representations of the community. The visual images include GIS maps, virtual reality, linear and nodal movies, and still and animated photographs.

  3. Kevin Lynch a été parmi les premiers auteurs à s’intéresser à la perception de l’espace urbain et demeure une référence en la matière. Dans « L’image de la cité », il examine la qualité visuelle de la ville américaine, et notamment des cas de Boston, de Los Angeles et de Jersey City, en étudiant la représentation mentale de la ville chez ses habitants.

  4. www.miguelangelmartinez.net › IMG › pdfImage of the City

    Kevin Lynch has come up with a readable, tautly organized, authoritative volume that may prove as important to city building as Camillo Sitte's The Art of Building Cities." — Architectural Forum "City planners and urban designers everywhere will be taking account of his work for years to come . . . The importance of this book in the

  5. Lynch's five elements of city imageability (paths, nodes, edges, districts, and landmarks) provide the underlying structure for organizing visual representations of the community. The visual images include GIS maps, virtual reality, linear and nodal movies, and still and animated photographs.

  6. 5.9.1 Organizin g Lynch 's five elements on separate transparent la yers. In the project web site described above, images and movies of all the five elements. were put on the same map.

  7. The American urban planner Kevin Lynch (1918 - 1984) was one of the most significant contributors to 20th century advances in city planning and city design. Having studied at Yale University, and Taliesin under Frank Lloyd Wright, Lynch received a Bachelor's degree in City Planning from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) where in 1948 he began lecturing and went on to become a ...