ORCID

Abstract

The area around Union Street in Plymouth, UK, has been facing processes of decline. Key historical buildings sit empty, with deteriorating fabrics, epitomizing the socio-economic condition of the neighborhood. This paper explores perceptions of ‘inclusion’ in Union Street, and visions to improve it, through interviews with key stakeholders from community groups, the local authority, local businesses, landlords, local health organizations, visitors and designers. Whilst some local actors amplify inclusive processes - for example in the low-cost re-use of spaces to host micro, alternative businesses or community initiatives – these efforts clash with a general perception of a depleted and unsafe environment, with few evident ‘signals’ manifesting what is available beyond certain thresholds.The discussion identifies the dimensions playing a key role toward perceptions of inclusion in the place, that could be addressed in a strategic effort to enhance it. It highlights how locales that are strongly supporting inclusion can be perceived as exclusive by lacking an ability to ‘signal’ this in the public realm. It explores the physical dimension of “signals” in the neighborhood, and the importance of fostering underlying processes of participation, governance, spatial agency and local appropriation involved in the successful production and sharing of signals of inclusion.

Publication Date

2025-12-02

Publication Title

Designing Signals of Inclusion: A Framework for Fostering Shared Neighborhoods

Publisher

Routledge

ISBN

9781003683841

Acceptance Date

2025-12-02

Deposit Date

2025-12-18

Share

COinS