AAU Student Projects is unavailable between June 15th 1.30pm and 17th 1.30pm due to planned system maintenance. The projects cannot be downloaded during this period.
AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
An executive master's programme thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


A Sense of Belonging in Student Co-Living: Opening Community Networks in a Case Study of CPH Village

Authors

;

Term

4. term

Publication year

2026

Submitted on

Abstract

This Master’s thesis examines how student communities are formed and experienced in CPH Village, with a particular focus on networks and their actors in two selected housing sites. Using Actor-Network Theory (ANT), we describe how relationships between people, buildings, physical spaces, and various objects contribute to creating community and a sense of belonging. We combine ANT with personas – fictional but realistic user profiles – to show how many different actors together shape diverse experiences of community in concrete everyday scenarios. We apply a range of techno-anthropological methods, including qualitative interviews and field studies, to collect data about CPH Village and the residents’ experiences. Our analysis shows that communities are complex networks that are closely intertwined with architecture, spatial design, and non-human elements. Community work appears as a relational practice, in which relationships are constantly created and maintained. On this basis, we argue for attentiveness to different ways of experiencing reality (ontological diversity). We make this operational through a persona we call a ‘Community Tentacle’, which can be used as a tool to open up community networks and make their boundaries more porous, helping new residents integrate more easily.

I dette speciale undersøger vi, hvordan fællesskaber mellem studerende formes og opleves i CPH Village, med særligt fokus på netværk og deres aktører i to udvalgte boligafdelinger. Med udgangspunkt i Actor-Network Theory (ANT) beskriver vi, hvordan relationer mellem mennesker, bygninger, fysiske rammer og forskellige ting er med til at skabe fællesskab og en følelse af at høre til. Vi kombinerer ANT med såkaldte personaer – fiktive, men realistiske brugerprofiler – for at vise, hvordan mange forskellige aktører tilsammen skaber forskellige oplevelser af fællesskab i konkrete hverdagssituationer. Vi anvender en række techno-antropologiske metoder, blandt andet kvalitative interviews og feltstudier, til at indsamle data om CPH Village og beboernes erfaringer. Vores analyse peger på, at fællesskaber er komplekse netværk, som hænger tæt sammen med arkitekturen, de fysiske omgivelser og ikke-menneskelige elementer. Fællesskabsarbejde fremstår som en relationel praksis, hvor relationer hele tiden opbygges og vedligeholdes. På den baggrund argumenterer vi for behovet for opmærksomhed på forskellige måder at opleve virkeligheden på (ontologisk diversitet). Det gør vi konkret gennem en persona, vi kalder en ‘Community Tentacle’, som kan bruges som et redskab til at åbne fællesskabsnetværk og gøre grænserne mere porøse, så nye beboere lettere kan blive en del af fællesskabet.

[This abstract has been rewritten with the help of AI based on the project's original abstract]