Urban Landscape and Spatial Heritage: The Case of Gateway-Pathways in Zagreb, Croatia (original) (raw)
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2011
This urban thesis represents a body of work which spans eight years. Presented within its pages is a ‘PhD-Thesis-Atlas’ related to the questions of how to read the urban structure for the contemporary urban landscape. It embodies first and foremost the academic explorations of what specific questions, problems and issues present themselves within the debate of urban morphology and, specifically, typomorphology which centres its activity around the study of the physical [building] and spatial [open] forms of the cities. The Thesis-Atlas simultaneously traces the effects of the typomorphological debate through the visual and empirical explorations of urban form and structure. Documented here, is a theoretical underpinning for the debate, as well as a proposal on how to empirically reflect on urban form and place formations. The document is divided into 4 parts. Parts 1 to 3 contain the core text and theoretical elaborations within the debate, and explore the possible methods of how to examine the city empirically. A total of 10 chapters, each with a specific focus and questions, complete part 1 to 3. Each chapter has visual markers to indicate which images relate to specific issues mentioned in the text. Part 4 represents the visual narrative of the thesis. It contains all graphic material, either sourced or original, in photographic, mapped and diagrammatic formats. It is hoped that the 500 images shown in this thesis will help guide the reader through the periods and types of development which has not only been instrumental in the historical development of the debate surrounding city structure, but also to act as a stimulus for future work.
2013
The purpose of this paper is to provide some much needed theoretical grounding and historical-morphological context for the narratives of communal loss that recur in the reportage concerning the British high street. Given the topicality of this issue for policy-makers it is worth enquiring into precisely how far such narratives are in fact supported by a long-term perspective on historical changes in high street land uses in relation to the evolving spatial morphology of small town centres, in order to better distinguish the extent to which a further layer of socio-cultural explanation is required to account for the concern over ‘decline’. This research, undertaken as part of the EPSRC Adaptable Suburbs project at UCL, uses fully digitized historical maps, contemporary and historical land use data and space syntax analysis to identify historical-morphological parameters of change and continuity in and around two suburban high streets of Greater London since the nineteenth century: S...
IN PURSUIT OF INTEGRITY IN URBAN MORPHOLOGY: CULTURAL LANDSCAPE VS URBAN LANDSCAPE
CHANGE-TRANSFORMATION AND CRITIQUE OF URBAN SPACES, Editors Sonay ÇEVİK Öner DEMİREL Havva ÖZDOĞAN, 2023
Urban morphology studies put forward how different elements work together and change the shape of the city, and provide information to understand the contrasts and coexistence of the city between continuity and change. The antecedents of urban morphology field has shown that urban morphology is initially based on the cultural landscape perspective as the overarching framework to explore urban landscape. However, morphogenetic approach, typomorphology studies and space syntax studies do not consider unbuilt elements as a layer of the urban landscape. This study sheds light on exploration for a desired but unattainable holistic approach in urban morphology through reintroducing the cultural landscape perspective. By recalling geographer J.B. Jackson's composite formal combinations based on the cultural landscape perspective, this chapter focuses on land division and use, street systems and land use and public spaces for a unity of built and unbuilt spaces in urban space.
Established Urban Research Traditions and the Platform for Space Syntax
Introduction to Space Syntax in Urban Studies, 2021
This chapter provides an overview of established researchtraditions in the analysis of physical elements of the built environment. Herein, we address the morphological, place phenomenological, andurban network traditions. Following this, a synopsis about spatial elements applied to these traditions, including space syntax, is given. Furthermore, in this chapter, we explain the differences between extrinsic and intrinsic properties of space and clarify the typology concepts of the built form. Finally, we introduce the basic spatial elements used in space syntax and the simplest spatialstructures that cities can have. Exercises are provided at the end of this chapter.
The Cyclicality of the Anthropic Space in Urban Morphology: an architectural perspective
Proceedings 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age, 2017
The "Network city" and its crisis Over the last decade we have been witnessing the effect over the territory of the worldwide propellant of the globalization processes. As an immediate consequence, one can remind the progressive weakening of the "Network city" (Marzot, 2006 i). This urban model was intended, since its inception, development and forerunning application, to take over the role of Planning in the management of the territorial transformation and to supersede it with urban and territorial marketing multimodal infrastructure to group existing cities into clusters, considered coherent to down strategy. This overarching process was developed at the expenses of national and local interests, almost completely disregarding the effects produced onto the already established communities. Therefore, if the "Network City" was apparently unfolding an unlimited capacity to multiply opportunities, by increasing movements of people, goods, information and resources, it was pursuing its goals by being very selective and exclusive with respect to the existing framework. As a side effect of this overarching strategy, the dominant urban model Abstract. Over the last decade, we have been witnessing the progressive weakening of the so-called "Network City", indented as the sheer embodiment of the globalization driving forces. This phenomenon mostly occurred because urban model. It progressively delivered an increasing amount of waiting lands and building vacancies over the territory. Emptiness suddenly appeared as the "culture of congestion". Recycling seems to be the immediate reaction to the building standstill and it is nowadays widely accepted as the most promising strategy to face the crisis of the city, especially within Europe. This statement respect it becomes fundamental to reconsider the forerunning contribution of Urban Morphology and Building Typology. In fact this discipline, since the second half of the '50 of the XX century, because of the necessity to reconstruct Europe after the Second World War, was pioneering the necessity to read the Form of the city beyond any ideological prejudice, superseding the Modern approach. As a consequence of this attitude, the city was even more intended as a "manufact" constantly transformed through the different historical promising future for our cities.
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This article presents an argument for the enhanced utilisation of urban morphology in urban design, drawing inspiration from space syntax theory and methodologies, advocating for the integration of social, economic, and cultural considerations alongside physical structures. This perspective shift entails transitioning from descriptive analysis to quantitative inquiries for the prediction and assessment of urban dynamics. By incorporating spatial analysis and socio-economic factors, urban morphology offers a competent understanding of the complexities inherent to urban environments. This comprehension supports the development of evidence-based designs and predictive models that enable such an approach in urban design. To operationalise this approach, the article introduces a methodology that interlinks urban morphology and design through a cyclic process encompassing analysis, design, evaluation, and further design development. This framework is illustrated through the case study of ...
ZARCH Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies of Architecture and Urbanism, 2016
Prácticas espaciales en un mundo urbano. Revalorización del territorio y la ecología como un nuevo terreno para la arquitectura y el diseño urbano Spatial practices in an urban world. Reassessing territory and ecology as a new ground for architecture and urban design Prácticas espaciales en un mundo urbano. Revalorización del territorio y la ecología como un nuevo terreno para la arquitectura y el diseño urbano Spatial practices in an urban world. Reassessing territory and ecology as a new ground for architecture and urban design ADRIÀ CARBONELL Resumen En este trabajo plantea que para comprender los procesos contemporáneos de urbanización neoliberal y revetir su lucrativa destrucción, es necesario abordar la dimensión planetaria de los fenómenos y reconvertir el mar isotrópico de la urbanización en territorios y ecologías sostenibles.