Course | Credits | Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code | Contact Hours | Exercise Hours | Laboratory Hours | Personal Study Hours | Type of Activity | Language | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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21010264 -
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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21010264-1 -
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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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."
(reference books)
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. 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 |
6 | ICAR/14 | 75 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21010264-2 -
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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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.
(reference books)
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. 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. |
2 | ICAR/21 | 25 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21010263 -
THE STRUCTURES OF THE CITY
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The course provides the tools for understanding the city's formative, typological and constructive characteristics for the purpose of a conscious intervention of recovery, transformation or restoration through the architectural and structural survey and the consequent critical and philological analysis of an urban fabric. |
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21010263-1 -
TECHNIQUES OF ARCHITECTURAL RESTORATION
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The course provides the tools for understanding the city's formative, typological and constructive characteristics for the purpose of a conscious intervention of recovery, transformation or restoration through the architectural and structural survey and the consequent critical and philological analysis of an urban fabric.
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GEREMIA FRANCESCA
(syllabus)
The course draws on the contribution of three different but complementary disciplines: restoration, survey, and mechanics of solids and structures that work together on a common theme. The three specific approaches are integrated aiming at the same objective: the study and interpretation of the existing city.
(reference books)
The course is carried out through three fundamental moments of knowledge, corresponding to three scales of investigation. The first part is focused on the knowledge of the territorial system on a large scale, understanding the natural and environmental systems and putting them in relation with the historical formative phenomena of the city structure. The identification of different topographic levels and their decomposition and analysis through the study of geomorphology, historical and actual cartography, main phases of evolution of Rome, allows the understanding of the current urban consistency as a result of a layered anthropic process, intimately conditioned by the natural substrate. In the second part we change scale: the work of analysis, verify and study of the city focuses on a portion of well-defined territory corresponding to one of the historical districts. The history and the reading of transformation of the district, the recognition of the building types that compose the urban fabric, the comparison with the present configuration, will lead to thematic syntheses addressed to the understanding of the examined urban area. At the same time, a block or a portion of it, is surveyed in order to make a closer observation, useful to experiment the graphic tools of survey and representation and learn the architectural and structural characters of the historical building. For the purposes of this understanding, the typological study will be important, starting from historical bibliographic, archival and cartographic data, as well as comparison by analogy with types and fabrics recognizable in the surrounding context. This study is a prerequisite for the elaboration of the philological recompositions that are the subject of the third phase of the course. This involves the identification of a part of the city deeply transformed as a result of the post-unification interventions and, through archival, historical-bibliographical and iconographic research, its redesign. The operation is aimed not only to document the historical consistency of the urban fabric and its architectural configuration but also, through this, to apply the techniques of representation acquired and experiment through the use of a given commercial calculation code, a structural analysis of the historical building finalized to the restoration design. Restauro:
S. Muratori, R. Bollati, S. Bollati, G. Marinucci, Studi per una operante storia urbana di Roma, Roma, Centro Studi di Storia Urbanistica, 1963 G.Caniggia, G.L.Maffei: Lettura dell’edilizia di base, Venezia 1979 M. G. Corsini: Tipi e tessuti del centro storico di Roma. Lettura del costruito per il progetto, Edizioni Kappa, Roma, 1998. Guide Rionali di Roma,fratelli palombi editori, Roma. AA.VV. Architettura e urbanistica-uso e trasformazione della città storica, collana Roma Capitale 1870-1911, Marsilio ed. 1984 F.Giovanetti (a cura di): Manuale del recupero del comune di Roma, edizioni dei, Roma 1997. Analisi e rappresentazione urbana: R. Arnheim. Arte e percezione visiva. Milano 1965. M. De Simone. Disegno, rilievo, progetto. Il disegno delle idee, il progetto delle cose. Roma 1990. E. E. Viollet le Duc. Storia di un disegnatore. Cavallino. Venezia 1992. M.Docci e D. Maestri. Scienza del disegno. Torino 2000. Scienza delle costruzioni: G.Cangi: “Manuale del recupero strutturale antisismico”, edizioni dei, Roma 2005. A.Giuffré: Letture sulla Meccanica delle Murature Storiche, Edizioni Kappa, Roma 1991. A.Giuffré: La meccanica nell’architettura, La Nuova Italia Scientifica, Roma 1986. |
4 | ICAR/19 | 50 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21010263-2 -
DRAWING
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The course provides the tools for understanding the city's formative, typological and constructive characteristics for the purpose of a conscious intervention of recovery, transformation or restoration through the architectural and structural survey and the consequent critical and philological analysis of an urban fabric.
