RUMBI:
---
WILL:
To inform us objectively of the campus and integrate a diverse selection of memories, tours of the Clifton Campus have been undertaken from many different perspectives. An uninformed tour where we simply explored the campus and a tour from one of the staff at the campus, Christopher Terrell Nield who gave us a viewpoint from the ecological and historical perspective.
Interviews were undertaken today with current users of the campus to see how they use it and what memories and experiences they have. Questions like - which parts of the campus do you use and why, what parts of the campus are important to you, what memories and feelings do those places evoke, were put to the interviewees. More people have to be interviewed so that as diverse a range of places as possible are obtained.
Photographic panoramas will be obtained at these places and Rumbi's impressions of the campus, taking into account the experiences and memories people talked about, will be integrated. From this first day of interviews, many people talked about places in the Erasmus Darwin Building that they say resonated with them. Thus, a panorama will be taken near the atom sculpture. Moreover, a particular memory of the campus that Christopher Terrell Nield talked about was the conflict between conservation and redevelopment. In past times, the southwestern corner of the campus was occupied by woodland and has now been removed to make way for a sports pitch. Not far away from the campus is Clifton Village where there is similar conflict from the local residents and the campus because of noise. This corner of the campus has thus been called the Conflict or Contested Zone because of its synonymy with conflict.
---
WILL:
To inform us objectively of the campus and integrate a diverse selection of memories, tours of the Clifton Campus have been undertaken from many different perspectives. An uninformed tour where we simply explored the campus and a tour from one of the staff at the campus, Christopher Terrell Nield who gave us a viewpoint from the ecological and historical perspective.
Interviews were undertaken today with current users of the campus to see how they use it and what memories and experiences they have. Questions like - which parts of the campus do you use and why, what parts of the campus are important to you, what memories and feelings do those places evoke, were put to the interviewees. More people have to be interviewed so that as diverse a range of places as possible are obtained.
Photographic panoramas will be obtained at these places and Rumbi's impressions of the campus, taking into account the experiences and memories people talked about, will be integrated. From this first day of interviews, many people talked about places in the Erasmus Darwin Building that they say resonated with them. Thus, a panorama will be taken near the atom sculpture. Moreover, a particular memory of the campus that Christopher Terrell Nield talked about was the conflict between conservation and redevelopment. In past times, the southwestern corner of the campus was occupied by woodland and has now been removed to make way for a sports pitch. Not far away from the campus is Clifton Village where there is similar conflict from the local residents and the campus because of noise. This corner of the campus has thus been called the Conflict or Contested Zone because of its synonymy with conflict.