Online Lectures Calendar — AIA INTERNATIONAL

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Public Space

Filtering by: Public Space

Feb
26
6:00 AM06:00
G3

AIA IR Taipei - Contextual Revelation - Revealing History with Design

AIA IR Taipei - Contextual Revelation - Revealing History with Design

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When: Friday 26 February 2021 @ 06:00 (Eastern US Time)/ 19:00 (Taipei time)
CES Credits - 2.0 LU

Description

Finding historical traces while balancing this with the need to add on has been a struggle for many practitioners. This lecture considers this topic via a case study - the addition to Pingtung Public Library by Mayu Architects. A new and transparent lobby is attached to the existing building facing the city. The course considers the following aspects of the project to understand the issues involved in constructing an addition to a historic building:

1. At the urban scale, how it reorients the entrance to face the city and embrace the citizen’s daily life.

2. At the architectural scale, how the new glass entrance serves as a big open window linking the interior to the exterior, displaying the activities in the library to the city while taking in the surrounding landscape, bringing vitality to the interior.

3. Program intervention: the creation of several “activity islands” in the lobby, with triangular elements, including a sunken seating area, a floating mezzanine, and a pair of suspended lanterns. Given its form, use of materials, colors, and its social- cultural meanings, the new lobby is a modern interpretation of a “slate building”, a typical aboriginal dwelling type in Pingtung.

4. Spatial considerations: the removal of monumental concrete stairs to create a pair of double height spaces for seniors and teenagers. The introduction of natural materials, modern furniture and glass partitions here helps bring fluidity, transparency and a sense of intimacy to the library.

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Dec
17
4:30 AM04:30
G3

AIA Japan - Locally-based Sustainable Design Approach for Walkability in Dubai - by Takeshi Maruyama, AUD

AIA Japan - Locally-based Sustainable Design Approach for Walkability in Dubai - by Takeshi Maruyama, AUD

When: Thursday, December 17 @ 04:30 (Eastern US time)/ 18:30 (Japan time)

CES Credits - 2.0 LU/ HSW

Speaker: Takeshi Maruyama, American University in Dubai

Description:

Since the discovery of oil in 1966 and its subsequent financial revenues, Dubai has been developing rapidly into a global city – while mainly adapting the western urban development style. Suburban growth exploded, with urban sprawl becoming an issue since the early 1980s. Local towns spread out and expanded in scale. Consequently, Dubai could be called ‘Cities within a city,’ representing many fragmented western-style suburban communities connected by automobiles. People often attribute problems with walkability or the limited pedestrian-oriented activities to the harsh weather. Still, harsh weather in Dubai lasts roughly four months out of the year, causing people to avoid the outdoors during that period. Nevertheless, the somewhat limited walkability continues throughout the year, even in the nicer weather. Then what is the leading cause of this phenomenon? 

My study argues that this limited walkability is not due to weather but due to the urban structure caused by mega-developments in Dubai, which do not consider human scale or local culture. For instance, old districts such as Satwa or Karama have a more compact scale; therefore, pedestrian activities occur naturally. Aggressive adaptation of western-style urbanization completely goes against locally-adapted sustainable design approaches that ancestors have fostered in the city. Driveways and fenced-gardens have replaced the narrow alleys (Sikka) and the court-yard houses of the past. These drastically changed the structure of communities, therefore, impacting walkability as well as the health, safety and welfare of its residents.

This issue is a common theme discussed in the thesis courses and sustainability design studios, which I am instructing at the university. The lecture will demonstrate potential design solutions for walkability and enhancing outdoor public space usage within existing urban areas. 

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