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The Roofless Truth

Planning and Architecture for Homelessness

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How should public space be designed to offer protection, dignity, and opportunities for homeless people, and to facilitate encounters and interaction? A comprehensive survey of homelessness, urban planning, and architecture.

English edition
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Title Details
Edited by Matthias Drilling, Fabian Neuhaus
Expected release date 04.2026
Paperback
432 pages, 172 color and 19 b/w illustrations
20.5 x 29 cm
ISBN 978-3-03860-475-4
Product safety
Responsible person according to EU Regulation 2023/988 (GPSR):

GVA Gemeinsame Verlagsauslieferung Göttingen
GmbH & Co. KG
P.O. Box 2021
37010 Göttingen
Germany
+49 551 384 200 0
info@gva-verlage.de
Safety notice according to Art. 9 Paragraph 7 Sentence 2 of the GPSR is unnecessary

Homelessness is one of the most pressing social challenges of our time, and is closely linked to issues of urban design and architecture. Homeless people are part of urban society and depend on accessible public spaces and urban infrastructure. Yet, in cities around the world, local governments use policies and urban planning to ward off street people, aiming at making them invisible in the cityscape and deliberately impeding certain forms of stay. Urban design always reflects power structures—it can exclude or open up avenues for participation.

The Roofless Truth brings together contributions by international researchers and practitioners from the fields of architecture, urban development and design, sociology, ethnology, social work, and education. It offers academic analyses and essays, field reports, and student proposals for interventions in public space, and features award-winning projects and initiatives in Canada, Germany, Iran, Switzerland, and the US.

The book highlights how public spaces should be designed to offer protection, dignity, and opportunities for homeless people, and to facilitate encounters and interaction. The featured examples impressively demonstrate that even the smallest spatial decision can determine inclusion or exclusion. The Roofless Truth paints a multifaceted picture of planning and design as a social practice beyond representation and prestige.

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