| 摘要: |
| 在新时期城市更新的战略背景下,基础设施改造升级面临着技术封闭、空间割裂和社会区隔等多重矛盾。以社会学“场域理论”为理论支点,融汇“基
础设施都市主义”的跨学科视角,提出“场域基础设施”理论,为城市基础设施复合化转型提供系统性指导。以“同构-互构-重构”3层递进逻辑构建理论框架:
1)“空间-社会”的拓扑关系同构;2)“物质-社会-象征”的三元空间互构;3)“场域基础设施”的多域维度重构。理论框架由相互作用和映射的“物质-社会象征”场域,以及“7+X”多域维度构成。后者作为动态变量,包括安全、政策、经济、生态、文化、技术和社会7个基本维度与作为变量的X维度。通过探索理
论结合实际需求的“多域”关系重构及其作用机制,倡导以“场域基础设施”为导向的建成环境再生的范式创新。 |
| 关键词: 风景园林 城市更新 城市基础设施复合 场域理论 基础设施都市主义 |
| DOI:10.19775/j.cla.2025.09.0053 |
| 投稿时间:2025-06-09修订日期:2025-07-18 |
| 基金项目:国家自然科学基金(52378035);国家建设高水平大学公派联合培养博士研究生项目(202306260264) |
|
| Constructing the Theoretical Framework of "Field Infrastructure" |
| WU You,ZHANG Ming* |
| Abstract: |
| Within the strategic agenda of contemporary urban regeneration,
infrastructure retrofitting and upgrading must confront intertwined challenges
of technological enclosure, spatial fragmentation, and social segregation.
Grounded in Bourdieu’s field theory and enriched by the interdisciplinary lens
of infrastructural urbanism, this study advances a "Field Infrastructure" theory
to systematically guide the composite transformation of urban infrastructure.
The proposed framework unfolds through a three-stage logic - isomorphism,
interconstruction, and reconstruction - 1) revealing the spatial-social topological
isomorphism, 2) explicating the dynamic interconstruction among material,
social, and symbolic spaces, and 3) reconstructing the "7+X" multifield
dimensions of field infrastructure. It consists of mutually mapped material, social,
and symbolic fields, together with a dynamic "7+X" schema that integrates seven
fundamental dimensions - security, policy, economy, ecology, culture, technology, and
society - with an open X dimension reserved for emerging variables. By exploring
the mechanisms through which these multifield relationships can be reconfigured
to meet practical needs, the framework advocates a field-infrastructure-oriented
paradigm for regenerating the built environment and advancing integrated
urban-infrastructure transformation. Toward an integrated transformation of
urban infrastructure, paradigm innovation can be summarized in five key shifts.
First, a change in cognitive perspective: this study regards infrastructure as a
phased outcome of the contest among capitals and actors within specific fields.
Second, an expansion of analytical dimensions: by moving beyond singlefactor
metrics and introducing a "7+X" multi-domain framework, resources can
be flexibly allocated to meet diverse development demands in different field
scenarios. Third, an upgrade of the driving logic: the "topology-game" model
explains how various capitals and actors interact within infrastructure, elevating
static construction to dynamic governance. Fourth, the fusion of design
domains: cross-disciplinary strategies address urban development issues,
with landscape architects - through cross-scale integration - playing a pivotal
coordinating role. Fifth, an enhanced value orientation: guided by the principles
of the "People-Centered City" and "Beautiful China", the framework advocates
public interest and ecological priority. "Field Infrastructure" serves both as a
theoretical framework and practical paradigm for analyzing and reconstructing
the dynamic relationship between urban space and the social environment,
and as a tangible object in landscape design practice. Theoretically, it enables
analysis of how capitals and power relations - under dynamic variables - jointly
shape the material urban space, providing a dynamic strategic framework for
compound infrastructure transformation. Practically, "Field Infrastructure" is a
composite spatial carrier that organically integrates physical urban infrastructure
with landscape public space. By interweaving infrastructure and public space,
it transcends the single-function technical rationality, offering a comprehensive
planning paradigm and action program for contemporary cities. |
| Key words: landscape architecture urban regeneration transformation of
integrated urban infrastructure field theory infrastructural urbanism |