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CIANCI MARIA GRAZIA
(syllabus)
didactic methods
(reference books)
The course is developed with lectures ex cathedra, visits and inspections, debates. During the weekly meetings part of the time available will be devoted to a "laboratory" in which there will be graphic tutorials, reviews, thematic analysis in the presence of teachers who will provide practical explanations from time to time on the exercises to be performed. The periodic review of the projects, exercises, trials, is an integral part of the learning path. Mid-term evaluations are foreseen together with lectures and laboratory. student's attendance is required. learning assessment procedures The examination consists in the discussion and evaluation of the assignments and drawings gradually developed during the course and the presentation of a "notebook" containing all the exercises made in the classroom, at home and outside. - R. Arnheim, Arte e percezione visiva, Milano 1965
- M. De Simone, Disegno, rilievo, progetto. Il disegno delle idee, il progetto delle cose, Roma 1990 - E. E. Viollet Le Duc, Storia di un disegnatore, Cavallino, Venezia 1992 - M. Docci e D. Maestri, Scienza del disegno, Torino 2000 |
4 | ICAR/17 | 50 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21010263-3 -
STRUCTURES
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The course provides the tools for understanding the city's formative, typological and constructive characteristics for the purpose of a conscious intervention of recovery, transformation or restoration through the architectural and structural survey and the consequent critical and philological analysis of an urban fabric.
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GABRIELE STEFANO
(syllabus)
The course is given through a synergy between three different but complementary disciplines such as restoration, design and strength of materials that will arise in relation to a common theme: the study and interpretation of the existing city.
(reference books)
Knowledge of the city is achieved by means of questions about its composition, its history, its becoming; by means of interdisciplinary theoretical and practical research about the enhancement of the existing city. In the course will be discussed about the character training, typological and constructional of the historic city and then up to the scale of the building and its construction characteristics, so as to deepen their knowledge of technological components and structural of the pre-modern heritage. There will be a practical exercise on a given topic that will be developed at different representation scales: it will cover initially the entire historic center of Rome down to the size of neighborhood and a single street. Through this project, students will have the opportunity to test the ability of interpretation and reading of historical buildings: starting from the architectural survey and the subsequent critical and philological analysis of the historic center of Rome, in order to acquire the methodology for a correct intervention of recovery, transformation or restoration. G.Cangi: “Manuale del recupero strutturale antisismico”, edizioni dei, Roma 2005.
A.Giuffré: Letture sulla Meccanica delle Murature Storiche, Edizioni Kappa, Roma 1991. A.Giuffré: La meccanica nell’architettura, La Nuova Italia Scientifica, Roma 1986. |
4 | ICAR/08 | 50 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21002062 -
HISTORY OF THE CITY AND BUILT ENVIRONMENT
(objectives)
The foundation-transformation in the history of the city.
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SCIMEMI MADDALENA
(syllabus)
The topics of the lessons, grouped into seven cycles, will be the following:
(reference books)
1. THE CITY FROM THE MIDDLE AGES TO THE RENAISSANCE: URBAN PLANNING TRANSFORMATIONS AND THEORY OF THE CITY Cities and treatises between the 15th and 16th centuries: premises for Renaissance urban planning The palace as a city in nuce: Urbino, Ferrara and Pienza Rome in the fifteenth century - I Rome in the fifteenth century - II Rome in the first half of the sixteenth century Rome in the second half of the sixteenth century The urban planning of Naples and Palermo in the sixteenth century 2. ROME: THE TRANSFORMATIONS OF THE CITY BETWEEN BAROQUE MAGNIFICENCE AND NEOCLASSIC RULE The urban planning of Baroque Rome Rome in the eighteenth century - I Rome in the eighteenth century - II 3. THE CULTURE OF URBAN DESIGN IN ENLIGHTENMENT EUROPE • France: Paris from the Patte plan to the Napoleonic age • Great Britain: London from the "Great Fire" to Nash's interventions • Some Italian situations: Turin, Milan, Rome, Naples, Messina • St. Petersburg and Tsarist Russia 4. THE GREAT URBAN TRANSFORMATIONS OF THE MID-NINETEENTH CENTURY AND THE BIRTH OF THE URBAN PLANNING DISCIPLINE • Haussmann's Paris. • Vienna and the Ring. • Berlin and the Mietkasernen. • Barcelona and Plan Cerdà. • Theoretical elaborations on the city in Germany between the 19th and 20th centuries: Baumeister, Stübben, Eberstadt. The thoughts of Camillo Sitte. 5. 