Public places are open to the public (adopted from Moudon, 1987). A good public place must be adapted to everyone including edge, forgotten, silence (Badshah, 1996), and unwelcome people. They are informal street vendors, street people, people with different abilities, women, children, the elderly, and other alienated communities. So far, these and other social problems have not been clearly resolved throughout urban planning. "Citizen City" (Douglas & Friedmann, 1998) is a slogan. The informal sector and the stranded sectors are forgotten factors in urban space (Out of Place, [Yatmo, 2008]). Therefore, a solution to this problem is needed. So how do you create loose public spaces for marginalized people and peripheral uses? Based on the qualitative description approach, we develop an ideal public space for the stranded people. Then the result shows that we need everyone's deterministic space. If there is evidence of documentary in the legal city planning space of the marginalized community, the problem will be resolved automatically. If the physical aspects of the space can satisfy the requirements of the abandoned space (Badshah, 1996), a loose public space will be created. Therefore, the physical quality of the visual city improves because society is educated to learn, share and respect the rights of other users in the city, there is no room for mergers and redundant activities .
We may not be able to respond to the rights of these communities in our public places. Communities are alienated in public places. Sometimes they will be forgotten, silent and unwelcome people. Limiting is marginal. Broadly speaking, the term "marginalization" evokes the dynamics between the two categories of social analysis, the "core" (or mainstream) and the area called "edge". The core is usually associated with benefits, privileges and forces; margins are relatively weak. What is left behind is put at the edge, so it is excluded from the center's privileges and power. Marginalization is often done based on concepts such as gender, culture, language, ethnicity, sexual orientation, religion, political affiliation, socio-economic status or class, geographical location etc.
Public places are open to the public (adopted from Moudon, 1987). A good public place must be adapted to everyone including edge, forgotten, silence (Badshah, 1996), and unwelcome people. They are informal street vendors, street people, people with different abilities, women, children, the elderly, and other alienated communities. So far, these and other social problems have not been clearly resolved throughout urban planning. "Citizen City" (Douglas & Friedmann, 1998) is a slogan. The informal sector and the marginal sector have become forgotten factors in urban spaces (obsolete). Therefore, a solution to this problem is needed. So how do you create loose public spaces for marginalized people and peripheral uses? Based on the qualitative description approach, we develop an ideal public space for the stranded people. Then the result shows that we need everyone's deterministic space