PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

PORTALE DELLA DIDATTICA

Elenco notifiche



Architecture and urban space

04QLVPQ

A.A. 2018/19

Course Language

Inglese

Degree programme(s)

Course structure
Teaching Hours
Lezioni 64
Esercitazioni in aula 16
Tutoraggio 45
Lecturers
Teacher Status SSD h.Les h.Ex h.Lab h.Tut Years teaching
Bonino Michele
Architecture and urban space (Architectural and urban design)
Professore Ordinario CEAR-09/A 40 10 0 0 10
Sampieri Angelo
Architecture and urban space (Urban planning)
Professore Associato CEAR-12/B 48 12 0 0 8
Co-lectures
Espandi

Context
SSD CFU Activities Area context
2018/19
In the Design Unit 2, the students will continue to enhance their skills in managing a complex architectural project autonomously, already trained during the design experience of Design Unit 1, especially for the constructive aspects. The topics of Design Unit 2 will be the elaboration of a complex urban design, in the urban and architectural components, and in any case integrating the architectural design of a building to demonstrate the possession of the techniques, the methodologies and the specific abilities of the European architect. Through the knowledge and in-depth analysis of the specific design theme, the students will acquire an understanding and interpretation of the complex phenomena that characterise the contemporary processes of urbanisation and urban regeneration, at both levels local and global. The overall educational goal of the “Architecture and Urban Space” Design Unit is elaborate a complex urban project from the knowledge and skills provided by two specific subjects, complementary between them: Architectural Design, and Urban Planning, the latter providing specialist knowledge about the urban dimension of architecture. To these two subjects are associated in the Design Unit the specific knowledge and skills provided by one or more related and integrative disciplines, selected in relation with the specific design topics of every Design Unit. Through the experience of the Design Unit, the student will acquire not only the general design skills, but also the specific knowledge and skills in Urban Planning, mandatory in the Master’s degree, as an alternative to the 2nd Year Course in “Town Planning”.
In the Design Unit 2, the students will continue to enhance their skills in managing a complex architectural project autonomously, already trained during the design experience of Design Unit 1, especially for the constructive aspects. The topics of Design Unit 2 will be the elaboration of a complex urban design, in the urban and architectural components, and in any case integrating the architectural design of a building to demonstrate the possession of the techniques, the methodologies and the specific abilities of the European architect. Through the knowledge and in-depth analysis of the specific design theme, the students will acquire an understanding and interpretation of the complex phenomena that characterise the contemporary processes of urbanisation and urban regeneration, at both levels local and global. The overall educational goal of the “Architecture and Urban Space” Design Unit is elaborate a complex urban project from the knowledge and skills provided by two specific subjects, complementary between them: Architectural Design, and Urban Planning, the latter providing specialist knowledge about the urban dimension of architecture. To these two subjects are associated in the Design Unit the specific knowledge and skills provided by one or more related and integrative disciplines, selected in relation with the specific design topics of every Design Unit. Through the experience of the Design Unit, the student will acquire not only the general design skills, but also the specific knowledge and skills in Urban Planning, mandatory in the Master’s degree, as an alternative to the 2nd Year Course in “Town Planning”.
The Design Unit 2 deepens and develops the advanced knowledge and the design skills learned during the Design Unit 1: such a knowledge is acquired within the Design Unit and through a series of mono-disciplinary or multi-disciplinary lectures, and through studies and in-depth modules on theories, relevant to the design themes and issues. The advanced progresses in knowledge and understanding will be assessed through mid-term and final evaluations during the Design Unit, especially aimed at assessing the students’ capability to synthesise and to integrate the different disciplines contributing to the Unit. In the experience of the Design Unit “Architecture and Urban Space”, the understanding of the complex phenomena that govern urban and territorial transformations, both in its architectural and urban components, occurs through the knowledge and the in-depth analysis of the specific design theme. The instructors provide multi-disciplinary knowledge of all the aspects of the complex context within which the design has to be developed. The ability to understand and interpret the complex phenomena that characterize the practices of urbanisation and urban regeneration, at both local and global levels, also occurs in the ability to work in un international context, understanding cultures and traditions not only national, also through the choice of topics and design sites in international context, in the capacity of a design and narrative synthese, and in the ability to carry out individual research, aimed to connect architectural