'ANTI-URBAN' THEORIES AND EXPERIENCES • The problem of workers' residence from the proposals of utopian socialism to the first industrial villages. • Howard and the Garden City. Unwin and the Garden Suburb. • The diffusion and developments of the idea of the Garden City in Germany and Austria: Gartenstadt, Gartensiedlung, rural colonies and workers' cities from the beginning of the century to the Third Reich. Moments of the Italian story: 'garden cities' and 'new cities'. • Soria y Mata and the linear city. 6. TRENDS IN URBAN DESIGN IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY The relationship with the historic city: • Berlage and the Dutch affair. • Vienna from Otto Wagner to the Höfe. • Perret and the Le Havre case. • The monumental city of totalitarian regimes: Rome and Berlin. The myth of the new: • Garnier and the Cité industrielle. • The 'modern' metropolis. Le Corbusier and Hilberseimer. • The rationalist Siedlungen in Weimar Germany. • Affirmation, diffusion and crisis of the urban planning concepts of the Modern Movement: the Weissenhofsiedlung, the C.I.A.M. affair, the International Style, housing units and macrostructures, the recovery of historical memory after the Second World War. The American city • Notes on overseas colonies (17th century) • Urban planning developments in the United States of America in the age of Liberalism: structure and form • The new American frontier cities • From the 'Park Movement' to the 'City Beautiful Movement' • New York • Chicago: urban developments from its birth to the '93 World's Fair. Burnham's Plan of 1909 • Washington • San Francisco 7. THE “VERTICAL” CITY • From nineteenth-century miradors to the symbolic skyscrapers in the urban planning of the new millennium Enrico GUIDONI, La Città dal Medioevo al Rinascimento, Biblioteca di Cultura moderna, 848, Laterza, Roma-Bari 1989, pp. 215-255.
ID., Angela MARINO, Storia dell’urbanistica. Il Cinquecento, Laterza, Roma-Bari 1982 ID., Storia dell’urbanistica. Il Seicento, Laterza, Roma-Bari 1982 Paolo MICALIZZI, Roma nel XVIII secolo, Atlante storico delle città italiane, Roma 3, Edizioni Kappa, Roma 2003 Paolo SICA, Storia dell’urbanistica. Il Settecento, Laterza, Roma-Bari 1981 ID, Storia dell'urbanistica. L'Ottocento, Laterza, Roma-Bari 1981, voll. I-II Italo INSOLERA, Roma Moderna, Un secolo di Storia Urbanistica 1870-1970, Einaudi, Torino 1993 Paolo SICA, Storia dell'urbanistica. Il Novecento, Laterza, Roma-Bari 1981 |
8 | ICAR/18 | 100 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21002070 -
OTHER TRAINING ACTIVITIES
(objectives)
Additional language skills, computer skills, job training and guidance, other useful knowledge for entering the labour market.
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6 | 75 | - | - | - | Other activities | ITA | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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21010265 -
DESIGN STUDIO: REHABITING THE URBAN
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The workshop proposes design experimentation starting from the confrontation with some of the issues that characterise urban design today: the question of space, destruction, density, the identification of the resources indispensable to change and the agents that can produce it. The workshop will transmit technical knowledge from the perspective of looking at places as a reinvention of what surrounds us, innovating the operational and cultural schemes that contribute to defining the posture of the town planning architect. Students will configure the design proposal by reasoning, during the different transitions that characterise our time, on the possible transformative actions and confronting the complex governance of the factors that build the city. |
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21010265-1 -
URBAN PLANNING
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The workshop proposes design experimentation starting from the confrontation with some of the issues that characterise urban design today: the question of space, destruction, density, the identification of the resources indispensable to change and the agents that can produce it. The workshop will transmit technical knowledge from the perspective of looking at places as a reinvention of what surrounds us, innovating the operational and cultural schemes that contribute to defining the posture of the town planning architect. Students will configure the design proposal by reasoning, during the different transitions that characterise our time, on the possible transformative actions and confronting the complex governance of the factors that build the city.
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CAUDO GIOVANNI
(syllabus)
Today cities appear as inhabited territories, they are increasingly "endless cities". Even Rome has now overflowed well beyond its administrative borders, we can speak of a City Region. We would like to question the territory of Rome and ask ourselves: what is the current “forma urbis” of Rome? The "great project" of Rome is to recognize its current "forma urbis". They are the "voids" not built but in reality full of values: agricultural, environmental (parks and reserves) and ecological. The soil, the water that in their intertwining with the territorial extension, the different densities of living, the signs of history that have deposited over time to give "shape to the current urban", the one that looks to the future.
