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  1. The term sense of place is used to describe how someone perceives and experiences a place or environment. Anthropologists Steven Feld and Keith Basso define sense of place as: 'the experiential and expressive ways places are known, imagined, yearned for, held, remembered, voiced, lived, contested and struggled over […]’.

  2. Sense of place refers to the emotive bonds and attachments people develop or experience in particular locations and environments, at scales ranging from the home to the nation. Sense of place is also used to describe the distinctiveness or unique character of particular localities and regions.

  3. Sense of place is the capacity to recognize and respond to diverse identities of places. A place affects us directly through sight, smell, sound, and touch and sense of place is the synthetic faculty that combines these impressions with memory, imagination, and reason.

  4. Nov 2, 2001 · This study investigates the sense of place (SoP) as a function of spatial characteristics of Buffalo, New York's Elmwood Village, an award-winning American neighbourhood for its...

  5. A place is a point or area on Earth. It becomes subjective and relational when we develop feelings toward it. For instance, places can feel familiar, foreign, friendly, or hostile, depending on how we experience a place. Those feelings towards a place are otherwise referred to as a sense of place.

  6. Jun 29, 2024 · Overview. sense of place. Quick Reference. Either the intrinsic character of a place, or the meaning people give to it, but, more often, a mixture of both.

  7. Definition. Sense of place is: “A virtual immersion that depends on lived experience and a topographical intimacy” (Lippard, 1997, p. 33). The local “structure of feeling,” of subjective territorial identity (Agnew, 1987 ).