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Pieter De Kock

Researcher (Built environment and design)

University of Hertfordshire

Pieter is researching visual sustainability at the University of Hertfordshire. Recent work includes ‘The Meaning in Seeing: Visual Sustainability in the Built Environment’ presented at the 2019 AMPS Conference, Stevens Institute of Technology, New York. He is an Australian registered architect (ARBV 15737) with a master’s in urban design from the University of Westminster UK, an Australian diploma in graphic design, and Project Management Professional qualification (PMP 1353803).

Publications

  • Visual creases in urban topology: high streets as visual markers of our social
  • The meaning in seeing: visual sustainability in the built environment
  • The urban boogie: a heuristic dance to transcend alienation in High Streets
  • Standing Out in a Crowd: Big Data to Produce New Forms of Publicness
  • Buildings, faces, songs of alienation: how interiority transforms the meaning out there.
  • The burden of visual transaction
  • SECOND CHANCE OR COMMUNITY CHEST? SPATIAL MONOPOLY IN AN URBAN OF UNCERTAINTY VS RISK
  • Data, Data Everywhere, Not a Lot in Sync
  • Modern-day sustainability: managing the parts or looking beyond to the meaning?
  • Reifying luxury, gold to golden: How the showroom became a digital showreel, from object (gold) to experience (golden) – experiencing luxury by abstracting the object
  • Disrupting the urban: forcefields to reconstruct our social
  • SDG18 Visual Sustainability: dream or reality?
  • Visually dissecting sustainability (updated)
  • Not until strangers become locals: physical and digitally savvy markers of high streets
  • The importance of visual sustainability in urban design strategy
  • Visual Sustainability Manifesto
  • Joyful vs joyless expenditure: relevance, real estate, & the voice of urban data.
  • Trees don't shout
  • Trojans of ambiguity vs resilient regeneration: visual meaning in cities
  • Unifying Object With Experience: Heritage in a Temporal Setting
  • Architecture: Hurtling Towards an Irrelevant Conclusion; or Skilfully Shifting the Paradigm ?

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