(reference books)
We aim to give meaning to the complex of spaces, shapes, symbols that connote the city we live in from a historical-cultural and social point of view to help restore its “forma urbis”. Rehab, rewrite. A first representation of Rome is given by the “built lumps” held together by the infrastructures, in continuous transformation, an overwriting on a text already written in part. While the expansion has proceeded by additions, now the growth can take place by stratification on the existing and is built on top of the already built. C. Amato, C. Ravagnan, Percorsi di Resilienza. Rilancio e riuso delle ferrovie in dismissione nei territori fragili tra Italia e Spagna. Aracne, Roma, 2020
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8 | ICAR/21 | 100 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21010265-2 -
LEGISLATION
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The workshop proposes design experimentation starting from the confrontation with some of the issues that characterise urban design today: the question of space, destruction, density, the identification of the resources indispensable to change and the agents that can produce it. The workshop will transmit technical knowledge from the perspective of looking at places as a reinvention of what surrounds us, innovating the operational and cultural schemes that contribute to defining the posture of the town planning architect. Students will configure the design proposal by reasoning, during the different transitions that characterise our time, on the possible transformative actions and confronting the complex governance of the factors that build the city. |
4 | IUS/10 | 50 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21010265-3 -
MATHEMATICAL AND STATISTICAL METHODS
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The workshop proposes design experimentation starting from the confrontation with some of the issues that characterise urban design today: the question of space, destruction, density, the identification of the resources indispensable to change and the agents that can produce it. The workshop will transmit technical knowledge from the perspective of looking at places as a reinvention of what surrounds us, innovating the operational and cultural schemes that contribute to defining the posture of the town planning architect. Students will configure the design proposal by reasoning, during the different transitions that characterise our time, on the possible transformative actions and confronting the complex governance of the factors that build the city. |
4 | MAT/06 | 50 | - | - | - | Related or supplementary learning activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21010266 -
DESIGN STUDIO: URBAN LANDASCAPES
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The course offers the theoretical and operational knowledge which are essential for describing and designing the open spaces of the city, enhancing their architectural, functional, and environmental features, and managing the spatial, temporal, social, and ecological interactions between their biotic and abiotic components. |
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21010266-1 -
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The course offers the theoretical and operational knowledge which are essential for describing and designing the open spaces of the city, enhancing their architectural, functional, and environmental features, and managing the spatial, temporal, social, and ecological interactions between their biotic and abiotic components.
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METTA ANNALISA
(syllabus)
This course deals with the disciplinary horizon of landscape architecture: the art and technique to shape open spaces, with materials, methods and approaches proper of landscaping. It focuses on relationships rather than artifacts, processes rather than outcomes; because it prefers the use of natural and living materials, in evolutionary and cyclical time dimensions; Because it proceeds through strategies and programs rather than forms; Because it requires the contamination of various professional skills (botany, geology, natural science engineering, environmental sciences, economics and sociology ...); Because it crosses scale and does not proceed mechanically from general to detail; Because it requires the study and interpretation of behavioral and social topics.
(reference books)
The main objective of the course is to understand this complexity within the framework of the urban open space design, to provide the students with the ability to govern and value this complexity on a cultural, ethical, figurative and environmental level through a receptive and attentive sensitivity (listening and viewing skills) and a specific technical skill (ability to intervene and transform). The project of open space can be declined in a multitude of species of spaces: gardens, parks, shores, residual areas, gardens, squares, streets, streets, parks, and so on, subject to further specific articulations Than reciprocal hybridisations. Some of these categories are the legacy of a long and valuable historical legacy, others talk about contemporaryity and the continuous transformation of urban spaces. On the last we focus our attention. The course has a theoretical and design character and is divided into three modules - module 1, "Plants Ecology"; module 2, "Landscape Representation"; module 3, "Landscape Architecture" - which work in a synergic way to offer a framework of methodological, theoretical and operational knowledge aimed at designing open spaces in urban areas. E. Belfiore, Il verde e la città. Idee e progetti dal Settecento ad oggi, Gangemi Editore 2005.
M. Corrado e A. Lambertini, Atlante delle nature urbane. Centouno voci per i paesaggi quotidiani, Editrice Compositori, 2011. G. Cullen, Il paesaggio urbano, Calderini 1976. K. Lynch, L’immagine della città, Marsilio 1964. C. W. Moore, W. J. Mitchel, W. Turnbull, The poetics of gardens, MIT Press, Cambridge-London 1988, trad. it. La poetica dei giardini, Muzzio Editore 1991. D. Pandakovic, Dal Sasso A., Saper vedere il paesaggio, Ed. CittàStudi, 2009. F. Panzini, Progettare la natura – Architettura del paesaggio e dei giardini dalle origini all’epoca contemporanea, Zanichelli 2005. F. Zagari, Questo è paesaggio – 48 definizioni, Gruppo Mancosu editore 2006. F. Zagari, Sul paesaggio. Lettera aperta, Libria 2013. |
6 | ICAR/15 | 75 | - | - | - | Related or supplementary learning activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21010266-2 -
FUNDAMENTALS OF VEGETATION ANALYSIS
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The course offers the theoretical and operational knowledge which are essential for describing and designing the open spaces of the city, enhancing their architectural, functional, and environmental features, and managing the spatial, temporal, social, and ecological interactions between their biotic and abiotic components. |
2 | BIO/03 | 25 | - | - | - | Related or supplementary learning activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
21010266-3 -
LANDESCAPE REPRESENTATION
(objectives)
The objectives of the individual module help to define the set of objectives of the entire course.