design, history, urban culture and decision processes. In the design experience during the Design Unit, the capability to apply knowledge and skills is primarily defined by the ability to independently manage a complex urban project in a given time, through the mastery of techniques, methods and skills specific to the job of the Architect. The capability to independently manage a project of urban and territorial transformation is expressed in the ability to analyse complex and non-univocal information, to interpret them into a shared decision-making process, but also in the ability to exert leadership in a necessarily multi-disciplinary design team, even toward languages and social and public practices. The experience of the Design Unit, characterized by an intense experimentation, is configured as a partial simulation of effective design practices in the real-world. As such, it ensures the acquisition of the ability of applying knowledge and understanding. This ability is assessed through intermediate and final evaluations within the Design Unit, with the contributions of guest experts from practice, with especial attention to the capability to integrate and synthesise the various disciplines involved in the Unit, as well as to meet the timetable of the activities, which requires the students to complete the project at the end of the semester. The ability to process a complex architectural project in a given time represents a specific ability of the work of the architect: this will be verified at the exam that will take place during the first week of exams, in the first examination session consecutive to the Design Unit.
The Design Unit 2 deepens and develops the advanced knowledge and the design skills learned during the Design Unit 1: such a knowledge is acquired within the Design Unit and through a series of mono-disciplinary or multi-disciplinary lectures, and through studies and in-depth modules on theories, relevant to the design themes and issues. The advanced progresses in knowledge and understanding will be assessed through mid-term and final evaluations during the Design Unit, especially aimed at assessing the students’ capability to synthesise and to integrate the different disciplines contributing to the Unit. In the experience of the Design Unit “Architecture and Urban Space”, the understanding of the complex phenomena that govern urban and territorial transformations, both in its architectural and urban components, occurs through the knowledge and the in-depth analysis of the specific design theme. The instructors provide multi-disciplinary knowledge of all the aspects of the complex context within which the design has to be developed. The ability to understand and interpret the complex phenomena that characterize the practices of urbanisation and urban regeneration, at both local and global levels, also occurs in the ability to work in un international context, understanding cultures and traditions not only national, also through the choice of topics and design sites in international context, in the capacity of a design and narrative synthese, and in the ability to carry out individual research, aimed to connect architectural design, history, urban culture and decision processes. In the design experience during the Design Unit, the capability to apply knowledge and skills is primarily defined by the ability to independently manage a complex urban project in a given time, through the mastery of techniques, methods and skills specific to the job of the Architect. The capability to independently manage a project of urban and territorial transformation is expressed in the ability to analyse complex and non-univocal information, to interpret them into a shared decision-making process, but also in the ability to exert leadership in a necessarily multi-disciplinary design team, even toward languages and social and public practices. The experience of the Design Unit, characterized by an intense experimentation, is configured as a partial simulation of effective design practices in the real-world. As such, it ensures the acquisition of the ability of applying knowledge and understanding. This ability is assessed through intermediate and final evaluations within the Design Unit, with the contributions of guest experts from practice, with especial attention to the capability to integrate and synthesise the various disciplines involved in the Unit, as well as to meet the timetable of the activities, which requires the students to complete the project at the end of the semester. The ability to process a complex architectural project in a given time represents a specific ability of the work of the architect: this will be verified at the exam that will take place during the first week of exams, in the first examination session consecutive to the Design Unit.
The basic critical and design skills, along with the concepts and introductory tools in Urban Planning are assumed to have been acquired during the Disciplinary Courses and the Design Ateliers of the Bachelor Degree in “Sciences of Architecture”. It is necessary to possess the knowledge and skills trained during the Design Unit 1, especially the ability to process autonomously a complex architectural project in a given time. A last prerequisite is represented by the knowledge and skills learned in the Courses of First Semester “Building Information Modelling” and “Building physics and energy system in architecture”.
