<p>As an evolving and contested field, urban design has been made, unmade, and remade at the intersections of multiple disciplines and professions. It is now a decisive moment for urban design to reflect on its rigour and relevance. This handbook is an attempt to seize this moment for urban design to further develop its theoretical and methodological knowledge base and engage with the question of "what urban design can be" with a primary focus on its research. </p><p>This handbook includes contributions from both established and emerging scholars across the global North and global South to provide a more field-specific entry point by introducing a range of topics and lines of inquiry and discussing how they can be explored with a focus on the related research designs and methods. The specific aim, scope, and structure of this handbook are appealing to a range of audiences interested and/or involved in shaping places and public spaces. </p><p>What makes this book quite distinctive from conventional handbooks on research methods is the way it has been structured in relation to some key research topics and questions in the field of urban design regarding the issues of <i>agency</i>, <i>affordance</i>, <i>place</i>, <i>informality</i>, and <i>performance</i>. In addition to the introduction chapter, this handbook includes 80 contributors and 52 chapters organised into five parts. The commissioned chapters showcase a wide range of topics, research designs, and methods with references to relevant scholarly works on the related topics and methods. </p> <p>Introduction: urban design research<br><em>Hesam Kamalipour, Patricia Aelbrecht &amp; Nastaran Peimani</em></p><p>PART 1: AGENCY</p><p>1.1. Researching urban design governance</p><p>Matthew Carmona</p><p>1.2. Dynamic multiplicity: contexts, perspectives, and timeframes</p><p>Ali Madanipour </p><p>1.3. Transect-based coding: a methodology</p><p>Emily Talen</p><p>1.4. Exploring the temporal dimension of urban design thinking</p><p>Olgu Çalışkan &amp; Egbert Stolk</p><p>1.5. Commoning urban design: a research program</p><p>Stavros Stavrides</p><p>1.6. So the story goes: using narrative to explore social connections in urban space</p><p>Troy D. Glover &amp; Rebecca F. Mayers</p><p>1.7. Bursting housing bubbles and the agency of urban design activism </p><p>Thomas Markussen</p><p>1.8. An anthropological way of working with urban design: examples from Africa</p><p>Claire Panetta &amp; Suzanne Scheld</p><p>1.9. Exploring the agents involved in the urban design process for inclusive public spaces</p><p>Müge Akkar Ercan</p><p>1.10. Exploring financial agency in neoliberal urban design</p><p>Francisco Vergara-Perucich</p><p>PART 2: AFFORDANCE</p><p>2.1. Cognitive mapping as a research method: the childhood city</p><p>Tridib Banerjee </p><p>2.2. Discovering the playful affordances of urban spaces</p><p>Quentin Stevens</p><p>2.3. Exploring streets as places for social exchange</p><p>Vikas Mehta</p><p>2.4. Researching the applicability of body language methods in urban design</p><p>Patricia Aelbrecht</p><p>2.5. Exploring transit morphologies and forms of urbanity in urban design research</p><p>Nastaran Peimani</p><p>2.6. Putting people in place: deconstructing gendered imaginations through mental maps</p><p>Shilpa Ranade &amp; Shilpa Phadke </p><p>2.7. Forms of negotiating space inside the Palestinian camp</p><p>Samar Maqusi</p><p>2.8. Exploring affective infrastructures: a feminist co-production method in urban design</p><p>Catalina Ortiz, Yael Padan, Belen Desmaison, Judith Mbabazi, Jane Rendell, Vanesa Castán Broto, Paul Isolo Mukwaya, &amp; Teddy Kisembo</p><p>2.9. CPTED: research methods for crime prevention</p><p>Miguel Saraiva &amp; Ana Verónica