21002132 -
DESIGNING AND BUILDING ON SAFETY
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Also available in another semester or year
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21002134 -
CIVIC ARTS
(objectives)
The studio propose an experience of a phenomenological analysis of the actual city trough a relational, artistic and transdisciplinary approach. For more info see: http://www.articiviche.net/lac/arti_civiche/arti_civiche.html Professor’s blog: http://articiviche.blogspot.it/
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4
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ICAR/14
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50
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-
|
-
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-
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Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010001 -
SEMINARIO VILLARD
(objectives)
The optional course lasts the whole academic year and provides for the participation in the “Seminario itinerante di progettazione Villard”, reaches the seventeenth edition. To the Seminar participate 13 Faculties, Italian and foreign (Alghero, Ascoli Piceno, Napoli, Palermo, Paris Malaquais, Reggio Calabria, Patrasso, Roma, Venezia, Ancona, Milano, Genova, Pescara, Trapani) and some prestigious cultural institutions. The Seminar, is reserved to the students of the Laurea Magistrale and, for organizational matters, to a maximum of 10 students selected in base to the worth, through the presentation of a portfolio and an interview. The program foresees the layout of a project on the theme of year, generally proposed by administrations town or other institutions or corporate and, however, connected to different territorial realities. The theme is introduced at the beginning of the seminar and developed during the year according to the anticipated schedule. The trip and the knowledge of the cities constitutes the main core of the seminar. During every meetings, generally four and of the duration of two/three days, lessons, lectures, visits and shows are organized, with the contribution of the teachers of the Faculties participants. The itinerancy of the seminar ensures that students come into contact with different physical and cultural places, crossing experiences and knowledge with teachers and students from other cities. The seminar has its conclusion in a final event: the show, with the presentation and awarding of the best projects, followed by the publication of the catalog with the work of students and critical contributions collected during the seminar.
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8
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ICAR/14
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100
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010008 -
ANCIENT ARCHITECTURE: THEORIES, TYPES, AND TECHNIQUES
(objectives)
The course aims at offering the students the tools for analysing and understanding ancient architecture through a didactic strategy based both on an historical process-based outlook (crucial for an architect's background) and more practical design-based topics, highlighting traditional materials and building techniques, structural behaviour of traditional construction, principles of architectural design, the architectural language of classical orders. During the lessons the students will be encouraged to understand a ruined construction through diagrams and sketches as well as to have a a structural approach to the building techniques used in Greek and Roman architecture. In order to gain a wide understanding of classical architecture the classes and site visits will focus on the aesthetical issues of classical architecture, the political significance of Imperial architecture in Rome, metrology, design issues, the context in which the buildings were designed and built, the historical sources, ancient treatises.
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|
-
ANCIENT ARCHITECTURE: THEORIES, TYPES, AND TECHNIQUES - PART 1
(objectives)
The course aims at offering the students the tools for analysing and understanding ancient architecture through a didactic strategy based both on an historical process-based outlook (crucial for an architect's background) and more practical design-based topics, highlighting traditional materials and building techniques, structural behaviour of traditional construction, principles of architectural design, the architectural language of classical orders. During the lessons the students will be encouraged to understand a ruined construction through diagrams and sketches as well as to have a a structural approach to the building techniques used in Greek and Roman architecture. In order to gain a wide understanding of classical architecture the classes and site visits will focus on the aesthetical issues of classical architecture, the political significance of Imperial architecture in Rome, metrology, design issues, the context in which the buildings were designed and built, the historical sources, ancient treatises.
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6
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ICAR/18
|
75
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
-
ANCIENT ARCHITECTURE: THEORIES, TYPES, AND TECHNIQUES - PART 2
(objectives)
The course aims at offering the students the tools for analysing and understanding ancient architecture through a didactic strategy based both on an historical process-based outlook (crucial for an architect's background) and more practical design-based topics, highlighting traditional materials and building techniques, structural behaviour of traditional construction, principles of architectural design, the architectural language of classical orders. During the lessons the students will be encouraged to understand a ruined construction through diagrams and sketches as well as to have a a structural approach to the building techniques used in Greek and Roman architecture. In order to gain a wide understanding of classical architecture the classes and site visits will focus on the aesthetical issues of classical architecture, the political significance of Imperial architecture in Rome, metrology, design issues, the context in which the buildings were designed and built, the historical sources, ancient treatises.
