Compară metode
Examinează metodele selectate una lângă alta; rândurile care diferă sunt evidențiate.
| Charrette Method× | Visual Preference Survey× | |
|---|---|---|
| Domeniu | Urban Studies | Urban Studies |
| Familie | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Anul apariției≠ | 2006 | 1994 |
| Autorul original≠ | National Charrette Institute (Bill Lennertz & Aarin Lutzenhiser) | Anton C. Nelessen |
| Tip≠ | Time-compressed, multi-day collaborative design and planning workshop | Survey eliciting community design preferences by rating images |
| Sursa seminală≠ | Lennertz, B., & Lutzenhiser, A. (2006). The Charrette Handbook: The Essential Guide for Accelerated, Collaborative Community Planning. American Planning Association. ISBN: 9781932364217 | Nelessen, A. C. (1994). Visions for a New American Dream: Process, Principles, and an Ordinance to Plan and Design Small Communities. American Planning Association. ISBN: 9780918286888 |
| Denumiri alternative | Design Charrette, NCI Charrette, Dynamic Planning Charrette, Collaborative Design Workshop | VPS, Visual Preference Analysis, Image Preference Survey, Nelessen Visual Preference Survey |
| Înrudite | 4 | 4 |
| Rezumat≠ | A charrette is an intensive, time-compressed collaborative workshop in which designers, planners, officials, and the public work together over several days to produce a feasible plan or design for a place. Codified by the National Charrette Institute in The Charrette Handbook, the method replaces the slow, adversarial sequence of separate meetings with short, repeated feedback loops in which designs are drawn, shown to stakeholders, critiqued, and immediately revised. Its purpose is to compress months of back-and-forth into a few days and to build shared ownership of the outcome. | A visual preference survey (VPS) elicits a community's design preferences by asking residents to rate a curated set of photographs — of streets, buildings, public spaces, and landscapes — on a simple numeric scale. Developed and popularized by planner Anton Nelessen, it turns the often vague question of what a community wants its environment to look like into comparable scores, revealing which images people reward, which they reject, and where they agree or disagree. The averaged ratings give planners a defensible visual brief grounded in resident preference rather than professional taste. |
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