Due to discontent arising from the application of Modernism's totalitarian and homogenising logic to house design, recent research has concentrated on differences between cultures, societies and ethnic groups to the extent that today's students of architecture have difficulty finding sources which point to any universally valid values and preferences adopted by contemporary populations. In this study seventeen major design principles stemming from man-environment relationships, such as privacy, territoriality, personal space, backstage behaviour, orientation, and so on, as deduced from Turkish traditional houses, are investigated in terms of similarities among cultures. Samples of contemporary houses are selected from Turkey and elsewhere. Between local and international house designs full matches are depicted and verified by way of statistical analyses across fourteen items, such as living space subdivisions for guests and family, indirect access to the house (modulation), multi-purpose living space subdivisions (hierarchical living space), individualized bathrooms in bedrooms, independent family rooms, semi-closed spaces on the first floor, larger fenestration on upper floors as opposed to opacity of ground floors, segregated garden space, powerful demarcation of the garden space, orientation toward the house's own territory, bathrooms being situated in night time domains, differentiated status of spaces, multiple uses for stair landings (such as for hiding places for goods). Only three items showed some variance: closed balconies on upper floors were local, and semi-open spaces on ground floors were international tendencies. The practice of allowing direct access from the main entrance to a vertical circulation area was also predominantly a local choice.
Article navigation
1 December 2011
Research Article|
December 01 2011
Similarities and Differences Between Contemporary Turkish Houses and Those Worldwide Available to Purchase
Şengül Öymen Gür;
Beykent University, Faculty of Engineering and Architecture Head of Architecture Department Şişli-Ayazağa Campus 34396, İstanbul
Corresponding author: Prof. Dr. Şengül Öymen Gür, Beykent University, Faculty of Engineering and Architecture Head of Architecture Department Şişli-Ayazağa Campus 34396, İstanbul.
Search for other works by this author on:
Şengül Yalçınkaya Erol
Şengül Yalçınkaya Erol
Research Assistant Karadeniz Technical University Faculty of Architecture
61080 Trabzon Turkey
Search for other works by this author on:
Corresponding author: Prof. Dr. Şengül Öymen Gür, Beykent University, Faculty of Engineering and Architecture Head of Architecture Department Şişli-Ayazağa Campus 34396, İstanbul.
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2633-9838
Print ISSN: 0168-2601
© 2011 Open House International
2011
Licensed re-use rights only.
Open House International (2011) 36 (4): 57–74.
Citation
Gür ŞÖ, Erol ŞY (2011), "Similarities and Differences Between Contemporary Turkish Houses and Those Worldwide". Open House International, Vol. 36 No. 4 pp. 57–74, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-04-2011-B0006
Download citation file:
267
Views
Suggested Reading
Migrant Housing in the City and the Village: from Melbourne to Zavoj
Open House International (September,2009)
The evolution of privacy in contemporary houses in Iran using space syntax techniques: a case study of Kerman
Open House International (May,2022)
It's time to get to first principles in service design
Managing Service Quality: An International Journal (April,2004)
Information seeking in the context of writing: A design psychology interpretation of the “problematic situation”
Journal of Documentation (August,2003)
Travel behaviour differences among Indonesian youth in Generations Y and Z: pre-, during and post-travel
Consumer Behavior in Tourism and Hospitality (December,2022)
Related Chapters
Crises and Conflicts of Socio-economic Systems: Similarities and Differences
“Conflict-Free” Socio-Economic Systems: Perspectives and Contradictions
The Impact of Flood Hazard on Residential Property Price
Water Management and Sustainability in Asia
Diversifying Diversity: Creating an Integrative Agenda for the Evolution of Diversity as a Science and Practice
Management and Diversity: Thematic Approaches
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
