Behavioral Mapping
Behavioral mapping is the systematic, time-sampled observation of how people actually occupy and move through a public space, recorded directly onto a plan of the site. Developed in the urban context by William H. Whyte's filmed studies of New York plazas and formalized into a public-life methodology by Jan Gehl, it produces an empirical picture of where people sit, stand, walk, and gather, rather than where designers assumed they would. The two core modes — place-centered mapping of who is doing what at fixed moments, and individual-centered tracking of how single people move — together turn the invisible life of a space into mappable data.
Kilderegister
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- Whyte, W. H. (1980). The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces. Conservation Foundation. · ISBN 9780891640578
- Gehl, J., & Svarre, B. (2013). How to Study Public Life. Island Press. · ISBN 9781610914239
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