The basic critical and design skills, along with the concepts and introductory tools in Urban Planning are assumed to have been acquired during the Disciplinary Courses and the Design Ateliers of the Bachelor Degree in “Sciences of Architecture”. It is necessary to possess the knowledge and skills trained during the Design Unit 1, especially the ability to process autonomously a complex architectural project in a given time. A last prerequisite is represented by the knowledge and skills learned in the Courses of First Semester “Building Information Modelling” and “Building physics and energy system in architecture”.
The Design Unit addresses the issue of quality in phenomena of large-scale urbanization in the Chinese city. The construction of hundreds of new cities is progressing rapidly all over the Country, without stratification or diversity. The grain that "makes the city" is no longer the house, as it was in traditional China, but large mono-functional blocks, avoiding any chance of keeping the human dimension at the center of the project. Our project site is Lanzhou New Area: a new town built from scratch in the desert of the Gansu Province, to serve as a strategical hub for the Belt and Road Initiative, also known as the new Silk Road. In collaboration with Tsinghua University and Ecole Poliytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, the Design Unit will study, on the one hand, the design aspects of this kind of new urban space; on the other hand the dynamics of settlement and social integration, as well as the mechanisms of appropriation of urban space through the contributions of Urban Sociology and Governance of Urban Space. The aim of the project is to realize an urban space that focuses on community-building, social coherence and quality of places. Classes are articulated in the following way: - The contribution of Architectural Design (8 credits) presents a series of public spaces and buildings for social activities that emerge in the Chinese urbanization in certain privileged contexts: but they tend to fail in the "ordinary" urbanization. - The contribution of Urban Planning (6 credits) will focus on emerging transformations in territorial dynamics and on the way in which contemporary urban design aims to address them, both in the East as in Western countries. To do this, particular attention will be paid to: (i) the way in which analyze and represent complex metropolitan systems across multiple scales of intervention and development, (ii) the way in which design cultures involved in the reshaping of infrastructural and environmental systems emphasize their role in the organization of a collective landscape. - The contribution of Governance of Urban Space (3 credits) will focus on policies and strategies behind the physical construction of the public space. - The contribution of Urban Sociology (3 credits) will focus on the urban and social fabric of the Chinese city, and particularly the new cities along the Belt and Road.
The Design Unit addresses the issue of quality in phenomena of large-scale urbanization in the Chinese city. The construction of hundreds of new cities is progressing rapidly all over the Country, without stratification or diversity. The grain that "makes the city" is no longer the house, as it was in traditional China, but large mono-functional blocks, avoiding any chance of keeping the human dimension at the center of the project. Our project site is Lanzhou New Area: a new town built from scratch in the desert of the Gansu Province, to serve as a strategical hub for the Belt and Road Initiative, also known as the new Silk Road. In collaboration with Tsinghua University and Ecole Poliytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, the Design Unit will study, on the one hand, the design aspects of this kind of new urban space; on the other hand the dynamics of settlement and social integration, as well as the mechanisms of appropriation of urban space through the contributions of Urban Sociology and Governance of Urban Space. The aim of the project is to realize an urban space that focuses on community-building, social coherence and quality of places. Classes are articulated in the following way: - The contribution of Architectural Design (8 credits) presents a series of public spaces and buildings for social activities that emerge in the Chinese urbanization in certain privileged contexts: but they tend to fail in the "ordinary" urbanization. - The contribution of Urban Planning (6 credits) will focus on emerging transformations in territorial dynamics and on the way in which contemporary urban design aims to address them, both in the East as in Western countries. To do this, particular attention will be paid to: (i) the way in which analyze and represent complex metropolitan systems across multiple scales of intervention and development, (ii) the way in which design cultures involved in the reshaping of infrastructural and environmental systems emphasize their role in the organization of a collective landscape. - The contribution of Governance of Urban Space (3 credits) will focus on policies and strategies behind the physical construction of the public space. - The contribution of Urban Sociology (3 credits) will focus on the urban and social fabric of the Chinese city, and particularly the new cities along the Belt and Road.
