City spaces have lost their traditional roles and concepts according to the document. Spaces that were once very social places for people to gather, like bazaars, streets, and squares, have now been converted into the oldest and poorest points in cities and no longer serve their social purpose. Historical textures that once gave cities life and structure in a natural way have also lost their effectiveness and dynamism. The integrated buildings and social spaces that composed historical textures have disintegrated. While efforts are being made to preserve valuable historical textures, modern architecture has moved away from the living trends of the past.
Abstract
This research attempts to analyze the importance of a Public Park and the social responsibility as the lung and center of life and activities that provide people the tools to find their role and place within the community. The research also attempts to find out how the local identity influences the success of the such Public Park, as the diversity of customs and cultures, could present potential challenges in accommodating everyone in an environment that would make each individual feel included, part of, and even with a certain pride of belonging to a place versus disrespected and excluded.
The proposal for an Inclusive Public park would attempt to offer sustainable solutions, and is validated by research into five parks around the world that had attempted to include the needs and interests of the different ages throughout the human life, as well as to ensure accessible routes and alternatives on each case. However, the research related to the identity of place and culture is analyzed locally in observance of the uniqueness of San Antonio, TX.
Theories of Architecture and Urbanism Comparative Analysis Essaydouglasloon
Taylor's University Lakeside Campus
School of Architecture, Building & Design
Bachelor of Science (Hons) in Architecture
Theories of Architecture & Urbanism (ARC 61303)
Theories of Architecture and Urbanism Reaction Papersdouglasloon
Taylor's University Lakeside Campus
School of Architecture, Building & Design
Bachelor of Science (Hons) in Architecture
Theories of Architecture & Urbanism (ARC 61303)
Just Grounds: Cape Town
Post-graduate course in architecture at Mejan Arc at the Royal Institute of Art, Stockholm, 60 academic credits
Deadline for applications: June13th, 2011
Africa is rapidly urbanizing. 40% of the continent’s population is now urban, but despite Africa’s extensive natural resources and strong economic growth, neither international nor local investments find their way to the cities. In postcolonial Africa the City is still considered an exception. Basic infrastructure is still lacking and urbanization is occurring primarily in the form of slums, as silent encroachments. However, African urban researchers note that the African city should not be considered simply incomplete versions of their western counterparts. Indeed, the African city is following its own route with a very different map. These cities are growing as nodes in mutually dependent networks that span over national boundaries. Their populations are in perpetual movement – constantly in search of work and possibilities.
The city of Cape Town has a young, multi-cultural population and engagement from grassroots movements as well as academics and practitioners spans from social to spatial issues. Nowhere is the discourse on the Right to the City more urgently apparent than here. The conditions for an inclusive future based on equitably distributed resources are here and now. The city begs the question – can Cape Town show the way towards a genuinely more sustainable urban Africa, or will a refusal to act keep this development from occurring?
Resource.11 continues its present program series Happy Grounds – a multiple-year investigation of alternative urban models and perspectives on development generated from particularly advantageous breeding grounds, such as climate, topography, cultural expressions, resources, economies or social phenomena. We now look towards South Africa where we will take part of the intensive debate concerning the African city that is going on right now in Cape Town.
Are you an architect, landscape architect, urban planner, artist, designer or simply passionate about architecture and urban issues? Join us for a year of cross-disciplinary studies during the academic year 2011-12.
In Donald Barthelme's 1974 short story "I Bought a Little City", the narrator decides one day to purchase Galveston, Texas, where he then tears down some houses, shoots 6,000 dogs, and rearranges what remains into the shape of a giant Mona Lisa jigsaw puzzle visible only from the air. As with much of Barthelme's work, the premise seems so absurd that one cannot help but shake it until a metaphor falls out, and here one might well assume that, in the words of the novelist Donald Antrim, "I Bought a Little City" is "a take on the role that a writer has in writing a story – playing god,
Each month, join us as we highlight and discuss hot topics ranging from the future of higher education to wearable technology, best productivity hacks and secrets to hiring top talent. Upload your SlideShares, and share your expertise with the world!
Not sure what to share on SlideShare?
SlideShares that inform, inspire and educate attract the most views. Beyond that, ideas for what you can upload are limitless. We’ve selected a few popular examples to get your creative juices flowing.
How to Make Awesome SlideShares: Tips & TricksSlideShare
Turbocharge your online presence with SlideShare. We provide the best tips and tricks for succeeding on SlideShare. Get ideas for what to upload, tips for designing your deck and more.
