Port City Architecture
This article addresses the role and the importance of the 19th-century narratives and depictions of port cities in contemporary architectural design with a specific focus on paintings. In the last decades, cities the world undertook a large number of urban regeneration projects along waterfronts. In...
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ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:c4aa1d4932af41faa8daf9660b86dd40 2023-05-15T15:45:22+02:00 Port City Architecture Fatma Tanış 2022-09-01T00:00:00Z https://doaj.org/article/c4aa1d4932af41faa8daf9660b86dd40 EN eng Stichting OpenAccess https://spool.ac/index.php/spool/article/view/207 https://doaj.org/toc/2215-0897 https://doaj.org/toc/2215-0900 2215-0897 2215-0900 https://doaj.org/article/c4aa1d4932af41faa8daf9660b86dd40 Spool, Vol 8, Iss 1 (2022) contemporary architectural design port city port city architectures Bodø waterfront regeneration projects narratives Architecture NA1-9428 article 2022 ftdoajarticles 2022-12-30T19:59:28Z This article addresses the role and the importance of the 19th-century narratives and depictions of port cities in contemporary architectural design with a specific focus on paintings. In the last decades, cities the world undertook a large number of urban regeneration projects along waterfronts. In this way, vacant sites on waterfront areas became an opportunity to apply contemporary architectural design; however, many of those projects resulted in generic buildings failing to establish relationships with their landscape, environs, and the history of port cities. High-rise buildings, for instance, began to dominate waterfronts in many of the port cities (e.g., in London, Liverpool, Rotterdam, Baltimore). The land was simply used as a “site” by developers, and the contemporary architectural design failed to address the specificity of the architecture and caved in to the demands which had little to do with the possibilities of place. This article showcases a library and concert hall project realised in Bodø, Norway, to provide insight into an alternative model, where the architecture is situated specifically in response to the port condition and acts as a mediator between port, city and landscape. An interview with the architect Daniel Rosbottom, founder of the architecture firm DRDH which designed the project, provided insight into the design process. As Rosbottom elaborated broadly, a 19th-century painting of church San Giorgio Maggiore in Venice h, by the English painter J.M.W Turner was used as an inspiration for the design process. The embedded knowledge in the painting informed the project at various levels and turned a site into a place on the waterfront of Bodø. The design process analysis reveals similarities and significance of paired relations between artworks and architectural design and hints that the remedy of the contemporary architectures in port cities may lie in port cities’ own (immaterial) resources. Article in Journal/Newspaper Bodø Bodø Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles Norway Bodø ENVELOPE(14.405,14.405,67.280,67.280) |
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Open Polar |
collection |
Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles |
op_collection_id |
ftdoajarticles |
language |
English |
topic |
contemporary architectural design port city port city architectures Bodø waterfront regeneration projects narratives Architecture NA1-9428 |
spellingShingle |
contemporary architectural design port city port city architectures Bodø waterfront regeneration projects narratives Architecture NA1-9428 Fatma Tanış Port City Architecture |
topic_facet |
contemporary architectural design port city port city architectures Bodø waterfront regeneration projects narratives Architecture NA1-9428 |
description |
This article addresses the role and the importance of the 19th-century narratives and depictions of port cities in contemporary architectural design with a specific focus on paintings. In the last decades, cities the world undertook a large number of urban regeneration projects along waterfronts. In this way, vacant sites on waterfront areas became an opportunity to apply contemporary architectural design; however, many of those projects resulted in generic buildings failing to establish relationships with their landscape, environs, and the history of port cities. High-rise buildings, for instance, began to dominate waterfronts in many of the port cities (e.g., in London, Liverpool, Rotterdam, Baltimore). The land was simply used as a “site” by developers, and the contemporary architectural design failed to address the specificity of the architecture and caved in to the demands which had little to do with the possibilities of place. This article showcases a library and concert hall project realised in Bodø, Norway, to provide insight into an alternative model, where the architecture is situated specifically in response to the port condition and acts as a mediator between port, city and landscape. An interview with the architect Daniel Rosbottom, founder of the architecture firm DRDH which designed the project, provided insight into the design process. As Rosbottom elaborated broadly, a 19th-century painting of church San Giorgio Maggiore in Venice h, by the English painter J.M.W Turner was used as an inspiration for the design process. The embedded knowledge in the painting informed the project at various levels and turned a site into a place on the waterfront of Bodø. The design process analysis reveals similarities and significance of paired relations between artworks and architectural design and hints that the remedy of the contemporary architectures in port cities may lie in port cities’ own (immaterial) resources. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Fatma Tanış |
author_facet |
Fatma Tanış |
author_sort |
Fatma Tanış |
title |
Port City Architecture |
title_short |
Port City Architecture |
title_full |
Port City Architecture |
title_fullStr |
Port City Architecture |
title_full_unstemmed |
Port City Architecture |
title_sort |
port city architecture |
publisher |
Stichting OpenAccess |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/c4aa1d4932af41faa8daf9660b86dd40 |
long_lat |
ENVELOPE(14.405,14.405,67.280,67.280) |
geographic |
Norway Bodø |
geographic_facet |
Norway Bodø |
genre |
Bodø Bodø |
genre_facet |
Bodø Bodø |
op_source |
Spool, Vol 8, Iss 1 (2022) |
op_relation |
https://spool.ac/index.php/spool/article/view/207 https://doaj.org/toc/2215-0897 https://doaj.org/toc/2215-0900 2215-0897 2215-0900 https://doaj.org/article/c4aa1d4932af41faa8daf9660b86dd40 |
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1766379744967786496 |