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2
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ICAR/18
|
25
|
-
|
-
|
-
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Elective activities
|
ITA |
21002143 -
CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN ARCHITECTURAL RESTORATION IN EUROPE AND BEYOND
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Also available in another semester or year
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21010005 -
Urban markets and real estate developers
(objectives)
The central concern of the course is to identify ideas and methods of enhancing urban productivity while promoting sustainability and equity through public intervention at the city level. Bringing economic analysis to city planning and management, the course will focus on urban public policy & private economic development, mainly in the real estate sector. The course emphasizes the importance of the economic context, the understanding of the underlying rationale for policies, and the response private agents give to public action and incentives.
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4
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ICAR/22
|
50
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21002139 -
Planning of the Urban Recovery
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Also available in another semester or year
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21002138 -
URBAN STUDIES: SPACES AND COMMUNITIES
(objectives)
To give the students the basic skills for a critical understanding of urban problems and to compare these with the role of architectural approach
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8
|
ICAR/21
|
100
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
|
ITA |
21002012 -
MATHEMATICAL DRAWING MACHINES: HISTORIC DRAWING FROM A PARAMETRIC POINT OF VIEW
(objectives)
The goal of this course is to underline the existing relations, between graphic and analytic representation, by a contemporary approach to the disciplines of drawing and mathematics. The graphic construction of a curve with ruler and compass will be followed by the analytical representation with parametric ad cartesian equations. Then the construction of historical drawing instruments will follow. The interdisciplinary goals of this course are: develop the attitude of students to understand and foresee the features of a figurative project on a two-dimensional support, from the beginning of its initial representation; provide scientific and cultural basis to handle digital modelling; strengthen their ability to integrate knowledge coming from different disciplines.
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21002012-1 -
PARTE I
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Also available in another semester or year
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21002012-2 -
PARTE II
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Also available in another semester or year
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21002066 -
URBAN AND ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO
(objectives)
To explore issues raised by the Laboratory of Urban Planning with the tools of architectural design at the urban scale, with particular attention to the structural components. The laboratory offers a new architectural and urban design for the study area and the actions of modification of the spaces that could lead to an overall project, acquiring the basis for an economic evaluation of projects.
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21002066-1 -
PROGETTAZIONE ARCHITETTONICA
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Also available in another semester or year
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21002066-2 -
ESTIMO
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Also available in another semester or year
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21010027 -
COMPLEMENTS ON DESIGN OF TIMBER STRUCTURES
(objectives)
The course of Design complements of Timber Structures is conceived with the aim of providing a complete overview of the current state of the art of wooden building technology, of the fundamental knowledge of wood as a structural material of the basic design principles. The main focus is the acquisition of basic knowledge about the mechanical behavior of timber used as construction material and of the main elements and structural systems made with it, with particular reference to timber buildings and to the relative design methods. To this aim a design exercise of a simple timber building is required.
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4
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ICAR/09
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50
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010028 -
XXth CENTURY ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY
(objectives)
The course aims to introduce students to the knowledge of Italian architecture in the first decades after the Second World War, read in relation to the international context and the crisis of the Modern.
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21010028-1 -
XXth CENTURY ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY - PART 1
(objectives)
The course aims to introduce students to the knowledge of Italian architecture in the first decades after the Second World War, read in relation to the international context and the crisis of the Modern.
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2
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ICAR/18
|
25
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010028-2 -
XXth CENTURY ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY - PART 2
(objectives)
The course aims to introduce students to the knowledge of Italian architecture in the first decades after the Second World War, read in relation to the international context and the crisis of the Modern.
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2
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ICAR/18
|
25
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010029 -
HERITAGE
(objectives)
Could - and should - urban space be considered cultural heritage? If so, how can we reveal the hidden properties of the spatial system, so to turn it into a cultural landscape? And how could these properties be communicated in order to integrate space as cultural heritage into contemporary and social construction processes? How can cities integrate historic layers (palimpsests) into their urban development? The project aims at critically examining and synthesizing archaeological and urban artefacts, matching them with other memories of human experience in the urban landscape. Our intention is to analyze and interpret the city of Rome following roman aqueducts (from Porta Capena to Parco degli Acquedotti) with its surroundings, hypothetically made up of five distinguishable, interrelated layers: The original landscape: the topography of the ancient city; Classical Rome (a period of ca. twelve centuries); Medieval Rome (ca. ten centuries); the Rome of the Renaissance and Baroque (ca. four centuries); Modern and contemporary Rome (after 1871). These different layers have constantly interacted through the historical development of urbanism, and their existing elements in the urban landscape will be identified, studied and described by students in different ways such as mapping, storytelling collection, archivial research.
