The aim of this paper is to analyze the daily practices that involve the use and accessibility of public space from the perspective of territorial productions that can occur within it. That is, from the different forms of control resulting from interactions between the social and the material. Based on a process of non-participant observation at parque de la 93, in Bogota, this paper argues that accessibility, in this public space, is determined primarily by two factors: first, by the amount of territories that can be produced, and secondly, by the nature and type of control exercised over them. Global spaces like parque de la 93, characterized by having a modern, dynamic infrastructure designed for multiple uses and users, generates in practice, coercive dynamics derived from private control, which limit the potential of territorial appropriations that these spaces can allow.