The course offers the theoretical and operational knowledge which are essential for describing and designing the open spaces of the city, enhancing their architectural, functional, and environmental features, and managing the spatial, temporal, social, and ecological interactions between their biotic and abiotic components. |
2 | ICAR/17 | 25 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course | Credits | Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code | Contact Hours | Exercise Hours | Laboratory Hours | Personal Study Hours | Type of Activity | Language |
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21002066 -
ARCHITECTURAL AND URBAN DESIGN LABORATORY
(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 -
ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN
(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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CARERI FRANCESCO
(syllabus)
The laboratory develops the idea of C.I.R.C.O. (Casa Indispensable for Civic Recreation and Hospitality) proposing a rethinking of the welcoming spaces for migrants, transients and mobile populations, starting from the reuse of the abandoned or underused Roman real estate assets. The goal is to facilitate access to these spaces for all the inhabitants of the city, opening them up to the collective construction of living, spaces for exchange and sociability. The project involves the development of indications for a welcoming policy, in a more mutual sense of hospitality, aimed at generating new forms of reciprocity and coexistence. The work is in direct contact with the local area and its communities.
(reference books)
The course intervene at the core of the city in a creative, interdisciplinary and participatory way. It offers lessons about the relationship between arts, architecture and the city, and direct experiences such as urban explorations, realization of micro-structures at the 1:1 scale, events and performative actions of a high civic and symbolic content, in complex social contexts, with special attention to the intercultural city and the migrant's hospitality. We can explain the teaching approach goes in three main words: Arts Architecture City. By Arts we mean the tools of knowledge that guide us towards the comprehension of the dynamics of contemporary urban transformations; poetic glances that are able to reveal those aspects of the city that are often invisible, and to provoke their potentialities. We understand Architecture as a practice of reading and processing space, both in a physical and symbolic way. The course offers to the students an occasion to experiment the construction of an artifact in the city that is able to provoke social transformations. We view the City as a contested space, not just in terms of the formal regulations that aim to rule its development but in terms of those new dwelling practices that seek to transform housing and neighborhoods, to change the use and meaning of public space, and to claim people’s right to the city. https://laboratoriocirco.wordpress.com/ for an overview of the course topics and results of the last years see the course blog: https://laboratoriocirco.wordpress.com/
basic Bibliography: - FRANCESCO CARERI, LORENZO ROMITO, CAMPUS ROM, ALTRIMEDIA EDIZIONI, MATERA 2017 - FRANCESCO CARERI, WALKSCAPES. EL ANDAR COMO PRÀCTICA ESTÉTICA / WALKING AS AN AESTHETIC PRACTICE, EDITORIAL GUSTAVO GILI, BARCELLONA 2002, TRAD IT. WALKSCAPES. IL CAMMINARE COME PRATICA ESTETICA, EINAUDI, TORIMO 2006. -ANNA DETHERIDGE, SCULTORI DELLA SPERANZA. L'ARTE NEL CONTESTO DELLA GLOBALIZZAZIONE, EINAUDI 2012 - AA.VV., INTERNAZIONALE SITUAZIONISTA 1958-69, NAUTILUS/STAMPATRE, TORINO, 1994 - FRANCESCO CARERI, CONSTANT / NEW BABYLON, UNA CITTÀ NOMADE, TESTO & IMMAGINE, TORINO, 2001 - BRUCE CHATWIN, THE SONGLINES (1987), TRAD. IT. LE VIE DEI CANTI, ADELPHI, MILANO, 1988 - FRANCO LA CECLA., PERDERSI, L'UOMO SENZA AMBIENTE, LATERZA, BARI, 1988 - PETER LANG, A CURA DI., SUBURBAN DISCIPLINE, PRINCETON ARCHITECTURAL PRESS, NEW YORK, 1997 - ROSALIND KRAUSS, PASSAGES IN MODERN SCULPTURE, MIT PRESS, 1981, TR. IT. PASSAGGI, BRUNO MONDADORI, MILANO, 1998 |
8 | ICAR/14 | 100 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA |
21002066-2 -
APPRAISAL AND ECONOMIC EVALUATION
(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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FINUCCI FABRIZIO
(syllabus)
The module aims to integrate the issues of the evaluation examining some specific subject, according with the recent developments of the discipline. The assessment becomes a part of the design process, providing logical and methodological support and becoming an active component in the construction of the design. The evaluation, therefore, becomes a contribution to the implementation of the preferred solution in relation to context, to the actors involved in the process, and to feasibility, taking into account the numerous variables (socio-economic, environmental, financial, aesthetic, cultural, etc.). The module deals with the methods and techniques of project evaluation according to different approaches (financial, economic, multidimensional); finally, the module introduces methodologies that enable the assessment of the effects and impacts perceived by the community.