Neves</p><p>PART 3: PLACE</p><p>3.1. From place to assemblage: meanings and morphologies in urban design research</p><p>Kim Dovey</p><p>3.2. Phenomenological research methods and urban design</p><p>David Seamon </p><p>3.3. Researching place attachment</p><p>Maria Lewicka</p><p>3.4. Exploring the perception of urban environments for sound-driven placemaking</p><p>Tin Oberman, Francesco Aletta, &amp; Jian Kang</p><p>3.5. Researching place in urban design</p><p>Gethin Davison &amp; Ian Woodcock</p><p>3.6. Territoriology and the study of public place</p><p>Andrea Mubi Brighenti &amp; Mattias Kärrholm</p><p>3.7. Creating character and identity in the rebuilt city: Investigating post-war Britain</p><p>Peter J. Larkham</p><p>3.8. Researching place history, memory and contested identities in urban design</p><p>Ross King</p><p>3.9. Urban design, consilience and placemaking</p><p>Mahyar Arefi &amp; Amir Tayyebi</p><p>3.10. On the value of non-understanding in urban research: notes from explorations of significant non-translatables that make Tokyo - Tokyo </p><p>Darko Radović </p><p>3.11. Place writing, site drawing: researching graffiti as a critical spatial practice </p><p>Konstantinos Avramidis </p><p>PART 4: INFORMALITY</p><p>4.1. The spatial form and built environment of urban informality: researching informal housing in the Global North</p><p>Vinit Mukhija</p><p>4.2. Researching informal settlements in urban design: documenting urban villages in South China</p><p>Stefan Al</p><p>4.3. The challenges of researching place in informal settlements</p><p>Gabriela Quintana Vigiola</p><p>4.4. Research by the seat of your pants: the bicycle, the camera, and the sequential case method in studying urban informality</p><p>Gordon C. C. Douglas</p><p>4.5. An urban design framework of informal development stages: exploring self-build and growth in informal settlements</p><p>Jota Samper</p><p>4.6. Exploring informal urbanism</p><p>Hesam Kamalipour</p><p>4.7. Understanding how vendors move: mapping spatial informality using grounded theory</p><p>Kiran Keswani &amp; Banashree Banerjee </p><p>4.8. Who authors counter-maps? Lessons from an ethnography of street vending</p><p>Francesca Piazzoni</p><p>4.9. Researching the spatial heterogeneity of Informal Street Vending</p><p>Lautaro Ojeda Ledesma </p><p>4.10. Assessing temporary appropriation, informality, and displacement</p><p>J. Antonio Lara-Hernandez &amp; Abraham Echazarreta</p><p>PART 5: PERFORMANCE</p><p>5.1. Studying the qualities of urban squares</p><p>Jon Lang &amp; Nancy Marshall</p><p>5.2. Designing the urban metaverse: visual analytics for urban design</p><p>Andy Hudson-Smith &amp; Michael Batty </p><p>5.3. Post-occupancy evaluation</p><p>Mike Biddulph</p><p>5.4. Parameters for action: urban morphology as a framework for research in the built environment</p><p>Karl Kropf &amp; Regina Lim </p><p>5.5. Modelling, mapping and measuring urban densities</p><p>Elek Pafka</p><p>5.6. Fit for all: exploring invitations and imaginaries in urban design research</p><p>Rachel Berney </p><p>5.7. Urban design and mapping technologies</p><p>Ole B. Jensen, Lea Holst Laursen &amp; Signe Hald</p><p>5.8. <i>Morpho</i>: urban morphology, performance assessment and urban design</p><p>Vítor Oliveira</p><p>5.9. Green urban futures: researching the performance of urban design</p><p>Steffen Lehmann</p><p>5.10. Exploring transit-oriented urban design</p><p>Weichang Kong &amp; Dorina Pojani</p><p>5.11. Form syntax 1.0: an analytical tool assisting urban design via the measuring of urban vitality</p><p>Yu Ye, Dan Qiang &amp; Wei Zeng </p><p>5.12. Examining the role of the urban built environment in supporting disaster risk reduction</p><p>Jorge León &amp; Magdalena Vicuña</p>