2 sonuçlar
Arama Sonuçları
Listeleniyor 1 - 2 / 2
Yayın REINTERPRETARE IL RUOLO ECOLOGICO DELL’ACQUA Materiali viventi e design inclusivo(LetteraVentidue Edizioni S.r.l., 2025-12-30) Süyük Makaklı, Elif; Yücesan Altay, EbruL’acqua ha storicamente agito come catalizzatore culturale dello spazio, plasmando la vitacollettiva attraverso la sua presenza ecologica e sensoriale. In tale ottica l’articolo reinterpretail ruolo ecologico dell’acqua attraverso un approccio ‘ricerca attraverso il design’ che sviluppaun quadro concettuale per la progettazione di interventi di micro-architetture. Lo studio esploracome i materiali a base biologica, e in particolare i compositi di micelio e i sistemi biolumine-scenti, possano migliorare il coinvolgimento multisensoriale e la consapevolezza ecologicanegli spazi pubblici. Attingendo alla recente letteratura internazionale e alla ricerca nel campodel progetto il contributo individua parametri per le prestazioni luminose, il comportamentodei materiali e la reattività ambientale. La proposta che ne risulta posiziona l’acqua comeun mezzo spaziale attivo, percettibile e inclusivo, contribuendo ai dibattiti attuali sul designmultispecie, l’urbanistica sensoriale e il legame tra gli SDG 6, 11 e 13.Yayın Architects' journeys to Italy and their contribution to architectural culture in postwar-era Turkey(Cambridge University Press, 2024-12) Hamiloğlu, Ceren; Özsoy, AhsenIn the twentieth century, the mobility of architects and ideas played an important role in the dissemination of an architecture culture characterised by modernity. Architectural ideas were disseminated through institutions and a variety of visual, verbal, and textual representations as well as physical encounters. Travel, with its associated architectural thinking and representation, became a generative practice through which the dissemination of architecture could be understood. The Grand Tour was one of the most well-studied examples of travel as a rite of passage, and Italy remained a dominant destination long after its peak in the eighteenth century. Italian architectural discourse entered Turkey through travels and publications, mostly in the prewar era. This article aims to show the role of architects’ travels in inducing architectural productions through a variety of representations from sketches to published media, scrutinising Turkish-speaking architects’ journeys to Italy in the postwar era. The study incorporates content analysis of selected media - such as photographs, articles, class notes, books, and memoirs - to review architects’ productions during and after their travels, as they facilitated the dissemination of an architecture culture ‘brought back’ after key experiences.












