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Place-Healing and the Role of Adaptation

How to manage disruptive daily news that impacts our sense of well-being, highlights social disparity, or recalls the fragile balance between health and economy? As forms of therapy, how do we adapt to the unaccustomed extremes of 2020 thus far? Our answers will vary; recently, I have tried to share creative ideas based on experiences while living abroad.
Yesterday, I provided some suggestions on how urban places could heal from simultaneous “social infrastructure crises” spotlighted by the dual pandemics of COVID-19 and harsh reminders of societal injustice. This healing will inevitably involve adaptation and modifications to what we already know. We adapt, and appearance and experience transform.
In cities such as London, diversity, and remnants from other eras define much of the urban landscape. A long and rich history allows continuity expressed, in an oddly comforting way. In the photograph above, a red phone booth blends with a pandemic-based sidewalk retrofit. The colorful icon (actually an artifact no longer used) now shares the limelight with an emergency public health response. Similarly, in the realm of public transport, compulsory face masks will soon blend with the equally iconic double-decker bus.