Abstract
This research attempts to analyze the importance of a Public Park and the social responsibility as the lung and center of life and activities that provide people the tools to find their role and place within the community. The research also attempts to find out how the local identity influences the success of the such Public Park, as the diversity of customs and cultures, could present potential challenges in accommodating everyone in an environment that would make each individual feel included, part of, and even with a certain pride of belonging to a place versus disrespected and excluded.
The proposal for an Inclusive Public park would attempt to offer sustainable solutions, and is validated by research into five parks around the world that had attempted to include the needs and interests of the different ages throughout the human life, as well as to ensure accessible routes and alternatives on each case. However, the research related to the identity of place and culture is analyzed locally in observance of the uniqueness of San Antonio, TX.
Theories of Architecture and Urbanism Comparative Analysis Essaydouglasloon
Taylor's University Lakeside Campus
School of Architecture, Building & Design
Bachelor of Science (Hons) in Architecture
Theories of Architecture & Urbanism (ARC 61303)
Theories of Architecture and Urbanism Reaction Papersdouglasloon
Taylor's University Lakeside Campus
School of Architecture, Building & Design
Bachelor of Science (Hons) in Architecture
Theories of Architecture & Urbanism (ARC 61303)
Just Grounds: Cape Town
Post-graduate course in architecture at Mejan Arc at the Royal Institute of Art, Stockholm, 60 academic credits
Deadline for applications: June13th, 2011
Africa is rapidly urbanizing. 40% of the continent’s population is now urban, but despite Africa’s extensive natural resources and strong economic growth, neither international nor local investments find their way to the cities. In postcolonial Africa the City is still considered an exception. Basic infrastructure is still lacking and urbanization is occurring primarily in the form of slums, as silent encroachments. However, African urban researchers note that the African city should not be considered simply incomplete versions of their western counterparts. Indeed, the African city is following its own route with a very different map. These cities are growing as nodes in mutually dependent networks that span over national boundaries. Their populations are in perpetual movement – constantly in search of work and possibilities.
The city of Cape Town has a young, multi-cultural population and engagement from grassroots movements as well as academics and practitioners spans from social to spatial issues. Nowhere is the discourse on the Right to the City more urgently apparent than here. The conditions for an inclusive future based on equitably distributed resources are here and now. The city begs the question – can Cape Town show the way towards a genuinely more sustainable urban Africa, or will a refusal to act keep this development from occurring?
Resource.11 continues its present program series Happy Grounds – a multiple-year investigation of alternative urban models and perspectives on development generated from particularly advantageous breeding grounds, such as climate, topography, cultural expressions, resources, economies or social phenomena. We now look towards South Africa where we will take part of the intensive debate concerning the African city that is going on right now in Cape Town.
Are you an architect, landscape architect, urban planner, artist, designer or simply passionate about architecture and urban issues? Join us for a year of cross-disciplinary studies during the academic year 2011-12.
In Donald Barthelme's 1974 short story "I Bought a Little City", the narrator decides one day to purchase Galveston, Texas, where he then tears down some houses, shoots 6,000 dogs, and rearranges what remains into the shape of a giant Mona Lisa jigsaw puzzle visible only from the air. As with much of Barthelme's work, the premise seems so absurd that one cannot help but shake it until a metaphor falls out, and here one might well assume that, in the words of the novelist Donald Antrim, "I Bought a Little City" is "a take on the role that a writer has in writing a story – playing god,
Each month, join us as we highlight and discuss hot topics ranging from the future of higher education to wearable technology, best productivity hacks and secrets to hiring top talent. Upload your SlideShares, and share your expertise with the world!
Not sure what to share on SlideShare?
SlideShares that inform, inspire and educate attract the most views. Beyond that, ideas for what you can upload are limitless. We’ve selected a few popular examples to get your creative juices flowing.
How to Make Awesome SlideShares: Tips & TricksSlideShare
Turbocharge your online presence with SlideShare. We provide the best tips and tricks for succeeding on SlideShare. Get ideas for what to upload, tips for designing your deck and more.