(reference books)
Specifically, the module deals with: A brief summary of appraisal basics: appraisals principles and methods. Basics of international appraisal procedures. Total Economic Value, definitions and techniques. Shared evaluation and deliberative Value. Methods and techniques of projects evaluation: financial methods (Investment Analysis), cash flows and measures of investment performance, project financing, economic methods (Cost-Benefit Analysis), multidimensional methods, Multicriteria Analysis (among which Electre methods, Dominant Regime Methods, Analytic Hierarchy Process, etc.). Community Impact Evaluation, Deliberative methods to evaluate impact and effect perceived by community. Appraisal
Realfonzo, A. (1994). Teoria e metodo dell'estimo urbano. Carocci, Roma. Polelli, M. (2008). Nuovo trattato di estimo. (Vol. 49). Maggioli Editore. Bateman, I., & Department of Transport Großbritannien (2002). Economic valuation with stated preference techniques: a manual (Vol. 50, p. 480). Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. Saverio, M., Finucci, F., & Murro, R. (2023). Valore di stima deliberativo. Sperimentazioni di estimo civico. FrancoAngeli. Methods and techniques of projects evaluation Miccoli, S. (1996). La valutazione nel progetto di restauro. G. Carbonara, Trattato di restauro architettonico, UTET, Torino. Nijkamp, P., Rietveld, P., & Voogd, H. (2013). Multicriteria evaluation in physical planning. Elsevier. Dispense e documentazione fornite all'interno del modulo. |
4 | ICAR/22 | 50 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA |
21002068 -
URBAN AND SPATIAL POLICIES
(objectives)
Urban transformation - the course area of interest - is faced in a way to convey to the students the most suitable attitudes and postures, excluding final and preordained solutions. The course aims to convey the skill to identify the policies in action in the urban transformations and how they shape the contemporary city. Identify means acquire the skill to distinguish the policies in elements, actors and actions. The students will face the instruments and the operative methods usually employed for the policies implementation; they will learn to build, with different way to examine in depth the specific policies addressed to the theme of transformation, limited to some selected themes: sharing, habitability, density/intensity.
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PALAZZO ANNA LAURA
(syllabus)
Part One addresses the conceptual definition of public policies, introducing and critically discussing the distinction between policy and politics; the formulation of the problems that policies must deal with, and their putting 'on the agenda'; the coupling between problems and solutions; the nature and role of the actors that influence policy design in a multilevel governance framework and policy implementation, assessment and effects.
(reference books)
Part Two explores a wide array of regeneration policies and practices in European and North American contexts, that pay increasing attention to the quality of life at local level by intertwining affordable housing, local development and community empowerment issues. The case of the construction of local agendas also helps revisit a wide range of Italian urban and territorial policies, notably in reference to governance issues. Environment and biodiversity take in a major role, allowing to tackle welfare and wellbeing in urban and peri-urban areas. Part Three, that will be developed alongside the previous parts, is devoted to a practical approach to thee case study of the Ostiense-Marconi district, where Roma Tre University located its facilities adopting the model of "City within the City", unlike the model of "University City" adopted by Roma Uno Sapienza, and the "Campus" realized by Roma Due Tor Vergata. Roma Tre has played the role as an anchor institution contributing to so-calle city effect thanks to a wide array of cultural, sport, and recreational facilities, events and workshops aimed at citizenship: initiatives that have exerted a strong appeal towards other cultural agents, innovative companies, and a creative class that has revitalized the urban scene garnering general appreciation in Italy and abroad. In addition to the University and other actors belonging to the cultural ecosystem, grassroots associations have also participated. Over thirty years since the start of the PUOM, the decision-making chain has lost momentum, focusing mainly on achievements involving individual actors of the transformation with the public counterpart, neglecting urban design themes. These divergent dynamics have repercussions on public space and on the demarcations between trajectories of ethnic, cultural, and socioeconomic matrix, hindering the vision and strategy of a collective project tuned to a broader dimension of "future". Throughout the course's development, surveys, communications, seminars, and meetings with stakeholders will intertwine theoretical and practical narratives, highlighting syntonies and contradictions, negotiations and interference between top-down and bottom-up approaches witnessing the fluctuating interplay between the community and institutions. Marroni U. (2017), Roma. La rigenerazione dei quartieri industriali. Il Progetto urbano Ostiense-Marconi. Roma: Ponte Sisto.
