The Human Environment is introduced as the field in which urban conditions take form. Spatial, social, infrastructural, and institutional dimensions are often developed through separate frameworks, producing only partial alignment within the city. It defines the relation between human existence and spatial systems as a structured and relational condition. Within this frame, urban design operates through spatial articulation, structuring relations between actors, spaces, and institutions, and translating questions of governance, accessibility, and transformation into concrete, situated configurations. The work is part of the Research Notebook Series, an evolving body of research in architecture and urban design. The 02 series develops through a process of conceptual deconstruction of the author’s doctoral research, reorganising its material into a set of interrelated notebooks. The content remains grounded in the original work, while subsequent series extend and reformulate selected trajectories. It establishes the Human Environment as an operative field and sets the ground for the sequence that follows, where human, environment, and their modes of interaction are examined as distinct yet interdependent dimensions.
Deborah Navarra (Sat,) studied this question.