Urban edges, and how to define the space beyond

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This view from a basilica in Italy's Santa Maria di Leuca inspired ancient visitors to ponder the edge of the world.

I doubt that before today any urbanist writer has used an old, Latin term that lives on in southern Italy to explain the particular wonder of certain city street-ends. The term, finibus terrae, meant one end of the Earth to the Romans — the edge of the known extent of the land.

In Santa Maria di Leuca, at the tip of Italy’s boot-heel, there is a longstanding basilica named for this ancient boundary. When I was there, in 2008 and 2011, and saw the seaward view from the basilica, it was clear why the place is legendary. Surveying the expanse at the juncture of the Adriatic and Ionian seas, people once saw — or imagined — a void in their tangible environment that they could only explain by saying, the world stops here.

When the world was flat, it was a place to ponder our confluence with the unknown, a figurative end of the road, with a view towards an undefined beyond.

In modern parlance, we’ve embraced the multifaceted meanings of “end of the road”, or “dead ends”. These labels can describe failed businesses or careers, or something more ominous. In physical form, they may apply to an unfinished right of way, a route barred by topography or a highway cut off by a natural disaster.

But in the context of evolving cities, such terminal places, often called street-ends, are also opportunities for change or transition. A street-end may feature improvements such as public gardens, or measures such as landscaping, lighting or fencing that enhance safety.

In fact, some cities celebrate the opportunities for street-ends, where the public path often comes to rest. City staffs and nonprofit organizations champion property use and access in and around such dead-ends, where unimproved right-of-way is sometimes wrongly appropriated by abutting property owners. In Seattle, for instance, Department of Transportation programming especially emphasizes shoreline street-ends and the opportunities for improvements along Lake Washington and Puget Sound.

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Shoreline street ends are not the only Seattle examples. As illustrated above, other street-ends display dramatic views over lake and bridge, with neighborhoods beyond. Old and new ideas meet here, along with examples of city life. In this example, we see safety additions — signage and a railing — as well as graffiti, and an impromptu lost and found for the knit hat that someone left behind.

Today’s urbanist may also see a future gondola station, a walkable destination or the potential for sustaining natural pockets amid the built environment. But what compels such vision?

I’ll take a leap of faith here, in order to put a modern gloss on the human imagination that conceived the edge of the earth in Italy, long ago. As with the finibus terrae, such edges and views will always inspire us to create tangible and useful meanings for the spaces beyond.

Images composed by the author in Santa Maria di Leuca, Puglia, Italy and Seattle. © 2009-2015 myurbanist. All Rights Reserved. Do not copy.

For more information on the role of personal experience in understanding the changing city, see Urbanism Without Effort, an e-book from Island Press.

  

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About the Authors & Contributors

Chuck Wolfe

Chuck Wolfe

Chuck Wolfe provides a unique perspective about cities as a London-based urbanist writer, photographer, land use consultant and former Seattle land use and environmental attorney.