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Architectural objects confront their environment. They constitute a boundary, a form with an internalized point of view. Understanding architecture as environmental objects suggest a questioning of these dichotomies of separation between the symbolic landmark and the landscape background. It represents an architecture that amplifies nature, attunes to it and makes us aware of it.00Portugal Lessons: Imagining Architecture as Environmental Object takes Portugal as case study for such contextualism going beyond and understanding of design as immunization. Based on the latest research program conducted by EPFL?s Laboratory Basel (laba), it explores the topic of this architectural boundary: with whom we live with, to whom we open our house, how permeable the boundary should be. The findings are visualized in striking images, graphics and maps. The book also features proposals for architectural interventions by laba?s students, all of them tackling issues of housing.
Architecture --- Housing --- Environmental aspects. --- Portugal. --- Architecture écologique --- Analyse de site --- Recherche --- Rapport architecture-nature --- Intégration au site naturel --- Environmental aspects --- Ecole polytechnique Federale de Lausanne. --- Architecture - Environmental aspects - Portugal --- Architecture - Environmental aspects - Case studies --- Housing - Environmental aspects - Portugal
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Our contemporary condition, governed by the abstract apparatus of the capitalist market, demands a critical reading of the distribution, ownership, and use of common resources, especially on an island that has experienced a long history of privatization stemming from enclosure. Manor Lessons, the third investigation into what laba has termed 'environmental objects,' looks at how the manor house can be used as a testing ground to reassess Britain's complex and ongoing relationship with the countryside. As the most rural region of one of the more densely populated countries en Europe, the South West of England relfects all the absurdities of a globalized country under pressure, not only to develop its economy and infrastructure, but simultaneous to support and protect its environment. Highly protected landscapes, both natural and composed, serve as the backdrop to historic seats of political power, while sites of intense production are neatly concealed behind natural veils. This publication asks what lessons can be learned from the multi-layered history of the Manorial System, whose forgotten feudalistic origins were once rooted in the idea of the land not as private property but as common ground.
Architecture --- Architecture du paysage --- Projets d'architecture --- Enclosures --- Manoirs --- Étude et enseignement --- Aspect environnemental --- Angleterre (GB) --- Étude et enseignement --- projet d'architecture --- Château --- enseignement de l'architecture --- Analyse rurale --- Histoire rurale
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