MULTIFUNCTIONAL AND MULTILAYER DIMENSIONS OF EVOLVING CITIES FOR A SUSTAINAB...Sai Bhaskar Reddy Nakka
Cities are growing at a rapid phase, due to exponential growth of populations all over the world. The world population might stabilize by 2070 after reaching the peak population levels of about 9 billion. Already the urban population, living mostly in cities has reached 50% of the world population. Cities in the last few centuries have evolved coping with changes in social, economic, cultural, aesthetics, utility, historical, political, natural and environmental factors. There is always an interface between the interests of old and new generations of people sharing the same space. The buildings have more life than the people living in them. Each building is at least able to provide space for at least two generations. The comfort levels of one generation and the next are different in same space. There are often changes brought with time in any building. Similarly the infrastructure is also changing at a rapid phase as the transportation means and systems are changing. The access to power, drinking water, and open spaces for cultural and social events, educational institutions, markets, etc. also impacts the living space. The security and basic amenities are the main factors of consideration for not moving away from the congested cities. There is always an overlap of old and new adaptation factors, creating resilience for coexistence. The remembrance of a space and events in once own life time impact the people, and they love to continue in similar space. There is a kind of energy that one gets, while returning to the same space, it is often seen that the old people prefer living in the space they are used to and they often live longer too. There are emotions too acting up on the life of the people. Considering all the above factors, each city can be considered a single organism, having its own identity and also there are various diverse spaces within it. It is like a human body single living things, but various parts of the human body function for the happiness of the whole. There is a need to understand multifunctional and multilayer dimensions of the cities, for making a sustainable living in the cities.
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7022902
Download Link: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7022902
To understand how our urban world is changing, we need to investigate how seemingly technical or natural objects are embedded in our understanding, or in brief, to acknowledge that knowledges (in plural) are political. There are multiple ways of knowing our environment and these multiple ways matter in how we engage with it. Understanding of some influential groups take precedence over other understanding, which we call knowledge hegemony. Therefore, it is important to understand plural knowledges, who produces them, and how some of them become hegemonic. We, the authors of this book, embarked on an investigation to uncover these different lenses and how they affect the way we live in our cities. The investigations were based in Colombo, Sri Lanka. This illustrated book presents some of our findings and questions we engage(d) with.
............. ..................... OTHER CITIES, OTHER WO.docxhoney725342
............. ..................... OTHER CITIES,
OTHER WORLDS ... ... ......................................... .............. .
URBAN IMAGINARIES IN A GLOBALIZING AGE
EDITED BY ANDREAS HUYSSEN
Duke University Press Durham and London 2008
147 Okwui Enwezor
Mega-exhibitions: The Antinomies of a Transnational Global Form
ASIA
181 Gyan Prakash
Mumbai: The Modern City in Ruins
205 Rahul Mehrotra
Negotiating the Static and Kinetic Cities: The Emergent Urbanism of
Mumbai
219 Yingjin Zhang
Remapping Beijing: Polylocality, Globalization, Cinema
243 Ackbar Abbas
Faking Globalization
MIDDLE EAST
267 Farha Ghannam
Two Dreams in a Global City: Class and Space in Urban Egypt
289 Orhan Pamuk
Huzun-Melancholy - Tristesse of Istanbul
307 Bibliography
321 Contributors
325 Index
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The essays that make up this volume were first presented as formal
lectures in a year-long graduate research seminar in 2001-2002 at
Columbia University, conducted as a Sawyer Seminar and funded
by the Mellon Foundation. All of the essays have been updated
and rewritten since they were first presented. The seminar was
concluded two years later by a follow-up conference which gener-
ated further discussions and several more essays. Both the semi-
nar and the conference featured architects, urban historians and
theorists, anthropologists, sociologists, literary and cultural crit-
ics, curators, and writers, most of whom came from those non-
Western cities they spoke about. Two essays were commissioned
at a later time to round out the volume.
My first thanks go to the Mellon Foundation for the generous
funding and support that made the seminar possible. The Sawyer
Seminar itself was developed in close cooperation between the
Center for Comparative Literature and Society, which I directed
at the time, and the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning,
and Preservation at Columbia University. Special thanks are owed
the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation
and its deans Bernard Tschumi and his successor Mark Wigley,
the Temple Hoyne Buell Center for American Architecture and
its director Joan Ockman, and my colleagues at the Center for
Comparative Literature and Society. I am especially grateful to
Rahul Mehrotra
NEGOTIATING THE STATIC AND KINETIC CITIES
THE EMERGENT URBANISM OF MUMBAI
Cities in India, characterized by physical and visual contra-dictions that coalesce in a landscape of incredible plural-
ism, are anticipated to be the largest urban conglomerates of the
twenty-first century. Historically, particularly during the period
of British colonization, the different worlds-whether economic,
social, or cultural-that were contained within these cities occu-
pied different spaces and operated under different rules, the aim
being to maximize control and minimize conflict between op-
posing worlds.1 Today, although these worlds have come ...
