DESIGN STUDIO: URBAN SPACE
(objectives)
The course focuses on the integrated analysis of settlement, environmental, and infrastructural systems within a portion of the Roman territory. The critical examination of morphological factors, social components, and contextual relationships serves as the starting point for the design of urban space. The primary object of the design exercise is public space and the architectural elements essential for its equipping, with an initial examination of behaviors in public spaces and the relationships between design and usage practices.
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Code
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21010264 |
Language
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ITA |
Type of certificate
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Profit certificate
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Module: DESIGN
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course. The course focuses on the integrated analysis of settlement, environmental, and infrastructural systems within a portion of the Roman territory. The critical examination of morphological factors, social components, and contextual relationships serves as the starting point for the design of urban space. The primary object of the design exercise is public space and the architectural elements essential for its equipping, with an initial examination of behaviors in public spaces and the relationships between design and usage practices.
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Code
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21010264-1 |
Language
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ITA |
Type of certificate
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Profit certificate
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Credits
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6
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Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
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ICAR/14
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Contact Hours
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75
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Type of Activity
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Core compulsory activities
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Teacher
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PONE MARIA
(syllabus)
The course consists of a project exercise, at the scale of the urban project, which proposes a special focus on public space and its “equipments."
One of the main objectives of the course is for students to deal, in the first instance, with an exercise of complex and layered reading of the territory and contexts of action at different scales; an analysis capable of interpreting and comparing with the elements belonging to three fundamental systems that characterize the contexts of contemporary cities: the natural systems (soil, water, vegetation, ...), the "evolutionary" system of anthropic and settlement modifications, and the infrastructural networks that guide and orient these modifications.
This exercise of critical interpretation of the specific characters of territory and of their interactions is the first step in addressing the challenges of contemporaneity developing urban planning strategies that concern the way we occupy and modify the space we inhabit, especially when it comes to collective spaces.
The design exercise, that is the subject of the course, focuses, therefore, on an area of the city of Rome in which the three highlighted systems (buildings, natural, infrastructural) present elements of particular interest: this is the territory although the Via Tiburtina and that, like a palimpsest, is composed of multiple stratifications. In the image of the present landscape, although with different intensities, these stratifications still manage to be read in a more or less defined way: the natural system of the Aniene riverbed and its tributaries, the anthropic development of residential and productive areas, and a dense infrastructural network connecting east-west. These systems intersect, combine or overlap, making themselves recognizable with different gradations all along the road. Their history and origin is ancient and traces a direction of movement that is linked to the shape of the land and still belongs to the progressive and uneven eastward expansion of the city of Rome. This expansion causes the intensity of the flows of people who move to and from those places every day, ensuring that this quadrant of the city still remains heavily attended.
The course is divided into two phases: - the first develops and guides students through the process of critical analysis that will focus on an "assigned" sector of the via Tiburtina and its environs; the first phase concludes with the students' identification of a more defined "project area" that will allow them to approach with the project main themes of interest that emerged from the critical analysis. - The second phase is the project phase. The main focus of the exercise will concern the design of a new public space: the theme may be declined in different directions that will have be coherent with the motivations that, in the previous phase, led to the choice of the "project area" (open space project and/or landscape arrangements and/or settlement of new devices of collective interest, ...); the general objective of the project will be to imagine transformations capable of triggering virtuous processes for the life and care of common spaces. The project will have to confront, on the one hand, the theme of "complex uses" of public spaces, studying and questioning the social components and the overview of actors present, and on the other hand, the increasingly urgent issues of sustainability, with a focus on the themes of adaptation and mitigation of the effects of climate change in the urban environment.
