UD Co-Spaces User Study
We conducted a user study of UD Co-Spaces, comparing it to a similar paper-based workspace. In the exercise, groups of 4 to 5 participants collaboratively designed a walkable neighbourhood centre, while we observed.
We conducted a user study of UD Co-Spaces, comparing it to a similar paper-based workspace. In the exercise, groups of 4 to 5 participants collaboratively designed a walkable neighbourhood centre, while we observed.
Research Team
Narges Mahyar
Kellogg Booth
Cynthia Girling
Kelly Burke
Alix Krahn
Xiang (Ernest) Jialing
Siyi (Cathy) Ming
UD Co-Spaces, a multi-display touch table system engages the public in charrette-style urban design exercises, in comparison to a traditional paper-based workspace. University students from various disciplines served as surrogates for the public in collaboratively designing a walkable neighbourhood centre within an existing suburban neighbourhood.
Pre- and post-surveys, group debriefing interviews, and video-taping provided detailed data about group processes, interactions and experiences. Findings indicate that both workspaces were easy to use, engaging, and enabled collaboration, high-level discourse, and both self- and peer-learning. The digital system provided deeper information with bricher visualizations to enable a different collaborative process.
Except where otherwise noted, the original work by Cynthia Girling and Ronald Kellett presented on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
elementslab is an applied urban design and environment research group in the School of Architecture + Landscape Architecture and the Centre for Interactive Research in Sustainability at the University of British Columbia.