The main purpose of this study, in terms of spatial meanings that is developed from spatial imaginations, is aiming to establish Taiwanese space aesthetics. First of all, through reflexive thinking of the epistemology of space study, the fact that it lacks a humanistic depth in describing the life world is unveiled. The civic aesthetics of Hakka daily life world is, therefore, presented. By means of the daily lives of the Hakka people living in the northern Taiwan, the aim of this study is to examine the self-help construction behavior of the traditional Hakka settlements. Moreover, this study is oriented by the tactile experiences of human body, and to study the interaction, which is produced from the construction process of the settlements, between body and life objects. The construction of space discussed in this study is not a mere stereotype construction behavior; instead, in order to build a life world, it is a consistent living process. Based on the relations between body and settlement, the purpose of this study is to examine the experiences context of building the Hakka settlement, and to discuss the role of human body as it is presented as the medium, body and representation. There are two apparent spatial elements that exist in the Hakka settlements, which are the cobblestone embankment and traditional laundry spaces respectively. If by carefully studying those two almost unnoticed Hakka spatial elements, some meaningful meanings, which are hidden in the process of constructing the Hakka settlements, could appear. Those meanings are, for instance, the cobblestone embankment that presents the simple beauty of Hakka civic aesthetics, and that the traditional laundry spaces that shows the environment ethnics of Hakka people. Those two, coincidently, are correspondent to the two fashioned appeals: sustainable development and ecological environment.