The first part of the course works on 3 parallel levels: a mapping analysis at the large scale of Lanzhou New Area; some case-study of Chinese public and collective places to be analyzed and redrawn; lectures, movies and readings aimed to provide the theoretical and methodological tools for the definition of the project. Then, after about 3 weeks, the design area will be divided in smaller areas of urban design, and individual themes of architectural design.
The first part of the course works on 3 parallel levels: a mapping analysis at the large scale of Lanzhou New Area; some case-study of Chinese public and collective places to be analyzed and redrawn; lectures, movies and readings aimed to provide the theoretical and methodological tools for the definition of the project. Then, after about 3 weeks, the design area will be divided in smaller areas of urban design, and individual themes of architectural design.
Bosker, Bianca. 2013. Original Copies: Architectural Mimicry in Contemporary China, University of Hawaii Press. Ren, Xuefei. 2013. Urban China. Cambridge: Polity Press. Sheppard, Wade. 2015. Ghost Cities of China, London: Zed Books. Wu, Fulong. 2015. Planning for Growth: Urban and Regional Planning in China. New York and London: Routledge. Wakeman Rosemary. 2016. Practising utopia: an intellectual history of the new town movement, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Rowe Peter G..2016. China's Urban Communities, Basel: Birkhäuser. Williams, Austin. 2017. China’s Urban Revolution. Understanding Chinese Eco-Cities, London - New York: Bloomsbury. During the classes articles published in several international journals (Urban Studies, City, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research) will be recommended. More specific texts will be assigned in the classroom depending on the choice of the actual project area.
Bosker, Bianca. 2013. Original Copies: Architectural Mimicry in Contemporary China, University of Hawaii Press. Ren, Xuefei. 2013. Urban China. Cambridge: Polity Press. Sheppard, Wade. 2015. Ghost Cities of China, London: Zed Books. Wu, Fulong. 2015. Planning for Growth: Urban and Regional Planning in China. New York and London: Routledge. Wakeman Rosemary. 2016. Practising utopia: an intellectual history of the new town movement, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Rowe Peter G..2016. China's Urban Communities, Basel: Birkhäuser. Williams, Austin. 2017. China’s Urban Revolution. Understanding Chinese Eco-Cities, London - New York: Bloomsbury. During the classes articles published in several international journals (Urban Studies, City, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research) will be recommended. More specific texts will be assigned in the classroom depending on the choice of the actual project area.
Modalità di esame: Elaborato grafico prodotto in gruppo; Progetto individuale;
Exam: Group graphic design project; Individual project;
... Full attendance and engagement in lectures, seminars, and further activities of the Design Unit is a required precondition for the positive participation in the planned activities. The final exam will take place in the first week of the examination session consecutive to the Design Unit. In case the final design work is not completed on time or is judged inadequate or incomplete, the student may submit the final project in the second examination session consecutive to the Design Unit. The final grade will consider the student inability to develop a complex architectural design in a given time. The final evaluation will be individual and will use throughout the whole of the votes available. It is carried out through group discussion of DU professors, taking strictly into account the weight of each discipline (in terms of credits) and considering carefully the following criteria. Criteria regard the DU central experience, that the project activities: left to itself the assessment of other specific activities, according to the needs of lecturers (eg, written tests or theoretical checks). They consider a background value the student's ability to bring together in the project, as the experience of synthesis, what acquired from the different disciplines of the DU. 1. INVESTIGATION OF THE PROJECT Evaluating the ability to analyze and to return the context of the project, physical and social, through original elaborations. Evaluating the ability to manage the complexity of the information, provided by the teacher or found themselves, and to interpret the architectural context. Criteria guiding: - Reading and synthesis - Interpretation and critical processing - Return results 2. CONCEPTUALIZATION Evaluating the ability to conceptualize an argued proposal, as a strategic answer to the identified problems from the inquiry. Evaluating the ability to describe the general aspects (repeatable) of the project and its feasibility in relation to the ordinary practices. Criteria guiding: - Clarity of argument - Vision - Autonomy in the elaboration of the proposal 3. ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT OF PROJECT AND RESULTS Evaluating the ability to develop, within an available time, a coherent project in the individual joints compared to a unitary interpretation, through a circular process (development / discussion / feedback). Evaluating the quality of the final result, as the last maturation of this process. Criteria guiding: - Critical capacity and self-criticism in the early stages of development - Adaptation to the feedback of the mid-term reviews - Completeness and quality of the final papers 4. COMMUNICATION Evaluating the ability to represent and transmit the project, at all stages of the learning experience. It also evaluates the ability to communicate, in an integrated manner to the project and also in innovative ways, the specific aspects of different disciplines. Criteria guiding: - Compliance with the agreed rules of communication - Conscious use of presentation tools - Effectiveness of public presentation and discussion 5. DISCIPLINARY CONTRIBUTIONS Evaluating the ability to identify disciplinary problems in a relevant way of the proposed project case. Evaluating the ability to intercept a complex design theme using cross-fertilization of knowledge. Criteria guiding: - Maturation of sufficient knowledge in all disciplines - Disciplinary relevance of individual contributions in the project - Integration of disciplines at different scales
Gli studenti e le studentesse con disabilità o con Disturbi Specifici di Apprendimento (DSA), oltre alla segnalazione tramite procedura informatizzata, sono invitati a comunicare anche direttamente al/la docente titolare dell'insegnamento, con un preavviso non inferiore ad una settimana dall'avvio della sessione d'esame, gli strumenti compensativi concordati con l'Unità Special Needs, al fine di permettere al/la docente la declinazione più idonea in riferimento alla specifica tipologia di esame.
Exam: Group graphic design project; Individual project;
Full attendance and engagement in lectures, seminars, and further activities of the Design Unit is a required precondition for the positive participation in the planned activities. The final exam will take place in the first week of the examination session consecutive to the Design Unit. In case the final design work is not completed on time or is judged inadequate or incomplete, the student may submit the final project in the second examination session consecutive to the Design Unit. The final grade will consider the student inability to develop a complex architectural design in a given time. The final evaluation will be individual and will use throughout the whole of the votes available. It is carried out through group discussion of DU professors, taking strictly into account the weight of each discipline (in terms of credits) and considering carefully the following criteria. Criteria regard the DU central experience, that the project activities: left to itself the assessment of other specific activities, according to the needs of lecturers (eg, written tests or theoretical checks). They consider a background value the student's ability to bring together in the project, as the experience of synthesis, what acquired from the different disciplines of the DU. 1. INVESTIGATION OF THE PROJECT Evaluating the ability to analyze and to return the context of the project, physical and social, through original elaborations. Evaluating the ability to manage the complexity of the information, provided by the teacher or found themselves, and to interpret the architectural context. Criteria guiding: - Reading and synthesis - Interpretation and critical processing - Return results 2. CONCEPTUALIZATION Evaluating the ability to conceptualize an argued proposal, as a strategic answer to the identified problems from the inquiry. Evaluating the ability to describe the general aspects (repeatable) of the project and its feasibility in relation to the ordinary practices. Criteria guiding: - Clarity of argument - Vision - Autonomy in the elaboration of the proposal 3. ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT OF PROJECT AND RESULTS Evaluating the ability to develop, within an available time, a coherent project in the individual joints compared to a unitary interpretation, through a circular process (development / discussion / feedback). Evaluating the quality of the final result, as the last maturation of this process. Criteria guiding: - Critical capacity and self-criticism in the early stages of development - Adaptation to the feedback of the mid-term reviews - Completeness and quality of the final papers 4. COMMUNICATION Evaluating the ability to represent and transmit the project, at all stages of the learning experience. It also evaluates the ability to communicate, in an integrated manner to the project and also in innovative ways, the specific aspects of different disciplines. Criteria guiding: - Compliance with the agreed rules of communication - Conscious use of presentation tools - Effectiveness of public presentation and discussion 5. DISCIPLINARY CONTRIBUTIONS Evaluating the ability to identify disciplinary problems in a relevant way of the proposed project case. Evaluating the ability to intercept a complex design theme using cross-fertilization of knowledge. Criteria guiding: - Maturation of sufficient knowledge in all disciplines - Disciplinary relevance of individual contributions in the project - Integration of disciplines at different scales
In addition to the message sent by the online system, students with disabilities or Specific Learning Disorders (SLD) are invited to directly inform the professor in charge of the course about the special arrangements for the exam that have been agreed with the Special Needs Unit. The professor has to be informed at least one week before the beginning of the examination session in order to provide students with the most suitable arrangements for each specific type of exam.
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