The enhancement of small historic centresVIVA_EAST
The enhancement of small historic centres: integration between urban and landscape quality
Authors: Authors: Francesco Selicato, Francesco Rotondo, Pierangela Loconte, Claudia Piscitelli
Dr Igor Calzada, MBA, presents the paper 'Comparing Smart City-Regional Governance Strategies in Bristol, Glasgow, Bilbao & Barcelona' at the University of Oxford on 18th Feb 2016.
4th Mirmiran Conceptual Architecture Award, 2010, Water and Architecture, 2010.
چهارمین دوره جایزه معماری میرمیران، مسابقه طراحی مفهومی، آب و معماری، سال 1390
Art Movements and Interaction in Interior Architecture with the Approach of C...Davood Navabiasl
Art Movements and Interaction in Interior Architecture with the Approach of Contemporary Architecture
Davood Navabi Asl١, Alireza Bavandian٢,
Taghi Tavousi٣, Foroogh Ghaforian Khames Fard٤
davood.navabi@gmail.com
Abstract
Art in the twentieth century has been innovated and evolved more than previous centuries. So as in
contemporary art, the artist's individual influence has surpassed the influence artist's work and the artist is
the focus of attention, whereas in the old art, the artist's work was influential and also the artist's works
were formed based on peoples tastes. But today, by focusing on the artist, people's tastes have been
pushed aside and the artist's feeling has been emerged. Absence of art work in interior building creates
contradiction with human who favors art. The created space should have artistic features or could place
art works inside to the best of manifestation in order to be able to interact with cognitive ability of human.
This point can also be insisted on that nature inventory of interior space is designed for human and
without interior space; the building appears like a great statue. Art movements formed in recent decades
have caused that new needs will be felt whether for displaying works in a particular environment or
integrating the space and art work; in a wider environment, the created interior space can be looked at as
an art work in the prevailing art movements.
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
LF Energy Webinar: Electrical Grid Modelling and Simulation Through PowSyBl -...DanBrown980551
Do you want to learn how to model and simulate an electrical network from scratch in under an hour?
Then welcome to this PowSyBl workshop, hosted by Rte, the French Transmission System Operator (TSO)!
During the webinar, you will discover the PowSyBl ecosystem as well as handle and study an electrical network through an interactive Python notebook.
PowSyBl is an open source project hosted by LF Energy, which offers a comprehensive set of features for electrical grid modelling and simulation. Among other advanced features, PowSyBl provides:
- A fully editable and extendable library for grid component modelling;
- Visualization tools to display your network;
- Grid simulation tools, such as power flows, security analyses (with or without remedial actions) and sensitivity analyses;
The framework is mostly written in Java, with a Python binding so that Python developers can access PowSyBl functionalities as well.
What you will learn during the webinar:
- For beginners: discover PowSyBl's functionalities through a quick general presentation and the notebook, without needing any expert coding skills;
- For advanced developers: master the skills to efficiently apply PowSyBl functionalities to your real-world scenarios.
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.
Transcript: Selling digital books in 2024: Insights from industry leaders - T...BookNet Canada
The publishing industry has been selling digital audiobooks and ebooks for over a decade and has found its groove. What’s changed? What has stayed the same? Where do we go from here? Join a group of leading sales peers from across the industry for a conversation about the lessons learned since the popularization of digital books, best practices, digital book supply chain management, and more.
Link to video recording: https://bnctechforum.ca/sessions/selling-digital-books-in-2024-insights-from-industry-leaders/
Presented by BookNet Canada on May 28, 2024, with support from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
Let's dive deeper into the world of ODC! Ricardo Alves (OutSystems) will join us to tell all about the new Data Fabric. After that, Sezen de Bruijn (OutSystems) will get into the details on how to best design a sturdy architecture within ODC.
The Art of the Pitch: WordPress Relationships and SalesLaura Byrne
Clients don’t know what they don’t know. What web solutions are right for them? How does WordPress come into the picture? How do you make sure you understand scope and timeline? What do you do if sometime changes?
All these questions and more will be explored as we talk about matching clients’ needs with what your agency offers without pulling teeth or pulling your hair out. Practical tips, and strategies for successful relationship building that leads to closing the deal.
