wow, wish I had read that by foucault earlier. I did my writing sample for school applications on something very similar.
At the Great Exhibition of 1851, Amongst the silks and jewels and all manner of outlandish machinery, there were also some exhibits of a more philanthropic nature. At the time, London was super overcrowded, something like half a million people came to London in the ten years before the exhibition, about half of whom were working class and had to get by in crowded slums with overflowing sewage and a prevalence for diseases like cholera. Anyway, there were some people who tried to fix the problem (mostly by tearing down the slums and building developments with much less capacity, therefore not doing anything at all. or by cleaning out the sewage). One of the organisations was called "The Society for Improving the Conditions of the Labouring Classes" annoyingly long, believe me. Their strategy was to build 'model houses' and rent them out at a relatively low cost. These houses were constructed to a much higher standard than most of the speculative builders cared to try. They also used more advanced tech like hollow bricks (supposed to be cheaper and provide ventilation) and indoor toilets (yay!). The basic idea was to provide a model for how labouring class dwellings should be constructed and funded and also 'model' how the labouring class should live and behave. Anyway, because Prince Albert was sponsoring them, he gave them permission to build a nice model dwelling at the Exhibition of 1851 to convince people how nice the houses were and people should invest in building more of them.
They looked like this:
plan
anyway the part where it gets to what foucault is talking about. The guy who designed it, Henry Roberts, clearly wanted to control basically every aspect of the occupants lives while they were in the dwelling. Victorians were wary of helping out the poor because they were worried they would become dependent on the system (sound familiar?) so they mostly wanted to 'encourage' the poor to improve their lot by just working harder and not being such drunks all the time and committing incest and being generally filthy. Because that's the reason everyone had such shit lives. The model dwelling had glazed brick walls so that everything could be hosed down easily, the Kitchen was set up in a way that it could only be used in one way, there were three bedrooms to separate children of different sexes. Basically, the house defined all the spaces inside the dwelling and forced the occupants to use it in a specific way.
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That's basically what I was trying to express before but it got all muddled up.
Now I'm more interested in doing a phenomenological and navigational analysis of a space and combining it with mapping techniques, hopefully using software, to track how people move in a place and to see how the environment and the restrictions of the surrounding architecture affect movement and perception of space. Like how the program restricts pathways or how people fight against the program. or if its an open plan, how to people end up moving. Both as a general trend and also how their perception of the space will change (see subway example above). Or in HK, a large amount of pedestrian traffic takes place in elevated walkways, which allow pedestrians to understand the broader urban plan and also invokes a sense of layered movement and energy. I mean as youre walking you can perceive the flow of cars/buses and the flow of people crossing over each other. and of course when youre walking and there are a series of barriers you move around them and part of the program dissapears from your perception because you aren't using it anymore.
It's really hard to talk about and much easier to diagram and document so that's what I'm working on now.