Habitat évolutif
(English) Often, studying the multiple variations that a building undergoes is like taking a trip back in time. Discovering what is behind this transformation is like an open book for those who know how to read it, where very distant details are told that leave a mark and when that mark becomes visi...
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| Tipo de recurso: | tesis doctoral |
| Fecha de publicación: | 2024 |
| País: | España |
| Institución: | Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC) |
| Repositorio: | UPCommons. Portal del coneixement obert de la UPC |
| Idioma: | español |
| OAI Identifier: | oai:upcommons.upc.edu:2117/424252 |
| Acceso en línea: | https://hdl.handle.net/2117/424252 https://dx.doi.org/10.5821/dissertation-2117-424252 |
| Access Level: | acceso abierto |
| Palabra clave: | Habitat Evolución Bidonville Realojo Apilamientos Segunda Guerra Mundial Casablanca TIempo Hàbitat Evolució Bidonvilles Reallotjament Apilaments Segona Guerra Mundial Temps Evolution Relocation Starks World War II Time 72 Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Arquitectura |
| Sumario: | (English) Often, studying the multiple variations that a building undergoes is like taking a trip back in time. Discovering what is behind this transformation is like an open book for those who know how to read it, where very distant details are told that leave a mark and when that mark becomes visible, it is like returning to the beginning of that journey. It thus becomes a circle of relationships influenced by certain perceptible manifestations. However, on the other hand, most of these will be intangible and will be the ones that will truly determine the more or less adequate quality of what is acquired. The transformation of the environment, conditioned by the existence of human nature, is influenced by multiple factors that affect a probable response to environmental stimuli. The need for shelter and a social setting must be satisfied through an architectural form and the order in the landscape that occurs there through all the instinctive tools that promote survival. This is the case with the shanty towns that cluster around the motley industrial, French colonial area of the coastal city of Casablanca. A period of transition that goes from 1945 to 1956, between the end of colonialism and the beginnings of decolonization, where these slums, slums, slums or, more in line with their colonial origin, bidonvilles, proliferate as a paradigm and pathology. In their attempt to structure and restructure the city in the face of these spontaneous masses that jeopardized the orderly growth of cities, new studies on the change in the coming scenario anticipate ideas and projects on the behaviors and ways of life that have arisen and imposed on the tables of performance. In mind, past and future forms of life seek balance on the direction of the anticipated city that only time in its knowledge will tell. Faced with solutions of acquired interpretation, the contrasting stacks of courtyard houses as a genuine and deep-rooted way of understanding the Moroccan city, awaken in the consciousness of the natural passage of time an advance without a solution of continuity from a past that is still operational. The indeterminate spaces and the adaptation to the different needs as indispensable qualities in the possession of the homes will mark this premise imposed in the face of the inability to take another course other than that of adaptation to wrong situations, the object of European experimentations, where the building manifests as an incomplete assumption until the moment in which it is not inhabited or the individual is capable of appropriating it. In its continuity and on the movement that causes what has already been learned, one more step establishes the development of prolonged growth. The conquest of height, the true upward evolution based on the synthesis of studies on the acquired or imposed place, its people, origins and its multiple errors as true tests of what is understood to last, a constant, a continued evolution to understand or extract an approximation to the so-called habitat. |
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