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»Healing Design«, »Architecture for Health«, »Urban Health« - immer lauter wird der Ruf nach Bauten, die nicht nur funktional gestaltet sind, sondern so, dass Menschen sich in ihnen wohlfühlen und besser gesund werden: nach Architekturen also, welche die Gesetzmäßigkeiten des leiblich-räumlichen Wahrnehmens und Spürens berücksichtigen. Katharina Brichetti und Franz Mechsner stellen Projekte heilsamer Architektur vor und verbinden dies mit Einsichten aus Psychologie, Neurobiologie und Phänomenologie, um zu zeigen, was menschenfreundliche Raumgestaltung ausmacht. Im Mittelpunkt steht dabei die Wirkung gebauter Umwelt auf das Erleben im Sinne einer »Rehumanisierung von Architektur« (Gernot Böhme). »Damit das, was Brichetti und Mechsner in ihrem Buch an Wissens- und Lösungsansätzen so hilfreich zusammengetragen haben, sich zukünftig vermehrt in Praxis umzusetzen lässt, bedarf es der Zusammenarbeit von Bürgerbeteiligungen und interdisziplinären Expertengruppen. Dementsprechend empfehle ich ihr Buch sehr für alle ExpertInnen und Initiativen aus Stadtplanungs- und Krankenbereichen, aber auch aus Politik und Ökonomie.« Helmut Milz, www.flaneurin.at, 18.10.2020 »Die beiden Autoren lassen nicht außer Acht, dass der Zugang zu architektonisch heilsamen Umgebungen immer stärker zu einer Frage der sozialen Gerechtigkeit wird. So ist ein Buch entstanden, das Architektur in einen ganzheitlichen Zusammenhang stellt.« Stadt+Grün, 8 (2019) Besprochen in: www.kultur-punkt.ch, 7 (2019), Franz Mechsner Stadt und Raum, 4 (2019) Konturen, 06.09.2019 www.swiss-architects.com, 19.09.2019, Inge Beckel TEC21, 45 (2019) DAB Regional, 12 (2019), Loni Siegmund jot.wd, 12 (2019), Ralf Nachtmann Stadt+Grün, 8 (2019)
Heilsame Architektur; Heilung; Embodied Mind; Leibliche Wahrnehmung; Umweltpsychologie; Spirituelle Architektur; Entschleunigung; Phänomenologische Raumforschung; Gesundheitsbauten; Krankenhaus; Arztpraxis; Gernot Böhme; Architektur; Psychoanalyse; Medizin; Sozialpsychologie; Healing Architecture; Healing; Physical Perception; Environmental Psychology; Spritual Architecture; Deceleration; Phenomenological Spatial Research; Health Buildings; Hospital; Medical Practice; Architecture; Psychoanalysis; Medicine; Social Psychology --- Architecture. --- Deceleration. --- Embodied Mind. --- Environmental Psychology. --- Gernot Böhme. --- Healing. --- Health Buildings. --- Hospital. --- Medical Practice. --- Medicine. --- Phenomenological Spatial Research. --- Physical Perception. --- Psychoanalysis. --- Social Psychology. --- Spritual Architecture.
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The Heritage Patterns—Representative Models issue of Heritage welcomed twelve articles that discussed traditional and contemporary methodologies, as well as scholars from different backgrounds who intended to seek patterns of tangible heritage and its underlying principles to understand the diversity of heritage approaches. The Special Issue aims to research the patterns in heritage and the underlying rules that define tangible heritage as a universal value in spatial coexistence, economics, urban life, and design via case studies and theoretical proposals that could be implemented in the future. The pattern language and the heritage phenomenon could act as a base of observation to deduct logic and create generative algorithms (generative design); to understand the importance of spatial connection with tangible heritage and urban forms (space syntax, urban morphology, and urban morphometrics) and its visibility; as well as archaeological, architectural, and urban heritage. Based on the UNESCO-ICOMOS doctrines and the examination of morphological regions, urban morphological research and its different layers (urban forms, structural components, built environment, urban tissue, and their interaction) act as a background and foundation for general urban heritage conservation and protection proposals, and also as the base of specific interventions in the built environment caused by natural disasters.