Nigris E. (2023), Sulla produzione soc, iotecnica dello spazio urbano, Roma: Roma Tre Press. Lelo K. (2019), From the Subsidized Muse to Creative Industries: Convergences and Compromises. Roma: Roma Tre Press. Palazzo A.L. (2017), Culture-led Regeneration in Rome: From the Factory City to the Knowledge City, in “International Studies. Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal”, 19: 13-27. Palazzo A.L., D’Ascanio R. (2024), Culture-led regeneration and urban governance. The case of South Rome, in Miao J., Yigitcanlar T. Routledge Companion to Creativity and the Built Environment. London: Routledge, 190-204. Tocci W. (2020), Roma come se. Alla ricerca del futuro per la capitale, Roma: Donzelli. |
6 | ICAR/21 | 75 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA |
21010040 -
ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN STUDIO
(objectives)
The course deals with the design of urban space considering the interaction with the built surroundings and environmental factors, the compatibility and incompatibility at different scales, in order to identify innovative technological solutions, which meet the requirements of users, enhance places and pursue the objectives of environmental sustainability. Key methodologies in performance, parameters, indicators and evaluation criteria guide the various stages of the process.
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21010040-1 -
ARCHITECTURAL TECHNOLOGY
(objectives)
The course deals with the design of urban space considering the interaction with the built surroundings and environmental factors, the compatibility and incompatibility at different scales, in order to identify innovative technological solutions, which meet the requirements of users, enhance places and pursue the objectives of environmental sustainability. Key methodologies in performance, parameters, indicators and evaluation criteria guide the various stages of the process.
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MONTELLA ILARIA
(syllabus)
The Laboratory aims to investigate the transformations that, in the building process, affect the buildings and the contexts within which they are located, in order to identify solutions to operate, at the micro-urban and building scale, adopting a climate mitigation and adaptation approach.
(reference books)
The course addresses the relationship between the built environment, climate and new technologies by exploring the synergy between environmental factors, energy aspects, optimization of the form, use of green, soil treatment and choice of materials. In particular, the course is configured as an opportunity to deepen the environmental issues, with a bioclimatic approach and content related to the field of sustainability, aimed at the acquisition of knowledge of sustainability certification protocols and methods of detection of environmental and energy issues oriented to the management of indoor and outdoor comfort. The course includes lectures and project exercises, supported by the use of simulation software and calculation tools, aimed at investigating, with measurable results, the effects of the building on the environment, with reference to the phenomenon of Urban Heat Island, and the effects of the environment on buildings in terms of reduction of energy consumption. Finally, in a vision of energy transition, and according with the Sustainable Development Goals, the European Green Deal and the NRRP, the course proposes to investigate, on a Roman district, chosen as a case study, the possibility of adopting strategies for energy transition and decarbonization. •Benedetti, C. (2013), Comfort urbano, Bolzano University Press.
•Butera, F. M., [2014]. Dalla caverna alla casa ecologica. Storia del comfort e dell’energia (nuova edizione), A Ed. Edizioni Ambiente, Milano. •Casini, M. (2009). Costruire l'ambiente. Gli strumenti e i metodi della progettazione ambientale, Collana Manuali di Progettazione sostenibile, Edizioni Ambiente. •Dierna, S., Orlandi, F. (2009) Ecoefficienza per la «Citta' Diffusa», Alinea Editore. •Maretto, M. (2020), Il progetto urbano sostenibile. Morfologia, architettura, information technology, FrancoAngeli Editore. •Martincigh, L. (2012) Strumenti di intervento per la riqualificazione urbana. La complessità dell'ambiente stradale, Gangemi Editore. •Musco, F., Zanchini, E. (2014), Il clima cambia le città. Strategie di adattamento e mitigazione nella pianificazione urbanistica, FrancoAngeli Editore. •Olgyay, V. [2013]. Progettare con il clima. Un approccio bioclimatico al regionalismo architettonico (nuova edizione), Franco Muzzio Editore, Roma. •Rogora, A., [2012]. Progettazione bioclimatica per l'architettura mediterranea - Metodi Esempi, Wolters Kluwer Italia. Other texts and teaching contributions will be indicated by the teacher in the course of the lectures. |
6 | ICAR/12 | 75 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA |
21010040-2 -
BUILDING PHYSICS
(objectives)
The course deals with the design of urban space considering the interaction with the built surroundings and environmental factors, the compatibility and incompatibility at different scales, in order to identify innovative technological solutions, which meet the requirements of users, enhance places and pursue the objectives of environmental sustainability. Key methodologies in performance, parameters, indicators and evaluation criteria guide the various stages of the process.