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
GraphRAG is All You need? LLM & Knowledge GraphGuy Korland
Guy Korland, CEO and Co-founder of FalkorDB, will review two articles on the integration of language models with knowledge graphs.
1. Unifying Large Language Models and Knowledge Graphs: A Roadmap.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08302
2. Microsoft Research's GraphRAG paper and a review paper on various uses of knowledge graphs:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/graphrag-unlocking-llm-discovery-on-narrative-private-data/
"Impact of front-end architecture on development cost", Viktor TurskyiFwdays
I have heard many times that architecture is not important for the front-end. Also, many times I have seen how developers implement features on the front-end just following the standard rules for a framework and think that this is enough to successfully launch the project, and then the project fails. How to prevent this and what approach to choose? I have launched dozens of complex projects and during the talk we will analyze which approaches have worked for me and which have not.
From Daily Decisions to Bottom Line: Connecting Product Work to Revenue by VP...
457 navabi
1. Proceedings, International IAPS-CSBE & HOUSING Network 20091
NEW AND HISTORICAL TEXTURE
Davood Navabi Asl, AmirMohtasham Arab Aval, Abbas Arjmandi
Payam Noor University (Islamic Republic of Iran)
Abstract
Increased ugliness which is now observed everywhere, not only in so-called third-world countries,
but also in post-modern countries, suggests an internal destruction of today’s human being. The
spaces have lost their traditional concept and have changed into wide elements without any form,
and lacking any effective role in city life. Historical textures acted as alive-natural structures , in the
past , by natural and organic formation , and by their repeated process of freshmen of courses , this
similarity in the process of growth , and changing is not more longer a natural trend, and as other
aspects of life, has got and artificial form. Saying clearly, since our today’s architecture has lost its
effectivity and dynamic in the line of live and valuable trend of previous architecture. The city is the
pathway of time .the generations comes and goes , city’s public and residential spaces, continuously
are established and after a while they erode and finally like generations they will revived.
The spaces have lost their traditional concept
Increased ugliness which is now observed everywhere, not only in so-called third-world
countries, but also in post-modern countries, suggests an internal destruction of today’s
human being. Exactly as repetitive and mauled human (which it's itself a reason for his
emptiness) the space is absolutely become uniform and homogenous. Nowadays, the
cities are faced with a big problem in the field of city-planning. Citizens developed and
developing cities and the increasing need for all the new habitat and comments to major
urban planners day notice to new areas. Among the major points that one anonymous
opportunities for new programs will be face experts, historical context is in the cities due to
special situation in place have high potential.
City spaces have lost their traditional roles. These spaces have been considered the most
social places in the cities, such as bazaars, streets and squares where a lot of people
gathered. They had the traditional concept of space but, now, they have converted into
the oldest and poorest points of cities and could not be able to find their real positions as
the cites have developed, and have no effective role in the life of new city.
The tissues as a historic one hand and other hand-worn tissue as a heritage symbol of
generations past and crystallization, culture and national investment that is almost,
especially in recent decades in developed countries strongly considered is located. So
that many experts believe that these countries meet these tissues are spiritual values can
be a good potential to be fundraising material. The spaces have lost their traditional
concept and have changed into wide elements without any form, and lacking any effective
role in city life.
The integrated buildings and structures, part of which were the texture of streets and
squares, and which introduced the alive spaces, are no longer existing, they have
disintegrated into separated bodies which only think about themselves, not about city as a
whole body. Historical textures acted as alive-natural structures , in the past , by natural
and organic formation , and by their repeated process of freshmen of courses , this
similarity in the process of growth , and changing is not more longer a natural trend, and
Keywords:
Historical
texture
New texture
City planning
Requalifying
Revitalizing
Contat Person:
Davood Navabi
Asl : Payam
Noor uni - Iran -
Sistan &
Balochestan –
Zahedan -,
Khayyam St –
plate 431,
postal Code :
9817697788,
Fax : +98-
5412417585,
Mobile
Number:+98-
9194384218,
Email:
Davood.navabi
@gmail.com
2. Proceedings, International IAPS-CSBE & HOUSING Network 20092
as other aspects of life, has got and artificial form. So, it can be said that the existing
situation of historical textures which are still alive, active and dynamic.
