Here is an overview of what we consider to be the key website statistics and information:
Parameter name | Status | Comment |
---|---|---|
Website meta title | STAG | Search engines recommend title length of around 50-60 characters. The length of this title is 4. |
Meta description | Within the highly dense urban context of Hong Kong the way how people practice the public space is totally shifted. Because of economy driven urban development public space are becoming more and more insignificant. Indeed over-regulated parks and shopping malls are not really dedicated to the public since they don’t allow free appropriation. The STAG project intends to demonstrate that the city created by developers should not be perceived as a limitation of people’s appropriation but rather points out the opportunities that the city offers and encourage the inhabitants to play with it. When zooming in-between the concrete jungle of skyscrapers one can discover some unique and often well-hidden spaces, recesses and interstitial back streets that are far away from the picture postcard image of the city’s skyline but are indeed part of Hong Kong’s real identity. These so-called “edge public spaces” which belong to the public domain are in fact not planned nor designed for the public use. Hong Kong’s back lanes are one type of these “edge public spaces”. Because of their recurrence all-over the city and their typical morphology they represent a characteristic urban space of Hong Kong. In a frenetic city like Hong Kong these remote locations are indispensable buffer zones that allow veritable expression of freedom and independence that can not be found in the other types of public spaces. Traveling through this parallel network of back lanes we see people that are constantly adapting to their morphological environment. Along the day and the night neighbours use these spaces as short cuts or gathering spaces but also as an extension of their private home or shops. Indeed belonging to the public domain these “edge public spaces” contain therefore this in-between public/private condition that allows room for subtle forms of appropriation by the inhabitants. As architects we are especially interested in the relationship between the people and the spaces they live and interact in. Looking at micro-spaces in the city is an opportunity to observe the strategies people develop to deal with space restriction. Micro-scale architecture that scatters in the back lanes such as shelves/shops, improvised mahjong parlor or open air kitchens are examples that go beyond the space limitation. As they contain this in-between condition of being at the same time a public and private space their spatial occupation can be extended or retracted in order to enable a superposition of use.Flexibility, impermanence and appropriation are values from these “edge public spaces” that inspired the STAG project and are at its origins. Flexibility, impermanence and appropriation are values from these “edge public spaces” that inspired the STAG project and are at its origins. | To make sure all the meta description is visible in search results page, Google recommends length of up to 320 characters at the most. This description has exactly 2785 characters. |
Keywords | parallellab, Geraldine Borio, Caroline Wuethrich, Stan Diers, stool, hong kong, design, urban space, hong kong shenzhen architecture bienanle, appropriation, public space, project | We did not expect meta keywords to be used. It's a worrying sign more than anything, really, as websites with meta keywords often tend to be spammy. |
Load time | 0.8491 seconds on average | Website load speed is pretty fast. |
Total links on homepage | We found 1 links | Honestly, this is a strange amount of links for a homepage. |
Page HTML size | 3.7KB | Load speed (and overall responsiveness) is such an important factor for both search engines and user experience, would you not agree? With that in mind, this is a very good result. |
Website server | Server appears to be online. The IP address for the server is 173.254.28.19. | It's unfortunate, but despite our best attempts, we failed to gather enough data to provide a meaningful insight at this time. |
What, all that information was not enough? You want... more? Right, then. You asked for it.
Similarly to how a hard drive or a modern SSD device holds your files, a server holds all the files the website needs to operate. To load a webpage, your browser needs to contact the said server and request files - strings of code that make up the website into what it is, including images, text and database entries. Each physical server has a unique IP address that is used by the browser to contact it.
Let's see what technical information we've managed to gather:
Header in detail |
---|
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Server: nginx/1.12.1 Date: Fri, 08 Dec 2017 19:56:25 GMT Content-Type: text/html Content-Length: 3783 Connection: keep-alive Last-Modified: Mon, 20 Feb 2012 13:21:05 GMT Accept-Ranges: bytes Vary: Accept-Encoding |
A good domain address is usually one that is easy to spell, resulting in the smallest amount of mistypes possible. Still, such a thing inevitably happens. Here is a list with the most frequent 1820 mistypes, associated with staghk.org:
If you are curious about what TLD extensions could also match the domain name of staghk.org well, we have prepared an extensive list for you to look through:
We are glad you have finished this report. Hopefully, you found what you were looking for. In case you need more information to compare, here is a list of some other detailed overviews we have prepared: