Jennie Platt, from Manchester, UK, enlisted her sons to use cushions to cover up anti-homeless metal spikes.
Anti-homeless spikes are part of a wider phenomenon of `hostile architecture'. The Guardian. Retrieved from http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2014/jun/13/anti-homeless-spikes...Quinn, B. (2014), `Anti-Homeless Spikes Are Part of a Wider Phenomenon of `Hostile Architecture''. The ...
We all remember that luxury apartment building in London bordered by anti-homeless spikes to prevent the homeless from loitering on the property. Now, Vancouver, Canada has outdone itself in providing the opposite: Along with Spring Advertising,…
BIRMINGHAM city bank has torn out controversial "anti-homelessspikes" after more than 13,000...Content, James Cartledge
FLAGSHIP city centre store Selfridges has come under fire afterputting studs outside the...Richard WheatstoneEmma Flanagan