Although at a least level, can be seen as natural tissue of an alive patient, for whom
efforts are being made in other to keep them alive, but the direction and performance of
Thiess activities sometime , lead to their death or sometime result in changing them into
an artificial creature who by getting denoted, continuous to Thiess abnormal life, whit
respect to this similarity and accepting the fact that modern architecture is suggested as a
period of general declination and disintegration, the efforts and activities which are caroled
out to survive historical textures, especially the valuable pieces in these textures, can be
supposed as an effect in keeping alive this ill and weak creature.
The city is the pathway of time
Saying clearly, since our today’s architecture has lost its effectivity and dynamic in the line
of live and valuable trend of previous architecture, the historic textures as well as their
infrastructures cannot be dynamic and they cannot get their living activity completely, at
the rate of 100%, it seams that we should be await until the general soul of time, life and
soul of previous values will be back to the body of new and historical texture.
The city is the pathway of time .the generations comes and goes, city’s public and
residential spaces, continuously are established and after a while they erode and finally
like generations they will revived . But, despite these continuous and permanent changes
in the environment, the memories and memorials remain. these keep sakes , being the
persisting parts of cities, were established a long time ago , and now they have become
traditional spaces and old quarters .in fact, historical textures are accumulated saving that
cover and include treasures of social memories, and ways of our ancestors thinking and
living .
Tissue historical part of our cultural capital, and they have the sentence compression
savings. These tissues with some treasure memories of social thinking and living styles
persistent, the path over time due to the effect of low quality water and air, ground
handling, vibrations caused by traffic cars, inadequate maintenance and poor, worn , have
been unstable and vulnerable.Essentially clear differences between the historical context
that expresses the historical period and styles of architecture and urbanism are valuable
with old tissue that can be of historical value there.How to deal with old tissue expression
primarily to wear tissue is used which indicated lack of historical context is the value.
Tissues, usually in terms of ancient historical and cultural heritage importance, have been
considered.
References
Trancik R, 1986, “Finding Lost Space, Theories of Urban Design” Van Nostrand Reinhold Company,
New York
Christopher A, “The Search of Beauty” Stanford University
Thomas A, Markus and Deborah Cameron, “The Words Between The Spaces: Building and
Language” ( Routledge , London / Newyork )
3. Davood Navabi asl
Amir mohtasham Arab aval , Abbas Arjomandi
Increased ugliness which is now observed everywhere, not only in so-called third-world
countries, but also in post-modern countries, suggests an internal destruction of today’s
human being. Exactly as repetitive and mauled human (which it's itself a reason for his
emptiness) the space is absolutely become uniform and homogenous. Nowadays, the
cities are faced with a big problem in the field of city-planning. City spaces have lost their
traditional roles. These spaces have been considered the most social places in the cities,
such as bazaars, streets and squares where a lot of people gathered. They had the tradi-
tional concept of space but, notional concept of space but, now, they have converted into the oldest and poorest points of
cities and could not be able to find their real positions as the cites have developed, and
have no effective role in the life of new city
The spaces have lost their traditional concept and have changed into wide elements with-The spaces have lost their traditional concept and have changed into wide elements with-
out any form, and lacking any effective role in city life. The integrated buildings and struc-
tures, part of which were the texture of streets and squares, and which introduced the alive
spaces, are no longer existing, they have disintegrated into separated bodies which only
think about themselves, not about city as a whole body. Historical textures acted as alive-
natural structures , in the past , by natural and organic formation , and by their repeated
process of freshmen of courses , this similarity in the process of growth , and changing is
not more longer a natural trend, and as other aspects of life, has got and artificial form. So,
it can be said that the existing situation of historical textures which are still alive, active and
dynamic. Although at a least level, can be seen as natural tissue of an alive patient, for
whom efforts are being made in other to keep them alive, but the direction and perfor-
mance of Thiess activities sometime , lead to their death or sometime result in changing
them into an artificial creature who by getting denoted, continuous to Thiess abnormal life,
whit respect to this similarity and accepting the fact that modern architecture is suggested
as a period of general declination and disintegration, the eas a period of general declination and disintegration, the efforts and activities which are
caroled out to survive historical textures, especially the valuable pieces in these textures,
can be supposed as an effect in keeping alive this ill and weak creature
Saying clearly, since our today’s architecture has lost its effectivity and dynamic in the line
of live and valuable trend of previous architecture, the historic textures as well as their infra-
structures cannot be dynamic and they cannot get their living activity completely, at the
rate of 100%, it seams that we should be await until the general soul of time, life and soul
of previous values will be back to the body of new and historical texture
Payam Noor University
New and historical Texture