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Do-It-Yourself Street Views and the Urban Imaginary of Google Street View

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  • Jonathan Cinnamon
  • Alfie Gaffney

Abstract

Google Street View (GSV) is the de facto platform for street-level visual representation in most settings; however, its coverage is highly uneven due to a range of political, legal, technological, and economic factors. GSV’s spatiotemporal disparities are most evident within cities, and this advances a distorted urban imaginary of absences, fragments, and obsolescences. This paper traces key developments in 360° imaging poised to expand the production and consumption of street-level imagery, including new actors, platforms, technologies, and data production approaches. Then, engaging with consumer-grade imaging technologies and the notion of do-it-yourself urbanism, this paper develops a DIY street view approach as one new mode of producing street-level imagery. Drawing on the findings of a pilot study, the paper considers key practical issues for street-view production, the benefits and risks of DIY approaches in relation to corporate and crowdsourced imagery initiatives, and the politics of urban representation in 360°. Findings suggest that the DIY approach offers the potential for a more “careful curation” of space in 360° street-level representations; however, there are considerations specific to this “third way” that require further attention.

Suggested Citation

  • Jonathan Cinnamon & Alfie Gaffney, 2022. "Do-It-Yourself Street Views and the Urban Imaginary of Google Street View," Journal of Urban Technology, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 29(3), pages 95-116, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:cjutxx:v:29:y:2022:i:3:p:95-116
    DOI: 10.1080/10630732.2021.1910467
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