Much of the world, is currently experiencing intense growth, especially in and around cities. Most conventional practitioners of modern design and construction find it easier to make buildings as if nature and place did not exist. Cars and factories might be thought as the most obvious enemies of the environment, but buildings consume more than half the energy used worldwide. Attempts to destroy building traditions have been associated in some countries with a drive to modernize. Beyond the traditional aspects of dwelling, the impact of globalization and its effect on rural economies, environmental problems, rapid urbanization and the unprecedented scale of housing problems which confront the peoples of the world in the twenty-first century, bring a new urgency to the study of the vernacular architecture in a sustaining sense. In this work, the concept of “sustainability” will be taken into consideration especially within the building scale. Vernacular architecture in the past produced a built environment which met people's needs without deteriorating the environment. This paper discusses the concept of sustainability in building design and connects it to the vernacular architecture with the search of the vernacular Antiochia houses as a sample; focusing on its architectural properties in detail. The study concludes that what is expected of architects in the current century is, wherever they work, they are to understand and digest the nature of climate, history and culture, that is to say, to obtain inspiration from the essence of place and to contribute to the creation of relevant architecture and city for a sustainable future.
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1 September 2005
Research Article|
September 01 2005
Sustaining Vernacular Architecture - Antiochia as a Sample Available to Purchase
Meltem Yýlmaz
Meltem Yýlmaz
Hacettepe University, Faculty of Fine Arts, Department of Interior Architecture and Environmental Design
, Beytepe/Ankara-TURKEY
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2633-9838
Print ISSN: 0168-2601
© 2005 Open House International
2005
Licensed re-use rights only.
Open House International (2005) 30 (3): 83–93.
Citation
Yýlmaz M (2005), "Sustaining Vernacular Architecture - Antiochia as a Sample". Open House International, Vol. 30 No. 3 pp. 83–93, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-03-2005-B0011
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