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6
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ICAR/19
|
36
|
-
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-
|
-
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Elective activities
|
ENG |
21002062 -
HISTORY OF THE CITY AND BUILT ENVIRONMENT
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Also available in another semester or year
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21010034 -
LAB - Learning from Abroad
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Also available in another semester or year
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21010039 -
OPEN SPACE DESIGN STUDIO
(objectives)
The interdisciplinary nature of the course allows you to recognize and describe the areas of natural and man made landscape in which intervenes, to deal consciously with the different phases of human settlement, with the history and form of urban structures.
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21010039-1 -
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
(objectives)
The interdisciplinary nature of the course allows you to recognize and describe the areas of natural and man made landscape in which intervenes, to deal consciously with the different phases of human settlement, with the history and form of urban structures.
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6
|
ICAR/15
|
75
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010039-2 -
PLANT ECOLOGY
(objectives)
The interdisciplinary nature of the course allows you to recognize and describe the areas of natural and man made landscape in which intervenes, to deal consciously with the different phases of human settlement, with the history and form of urban structures.
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2
|
BIO/03
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25
|
-
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-
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-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010039-3 -
LANDSCAPE REPRESENTATION
(objectives)
The interdisciplinary nature of the course allows you to recognize and describe the areas of natural and man made landscape in which intervenes, to deal consciously with the different phases of human settlement, with the history and form of urban structures.
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2
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ICAR/17
|
25
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010042 -
INCLUSIVE DESIGN
(objectives)
The Course confirming the idea that man, in his broadest sense, must be placed at the centre of the project. The concepts of accessibility and availability will be integrated into those ones concerning comfort, safety and multisensory.
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4
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ICAR/12
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50
|
-
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-
|
-
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Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010046 -
THEORY OF ARCHITECTURAL RESEARCH
(objectives)
Critical ordering and operational testing on issues related to the culture of the historical and artistic heritage, led by a philological and constructive reading of arguments submitted during the course. Integration between theoretical research of architectural design and the themes of restoration, conservation and reconstruction in archaeology, monumental and contexts of regionalist architecture.
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4
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ICAR/14
|
50
|
-
|
-
|
-
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Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010044 -
ROMA-MADRID. CASA E CITTA' - MADRID-ROMA. CASA Y CIUDAD
(objectives)
The course aims to: - consolidate the students' knowledge on the topic of the collective housing, with particular reference to the experimentations proposed by architectural culture in Rome and Madrid from the beginning of the 20th century and more recent years; - strengthen students' consciousness of the role that collective housing has had and can have for the quality of urban space, capable of inspiring in the inhabitants a sense of identification and belonging; - promote the comparison between different architectural cultures and cities as a research method useful for architectural design; - promote exchanges between European students and the internationalization of teaching.
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6
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ICAR/14
|
75
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010043 -
HISTORY AND METHODOLOGY OF ANALYSIS IN ARCHITECTURE
(objectives)
The knowledge of historic architecture is very important to help the students improve their capacity of understanding the buildings and their design and technical features; this knowledge is gained through the study of the whole of buildings’ motivations, historic context and design features. The wide variety of courses dealing with history of architecture comes from this conviction. The course of History of Architecture and Methods of Analysis aims at critically retracing the composition process -either ideological, methodical or procedural- at the basis of every architecture; it is directed towards the students of the fifth year of course, that are already aware of the role that history of architecture plays in the design process. In particular, the very role of history in relation to architectural design during centuries is at the basis of the disciplinary orientation meant for the topics at hand, avoiding to take into account the use of simple stylistic issues as repertoire-catalogue and preferring the methodological lesson from the past. Once the intention of considering above all the historical evolution of the design method has been stated, the language will be dealt with closely during the classes, together with the programmatic criteria and the motivations -even ideological- found in the period of time between the Fifteen century and today.
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4
|
ICAR/18
|
50
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010050 -
PROJECTS AND BUILDING SITES FOR RESTORATION
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Also available in another semester or year
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21010051 -
EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN-RESTORATION WORKSHOP
(objectives)
To train students in the project activity by dealing, on an experimental basis, with themes focused on the design and restoration of historical or archaeological buildings, with particular consideration to the preservation of pre-existing structures and without renouncing the contemporary project, in the belief of the uniqueness of the working method of the two disciplines usually separated in university programs.
