This is a Windows-based program for generalised space
syntax. It enables users to perform traditional space
syntax, called the primal analysis, which
consists in describing a spatial configuration as a
set of axial lines and working out their relative proximities,
accessibilities or integration values. But the program
also enables users to generate the dual
analysis, which consists in working out these same accessibilities
with respect to the intersections between the lines
that we call junctions or nodes.
You can download the current version from this page.
We are not supporting the program in any way as it is
free and currently under rapid development. New versions
will come online as they are produced and can be downloaded
from this page. We will let the Space Syntax Mail Base
List know each time a new version of the program becomes
available.
The program is quite user friendly and as yet there
is no help. We have put up a pdf file you can download
with an example of how to use it - this is for the previous
versions and the current versions v1.02 has much much
more functionality - but we hope it is self-explanatory.
A full manual has not yet been written but the next
version will be v1.10 and we will have a manual for
that one with all bugs ironed out. I would like users
of this third version to email
me if there are any unwitting crashes and of course
suggestions are welcome. For previous versions, we have
encountered an error for some versions of Windows and
if you get an error message asking for some missing
.ocx component, then the way to remedy this is search
Google and download the patch. In the current version,
we hope this has been resolved as we are no longer using
APIs.
The program essentially lets you input your own map
and then draw axial lines on it so that the analysis
can be generated. You can save data from the program
and save the maps you generate. You can adjust your
map to the screen size by zooming and this means you
can use it on most PCs.
In the current version (v1.02) we have added a lot
more functionality, namely
changing color and width of the line drawing with
the mouse
adding radius-3 axial and junction maps to the syntax
adding zoom capability to the radius-n of the axial
and junction maps
adding depth maps from any line or junction
adding axial graphs and junction graphs from the axial
maps and junction maps
adding zoom capability to the distances associated
with the axial and junction maps
The program is restricted to 500 axial lines but it
would take several minutes to process a problem this
size. Problems with less than 100 lines and/or nodes
are very fast. On my laptop which is a SONY Vaio R600
(circa 2002) with Pentium III running at 844 MHz with
256K RAM, a 25 line or node problem takes 1 second,
a 50 line/node 2 seconds, a 100 line/node 5 seconds,
a 250 line/node problem 150 seconds and so on ...
You are welcome to try it out. For future versions,
I will ask you to register but for these early versions,
no registration is required.
I talked about this software and the logics behind it
at the Fifth
International Space Syntax Symposium in Delft 13-17
June in my invited speech. I have also talked about
it at SAGEO 05 in Avignon and in Pisa to spatial analyst
groups. The
ideas are based on my working paper last year "A
New Theory of Space Syntax" which is on the CASA
website under publications. Click
here for the list.
Click
here for the paper.
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