Archeotecture: seeking a new archaeological vision of Architecture (original) (raw)
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Archaeotecture. Archaeology of Architecture. 2003
2003
This volume has been produced by European Association of Archaeologist (EAA) as a result of the contributions presented by different authors during the sessions held under the general heading “Architectural Archaeology” in Lisbon (Portugal) in 2000, and in Esslingen (Germany) in 2001, both of which were coordinated by the editors of this volume. Archaeotecture: Archaeology of Architecture is a compilation of the majority of the papers presented during these sessions, organised according to their subjects or the chronological periods they cover. All of them share a common factor: the study of constructions and architectonic spaces, analysed from an from an archaeological perspective
Archaeology of Architecture: theory, methodology and analysis from Landscape Archaeology.
In the first part of our paper we propose a theoretic and methodological plan to develop an investigation line in Archaeology of Architecture, orientated from Landscape Archaeology propositions. In this plan we articulate a methotodological frame that include analysis techniques from different disciplines: Archaeology, Architecture, Anthropology and Psychology (stratigraphical analysis, formal analysis, perception analysis). This is the theoretical and methodological frame of the Archaeotecture. The second part includes a example of this kind of analysis, which is integrated into a major project about Heritage Management of a hillfort in North West of Spain: the Castro of Elviña (A Coruña, Galicia). Our archaeological research unit and A Coruña Council contracted for develop a Director Plan which put the basis to build an archaeological park in this site. The planning included several works among whose was the study of architectonical record. In this context we make a formal analysis of several domestic buildings and a stratigraphical analysis of one of them. At this point our research allow us know the evolution of domestic space and changes in social patterns from Iron Age until Romanization. In the same way this work give us a rich information about architecture that was used for a CAD reconstruction of the major house dirt in the site. This study not only contribute to identify the different constructive periods but also to design an architectonical reconstruction of an Iron Age dwelling into the future archaeological park.
«Intrecci» International Journal of Architectural Conservation, 2022
The article proposes a reflection on the relationship between Architectural Conservation and Archaeology. It analyses significant issues that emerge from the project of musealization and valorisation of the Domus of Tito Macro, a Roman house located in fondi Cossar area in Aquileia. The intervention was concluded in September 2020 and it represents the outcome of a complex process supported by Fondazione Aquileia. The work started with a research project and archaeological excavation conducted by the University of Padua, joined by the design team that won the Competition of Ideas launched by the Foundation in 2010. The article underlines complexity that has characterized a rich path of ‘contamination’ between different disciplines, first of all, Archaeology and Architectural Conservation. The project combines a careful preservation of the archaeological ruins with the installation of a complex shelter system, designed as a solution that alluded to the original shape of the Roman domus. This path describes a conservation building site that could hardly be managed with the common tools of Architectural Restoration but, on the contrary, strategies specifically designed were asked to deal with the archaeological site needs. Flexibility and multidisciplinary approach have been the key to address the relationship between the two disciplines, interpreted as an opportunity to produce an integrated design and stimulus for a cultured collaboration.
The archaeology of architecture for the knowledge and preservation of the 'modern’
Restauro Archeologico
The aim of this research is to find new tools to know, understand and consequently preserve the most recent architec- tural heritage (20th–21th century). This particularly interesting heritage needs attention, often its state of degradation undermines its conservation. This need is evident not only in the Italian context but also in the western world. The 1972 Unesco Convention defined an initial concept and definition of Heritage, and this concept now became increasingly broader; today, more recent artefacts are now looked upon as elements to be protected, in the same way as older ones. The writer started this research, years ago, currently a close collaboration between DAD Genova and Universidad del Pais Vasco brought more enlightening. The objectives are: verification of the applicability of the tools already adopted in the archaeology of the architecture of traditional constructions and development of the specificities in the interpretation of contemporary constructions.
Azkarate, A. (2020) Archaeology of Architecture – Buildings Archaeology, in Charles E. Orser, Jr., Andrés Zarankin, Pedro Funari, Susan Lawrence, James Symonds, The Routledge Handbook of Global Historical Archaeology, 2020
There are those who believe that the perception of the multidimensionality of architecture is a contemporary conceptual conquest, arising from the interpretative current that followed the questioning of the processual perspective. There is nothing further from the truth. When calling for the semantic diversity of environments built as physical spaces, social spaces and symbolic spaces, one <loes nothing but revive Vitruvio's thinking when he alluded more than two thousand years ago to the three principles that should govern the architecture of public buildings (Vitruvius, 1999: !, 3): firmítas, as an expression of a society's socioeconomic and technological capacities to source, extract, transform, transport and harness raw materials; utilitas, as a reflection of the social, political and religious organization needed to articulate spaces of diverse functionalities and meanings; and finally, venustas, as the embodiment of his thought, his ideology. It is precisely for this reason that it is necessary that these principies combine for their materialization, which is why architecture has rightly been regarded as the ultimate expression of what we understand as material culture (Azkarate, 2013). It is therefore understandable that architectural evidence has been an ÜTesistible focus of attention for many scientific disciplines and that there are extraordinarily rich and varied approximations to the field of built heritage. We are, in short, facing a material reality that contains multiple dimensions, which can be observed on numerous scales, both temporal and spatial - from the mobile homes of hunter gatherers to the cityscape and landscape in general (Steadman, 2015) - and a reality which is usually analysed from the most va1ied theoretical perspectives (Buchli, 2013; Steadman, 2015; Beaudry, 2015). This explains 'the my1iad directions still available in the field ofthe archaeology of architecture' (Steadman, 2015: 18) and the unstoppable growth of a bibliographic production that is extremely difficult both to follow and to synthesize.
Rethoric and design in premodern buildings
Archaeotecture. Archaeology of Architecture. , 2003
An archaeology of architecture could study, beside the phenomenology of space, the cognitive process of design, involving the relationships between parts of the building, between building and environment and between the observer and building. The present study analyse the above mentioned relationships existing in a pre-Modern architectural object, as well as the ritual and formal and material causes that contributed to its design.