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4
|
ICAR/14
|
50
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
4
|
ICAR/19
|
50
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
|
ITA |
21010052 -
2030 UNITED NATIONS AGENDA FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: BUILDING AND LIVING TOWN TOMORROW
(objectives)
Introduction to the United Nations 2030 Agenda for sustainable development in its unity and in its general articulation Analysis of the 17 SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals) Critical discussion of the agenda and the links between its different objectives, both in terms of synergies and possible trade offs Insights on some Agenda objectives, in connection with the specific interests and / or study plans of the individual students of the Department of Architecture
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4
|
ICAR/12
|
50
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010031 -
HISTORY OF TECHNIQUES
|
Also available in another semester or year
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21010054 -
THEORIES AND METHODS OF LANDSCAPE DESIGN
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
21002135 -
BIM - PARAMETRIC AND RULE BASED DESIGN
(objectives)
The class introduces students to complexity in Architectural Design. The class proposes and explains the digital means, the procedures, the uses and the organization of contemporary Design Offices mroe oriented toward innovation and integration of different instances in the design. The class is oriented as a small Laboratory, even is its results are evaluated in the understanding of the theory and the new concepts introduced. Students produce a series of small designs, based on the direct experimentation of digital procedures in BIM software, conceived in its parametric core identity. So there is a strict relationship between technology introduced and design topics, thanks to a careful selection and filter of the proposed functions. The basic assumption of the class is that there is a strict need of facing new technologies, deeply understanding them and their power, but in a day to day effort to engage them in a design based thinking. The aim is to prepare students to a mindset that is fruitful in the contemporary professional and cultural context.
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4
|
ICAR/14
|
50
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010055 -
ROME AND THE REINASSANCE
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
21010153 -
ELEMENTS OF URBAN DESIGN
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
21010154 -
PUBLIC SPACE AND CLIMATE CHANGE
(objectives)
The course deals with the complex relationship between climate and city. The evaluation of mitigation strategies and adaptation to the effects of climate change in the urban environment, becomes an increasingly important and essential issue in every hypothesis of modification of physical space and, in particular, of collective spaces in the city. The main objective of the course is to provide students some tools and techniques to evaluate the impact of an intervention on public space in terms of climate resilience and urban health (with particular attention to the microclimatic phenomenon known as "Urban Heat Island"). The course, conceived as a design exercise, aims to stimulate an innovative and sensitive approach to the understanding of urban morphologies, territories and their own needs for adaptation to new climatic conditions that affect the life and health of the inhabitants of metropolitan areas. The course tries to stimulate this sensitivity and, at the same time, to experience a broad design vision that can deal with the complex challenges that affect the contemporary public space, with the new and changing needs that contemporary urban communities express and that the project must be able to meet.
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4
|
ICAR/14
|
50
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010048 -
CAD/CAE FUNDAMENTALS OF COMPUTATIONAL MECHANICS OF STRUCTURES
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
21002013 -
HERITAGE'S CULTURE AND HISTORY
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
21010049 -
PROCESSI DI RIUSO E RIUSO ADATTIVO DEL PATRIMONIO
(objectives)
The adaptive reuse of the existing heritage is one of the main dynamics for the transformation of the contemporary city. The course aims to focus on the reuse of existing heritage through projects of case studies implemented or in progress. There are three proposed focuses: the roles of the different actors involved, the mechanisms for identifying and making available economic resources, the availability of public spaces and services, and the contribution to the modernization of essential services (health, education, culture, etc ...). The impacts evaluation of adaptive reuse in the territorial dimension will constitute a further area of interest of the course as well as the interrelationships with the aspects of mobility and in general the improvement of urban quality.
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4
|
ICAR/21
|
50
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
21010156 -
ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
21010176 -
Geographic Information Systems (GIS) for land use and environmental planning
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
21010177 -
CAD/CAE FUNDAMENTALS OF COMPUTATIONAL MECHANICS OF STRUCTURES
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
21010179 -
INHABIT SPACE
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
21010178 -
URBAN MORPHOLOGY
(objectives)
The purpose of the morphological studies proposed by the course is the knowledge of the characters of the built environment and the recognition of its formation and transformation having as ultimate goal the architectural design open to multiple esthetic synthesis. lt aims to teach a method of reading the built form through the understanding of the forming process common to urban fabrics and buildings. The basic notions of urban organism and process will be provided. The term "reading" not indicates the neutral recording of phenomena, but an awareness which requires the active and dynamic contribution of the reader.
|
4
|
ICAR/14
|
50
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ENG |