(reference books)
Bjur H., Santillo Frizell B., Via Tiburtina: space, movement and artifacts in the urban landscape, Svenska institutet i Rom, Roma 2009. Boano, C. (2020) Progetto Minore. Alla ricerca della minorità nel progetto urbanistico ed architettonico, LetteraVentidue, Siracusa Corboz A. (1985) Il territorio come palinsesto, «Casabella» 516, pp. 22-27. De Solà Morales, M. (a cura di) (1999), Progettare città/Designing Cities, «Quaderni di Lotus», 23. Erbani M. (2022) Il territorio manoscritto. Strumenti per un’indagine territoriale lungo la via Tiburtina da Tivoli a Roma, Tesi di Dottorato in “Architettura: Innovazione e Patrimonio”, Roma Tre. Pone M. (2019) Architetture devianti. Il potenziale infrastrutturale dell’architettura, Tesi di Dottorato in “Paesaggi della città contemporanea”, Roma Tre Pone M. (2021) ‘Sul potenziale della situazione: architettura come infrastruttura’, in Op.Cit Selezione della critica d’arte contemporanea, 170. Rykwert J., Learning from the Street, «Lotus», 158, 2015, pp. 102-113. Salat, S. (2011) Cities and forms: On sustainable urbanism. Editeurs des Sciences et des Arts Hermann
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Dates of beginning and end of teaching activities
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From 01/10/2024 to 28/02/2025 |
Delivery mode
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Traditional
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Attendance
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Mandatory
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Evaluation methods
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Oral exam
A project evaluation
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Module: URBAN PLANNING
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course. The course focuses on the integrated analysis of settlement, environmental, and infrastructural systems within a portion of the Roman territory. The critical examination of morphological factors, social components, and contextual relationships serves as the starting point for the design of urban space. The primary object of the design exercise is public space and the architectural elements essential for its equipping, with an initial examination of behaviors in public spaces and the relationships between design and usage practices.
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Code
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21010264-2 |
Language
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ITA |
Type of certificate
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Profit certificate
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Credits
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2
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Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
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ICAR/21
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Contact Hours
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25
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Type of Activity
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Core compulsory activities
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Teacher
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FAVA FEDERICA
(syllabus)
Starting from the forms of appropriation that have characterised the human-urban development of Rome, "Extra-space. Times, bodies, dynamics of the contemporary city" considers the processes affecting public space by thinking it through the multiplying lens of time. The planning discourse, thus, opens up to an ‘intermediate’ dimension of policies and design, understood in both material and immaterial terms. In this perspective, other spheres of the city, increasingly important such as the participatory but also the emotional and affective ones, become prominent. For Extra-space, this expresses a way of working with urban fragilities to translate them into an inclusive way of understanding and practising urbanism. Indeed, challenging the normative thinking through the intermediate space also means retreating of solely specialised knowledge, of planning and conservation, in order to open the extant up to the agency of human and non-human subjects. Following the groups organisation (three to four people) proposed in the Urban Space Design Lab, the module accompanies and amplifies the theoretical-practical understanding of the public space design, developing enhancement strategies aimed at creating adaptive, healthy and resilient urban systems.
(reference books)
Boano, Camillo, and Cristina Bianchetti. 2022. Lifelines: Politics, Ethics, and the Affective Economy of Inhabiting. Berlin: Jovis. Lefebvre, Henri. 2014. Toward an Architecture of Enjoyment. edited by Ł. Stanek. Minneapolis; London: University of Minnesota Press. Lynch, Kevin. 1972. What Time Is This Place. Massachusetts and London, England: MIT Press Cambridge. Pizzo, Barbara. 2023. Vivere o Morire Di Rendita. La Rendita Urbana Nel XXI Secolo. Roma: Donzelli. Rodney Harrison, Caitlin DeSilvey, Cornelius Holtorf, Sharon Macdonald, Nadia Bartolini, Esther Breithoff, Harald Fredheim, Antony Lyons, Sarah May, Jennie Morgan, and Sefryn Penrose, eds. 2020. Heritage Futures: Comparative Approaches to Natural and Cultural Heritage Practices. London: UCL Press. Smith, Laurajane. 2021. Emotional Heritage: Visitor Engagement at Museums and Heritage Sites. Routledge.
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Dates of beginning and end of teaching activities
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From 01/10/2024 to 28/02/2025 |
Delivery mode
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Traditional
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Attendance
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Mandatory
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Evaluation methods
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Oral exam
A project evaluation
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