
PROVISION OF A SUSTAINABLE PUBLIC SPACE: LEBIH COASTAL AREA IN THE AFTERMATH OF RAMPANT ABRASIONS
Author(s) -
Gusti Ayu Made Suartika,
Ni Putu Diah Agustin Permanasuri,
Kadek Edi Saputra
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
iop conference series. earth and environmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1755-1307
pISSN - 1755-1315
DOI - 10.1088/1755-1315/396/1/012029
Subject(s) - democracy , space (punctuation) , quality (philosophy) , public space , sustainable development , function (biology) , dimension (graph theory) , environmental planning , geography , environmental resource management , political science , environmental science , politics , computer science , engineering , architectural engineering , mathematics , law , evolutionary biology , pure mathematics , biology , operating system , philosophy , epistemology
The study aims to examine sustainable uses of public spaces of Lebih’s coastal line, in the aftermath of uncontrolled abrasion. It implements a qualitative research approach. Data was collected through a series of field observations, historical studies, and unstructured interviews. This study relates functions with spatial quality. While function is analysed based on social, economic and environmental roles accommodated by a public space, quality is assessed in terms of three conditions that a public space is expected to have, which are being responsive, democratic, and meaningful. Discussion over these two issues is based on the examination of both physical and non-physical attributes. The physical attribute is discussed in terms of spatial design and supporting facilities available to support the functions of Lebih as a public space, and the non-physical attribute is examined based on the capacity to be a responsive, democratic, and meaningful space to the public who uses it. This study alarmingly shows that abrasion has eroded Lebih coastal area to a level of 3.2% per year, which is equal to a 4m reduction annually. This condition directly influences the quality of Lebih Coast and consequently its capacity to accommodate the three inherent functions. The first two functions, to certain extents, remain well served, but the last one is feared to disappear along with the erosion of Lebih cost by continuous abrasion. This fear is especially underlined by the role of this coast as a buffer to protect the adjacent mainland and its associated ecosystem.