Touristic Connections and Reflections in Platanias, Crete. Re-weaving the Urban Fabric through Play

Touristic Connections and Reflections in Platanias, Crete. Re-weaving the Urban Fabric through Play

DIPLOMA THESIS ON LANDSCAPE

TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF CRETE

The project explores the emergence of an urban incubator by establishing unexpected connections between play and suburban fragments, altering the spatial character of mass tourism in Crete.        

Platanias, a coastal region in Crete, features a linear landscape dominated by hotels, shops, and restaurants. The investigation reveals two contrasting residential areas: an initial hilltop acropolis and a modern extension along the coastline. These areas are oriented towards the main arteries of the Road and the Beach. The dominance of mass tourism in Northern Crete relies on the region's diverse identities and options. Visitors can find familiar experiences at American diners, sushi places, or Scandinavian bars. However, they remain tourists seeking consumption and entertainment.

To address this, the project introduces play and playfulness as tools to understand, analyze, and partially reconstruct the theme park-like environment. French sociologist Roger Caillois examines four types of play - competition, chance, simulation, and vertigo - showcasing how playfulness can bypass dominant narratives and redefine the relationship between possibility and limit. Just as behaviors and meanings in cities are in constant flux, design processes can embrace non-functional, fleeting, and uncertain elements.

Through unexpected correlations between play and suburban fragments, a new intermittent spatial mechanism emerges, reinterpreting the existing site conditions. Critical points and paths are redefined, and structural elements and landscapes frame a playful design that organizes or dialectically reverses symptomatic aspects.

 

SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Teachers
Academic year
2021/2022
City
CHANIA, ISLAND OF CRETE
Country
Greece