urban morphology --- historico-geographical --- town plan --- preservation --- design guidelines --- conservation --- heritage --- urban form --- town-plan --- streets --- plots --- block-plans of buildings --- New York --- urban planning --- pattern language --- generative modelling --- Vienna --- Austria-Hungary --- Barnet --- suburban centres --- spatial morphology --- heritage syntax urbanism --- community heritage --- tangible heritage --- intangible heritage --- space syntax --- cultural heritage --- industrial landscape planning --- industrial landscape --- post-industrial landscape --- industrial tourism --- industrial heritage --- spatial layout --- spatial distribution --- spatial structure --- mapping --- surveying --- indigenous place values --- colonisation --- Michel de Certeau --- lost landscapes --- design reparation --- architecture --- healing architecture --- ergonomics --- community building --- ecology --- architecture for children --- low-tech --- universal design --- vernacular architecture --- regionalism --- visibility analysis --- isovist --- field of view --- urban heritage --- built environment --- Istanbul --- architectural heritage --- spatial distribution characteristics --- influencing factors --- UNESCO heritage --- heritage protection --- urban history --- urban design of 19th century --- system of public squares and city parks --- Zagreb --- Croatia --- urban block --- urban transformation --- urban reconstruction --- historical core --- sustainable urbanisation --- liveable urbanism --- evidence-based design --- Asian cities
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The Heritage Patterns—Representative Models issue of Heritage welcomed twelve articles that discussed traditional and contemporary methodologies, as well as scholars from different backgrounds who intended to seek patterns of tangible heritage and its underlying principles to understand the diversity of heritage approaches. The Special Issue aims to research the patterns in heritage and the underlying rules that define tangible heritage as a universal value in spatial coexistence, economics, urban life, and design via case studies and theoretical proposals that could be implemented in the future. The pattern language and the heritage phenomenon could act as a base of observation to deduct logic and create generative algorithms (generative design); to understand the importance of spatial connection with tangible heritage and urban forms (space syntax, urban morphology, and urban morphometrics) and its visibility; as well as archaeological, architectural, and urban heritage. Based on the UNESCO-ICOMOS doctrines and the examination of morphological regions, urban morphological research and its different layers (urban forms, structural components, built environment, urban tissue, and their interaction) act as a background and foundation for general urban heritage conservation and protection proposals, and also as the base of specific interventions in the built environment caused by natural disasters.
The arts --- Architecture --- urban morphology --- historico-geographical --- town plan --- preservation --- design guidelines --- conservation --- heritage --- urban form --- town-plan --- streets --- plots --- block-plans of buildings --- New York --- urban planning --- pattern language --- generative modelling --- Vienna --- Austria-Hungary --- Barnet --- suburban centres --- spatial morphology --- heritage syntax urbanism --- community heritage --- tangible heritage --- intangible heritage --- space syntax --- cultural heritage --- industrial landscape planning --- industrial landscape --- post-industrial landscape --- industrial tourism --- industrial heritage --- spatial layout --- spatial distribution --- spatial structure --- mapping --- surveying --- indigenous place values --- colonisation --- Michel de Certeau --- lost landscapes --- design reparation --- architecture --- healing architecture --- ergonomics --- community building --- ecology --- architecture for children --- low-tech --- universal design --- vernacular architecture --- regionalism --- visibility analysis --- isovist --- field of view --- urban heritage --- built environment --- Istanbul --- architectural heritage --- spatial distribution characteristics --- influencing factors --- UNESCO heritage --- heritage protection --- urban history --- urban design of 19th century --- system of public squares and city parks --- Zagreb --- Croatia --- urban block --- urban transformation --- urban reconstruction --- historical core --- sustainable urbanisation --- liveable urbanism --- evidence-based design --- Asian cities --- urban morphology --- historico-geographical --- town plan --- preservation --- design guidelines --- conservation --- heritage --- urban form --- town-plan --- streets --- plots --- block-plans of buildings --- New York --- urban planning --- pattern language --- generative modelling --- Vienna --- Austria-Hungary --- Barnet --- suburban centres --- spatial morphology --- heritage syntax urbanism --- community heritage --- tangible heritage --- intangible heritage --- space syntax --- cultural heritage --- industrial landscape planning --- industrial landscape --- post-industrial landscape --- industrial tourism --- industrial heritage --- spatial layout --- spatial distribution --- spatial structure --- mapping --- surveying --- indigenous place values --- colonisation --- Michel de Certeau --- lost landscapes --- design reparation --- architecture --- healing architecture --- ergonomics --- community building --- ecology --- architecture for children --- low-tech --- universal design --- vernacular architecture --- regionalism --- visibility analysis --- isovist --- field of view --- urban heritage --- built environment --- Istanbul --- architectural heritage --- spatial distribution characteristics --- influencing factors --- UNESCO heritage --- heritage protection --- urban history --- urban design of 19th century --- system of public squares and city parks --- Zagreb --- Croatia --- urban block --- urban transformation --- urban reconstruction --- historical core --- sustainable urbanisation --- liveable urbanism --- evidence-based design --- Asian cities
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