Aquatic Urbanisms: Water as Planning and Territorial Instrument Considering The 9 Dash Line Policy

The notion of territoriality, territory and terrain are all derivatives of ‘terra’ or ‘earth.’ As discourse, ‘territory’ has remained largely land centred for its terminologies, means of representation or in its application within urbanization. Water, conversely, is often considered as a resource or...

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Main Authors: Gerhard Bruyns, Peter Hasdell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MASTER PRO Ingegneri Associati 2017-12-01
Series:UPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.serena.unina.it/index.php/upland/article/view/5420
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spelling doaj-cdd4ca6cc70e471b871cc2c2325dd3d52021-01-26T08:31:29ZengMASTER PRO Ingegneri AssociatiUPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design2531-99062017-12-012327328410.6092/2531-9906/54205420Aquatic Urbanisms: Water as Planning and Territorial Instrument Considering The 9 Dash Line PolicyGerhard Bruyns0Peter Hasdell1Environmental Design Unit, School of Design, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong KongEnvironmental Design Unit, School of Design, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong KongThe notion of territoriality, territory and terrain are all derivatives of ‘terra’ or ‘earth.’ As discourse, ‘territory’ has remained largely land centred for its terminologies, means of representation or in its application within urbanization. Water, conversely, is often considered as a resource or as a specific morphological characteristic but rarely as a key object of discourse. China’s claim within the South China Sea and the subsequent creation of newly formed ‘island outposts’, has brought to light the political welding that water holds, as both territorial claim and negotiating instrument. Particularly significant in the context of increasing pressures on development in this urban age. This paper examines how the substitution of ‘terra derived’ concepts with that of ‘hydro’ driven concepts, impact the domains of territoriality in planning and urbanism. Focus is placed on speculative projections of design work that highlights one possible method of reconfiguring the territoriality of the South China Sea. Consequentially this work questions the assumptions and spatial ideologies in the ‘nine-dash line’ policy.http://www.serena.unina.it/index.php/upland/article/view/5420Speculative TerritoryAquaticUrbanismsSouth China SeasEnvironmental Design
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gerhard Bruyns
Peter Hasdell
spellingShingle Gerhard Bruyns
Peter Hasdell
Aquatic Urbanisms: Water as Planning and Territorial Instrument Considering The 9 Dash Line Policy
UPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design
Speculative Territory
Aquatic
Urbanisms
South China Seas
Environmental Design
author_facet Gerhard Bruyns
Peter Hasdell
author_sort Gerhard Bruyns
title Aquatic Urbanisms: Water as Planning and Territorial Instrument Considering The 9 Dash Line Policy
title_short Aquatic Urbanisms: Water as Planning and Territorial Instrument Considering The 9 Dash Line Policy
title_full Aquatic Urbanisms: Water as Planning and Territorial Instrument Considering The 9 Dash Line Policy
title_fullStr Aquatic Urbanisms: Water as Planning and Territorial Instrument Considering The 9 Dash Line Policy
title_full_unstemmed Aquatic Urbanisms: Water as Planning and Territorial Instrument Considering The 9 Dash Line Policy
title_sort aquatic urbanisms: water as planning and territorial instrument considering the 9 dash line policy
publisher MASTER PRO Ingegneri Associati
series UPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design
issn 2531-9906
publishDate 2017-12-01
description The notion of territoriality, territory and terrain are all derivatives of ‘terra’ or ‘earth.’ As discourse, ‘territory’ has remained largely land centred for its terminologies, means of representation or in its application within urbanization. Water, conversely, is often considered as a resource or as a specific morphological characteristic but rarely as a key object of discourse. China’s claim within the South China Sea and the subsequent creation of newly formed ‘island outposts’, has brought to light the political welding that water holds, as both territorial claim and negotiating instrument. Particularly significant in the context of increasing pressures on development in this urban age. This paper examines how the substitution of ‘terra derived’ concepts with that of ‘hydro’ driven concepts, impact the domains of territoriality in planning and urbanism. Focus is placed on speculative projections of design work that highlights one possible method of reconfiguring the territoriality of the South China Sea. Consequentially this work questions the assumptions and spatial ideologies in the ‘nine-dash line’ policy.
topic Speculative Territory
Aquatic
Urbanisms
South China Seas
Environmental Design
url http://www.serena.unina.it/index.php/upland/article/view/5420
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