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4 | ING-IND/11 | 50 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA |
Course | Credits | Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code | Contact Hours | Exercise Hours | Laboratory Hours | Personal Study Hours | Type of Activity | Language |
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21002069 -
INNOVATION IN TERRITORIAL GOVERNMENT
(objectives)
Deepening the skills in planning and design of urban and territorial space, urban sustainability and climate adaptation of settlements on different scales.
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21002069-1 -
URBAN REGENERATION
(objectives)
Deepening the skills in planning and design of urban and territorial space, urban sustainability and climate adaptation of settlements on different scales.
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RANZATO MARCO
(syllabus)
rottura forma urbe is an ambiguous and provocative proposition.
(reference books)
In contrast to Severan's similar and better-known forma urbis, whose intention was to 'outline' the shape of the city of Rome in stone from the architectural elements that made it up, rottura forma urbe counterpoints the destabilising action of disruption. That it is the disruption that shapes the urbe may sound controversial. And yet, the inhabited territory often looks like a fragment. The disruption, the fracture and what is deformed and hardly recognisable, is the epitome of the urban condition. But here, by disruption, even before the fragment and what breaks the idea of the urban figure, we are referring to the parts of the territory that are 'broken' due to a collapse. In the urbanised territory, disruption is discontinuity. It is perturbation that, as a-functional to current development, offers eccentric perspectives. It is a heuristic device (Graham, 2011) capable of producing a gap in knowledge as well as in experience. It is a "transformative place" that opens up new possibilities of being and living. It is a space within which a paradigm shift can be inscribed. It is often marginal, and if it is not marginal, it generates marginality. It is urban because it cannot be otherwise. It is revealing of local and planetary relations. Disruption is a lens through which to reinterpret inhabited territory. The approach of rottura forma urbe is not 'problem-solving'. On the contrary, the position is learning from what is commonly identified as a 'problem'. Disruption is interpreted as an inversely problematic condition because it reveals the structure but also the contradictions and fragility of the present urban condition. The object of rottura forma urbe are the disruptions of the geography of the Roman urban and beyond. Those disruptions that have to do with infrastructure, including environmental infrastructure such as soil and water. Also included are disruptions resulting from climate change. The sphere of rottura forma urbe is NO-CITY (www.no-city.org), that is, the diffuse urban condition. The disruption is ubiquitous and manifests itself in any urban gradient, from the centre, to the periphery, to the dispersion, to hinterland and the fragments of the geography of the Roman urban. Graham, Stephen (2011) Disruptions. In: Gandy, Matthew [ed.] Urban Constallations. Berlin: Jovis, pp. 65-70.
Haraway, Donna (1988) Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective. Feminist Studies, 14, 3, pp. 575-599. |
4 | ICAR/21 | 50 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA |
21002069-2 -
SUSTAINABILITYAND CLIMATE ADAPTATION
(objectives)
Deepening the skills in planning and design of urban and territorial space, urban sustainability and climate adaptation of settlements on different scales.
-
RANZATO MARCO
(syllabus)
rottura forma urbe is an ambiguous and provocative proposition.
(reference books)
In contrast to Severan's similar and better-known forma urbis, whose intention was to 'outline' the shape of the city of Rome in stone from the architectural elements that made it up, rottura forma urbe counterpoints the destabilising action of disruption. That it is the disruption that shapes the urbe may sound controversial. And yet, the inhabited territory often looks like a fragment. The disruption, the fracture and what is deformed and hardly recognisable, is the epitome of the urban condition. But here, by disruption, even before the fragment and what breaks the idea of the urban figure, we are referring to the parts of the territory that are 'broken' due to a collapse. In the urbanised territory, disruption is discontinuity. It is perturbation that, as a-functional to current development, offers eccentric perspectives. It is a heuristic device (Graham, 2011) capable of producing a gap in knowledge as well as in experience. It is a "transformative place" that opens up new possibilities of being and living. It is a space within which a paradigm shift can be inscribed. It is often marginal, and if it is not marginal, it generates marginality. It is urban because it cannot be otherwise. It is revealing of local and planetary relations. Disruption is a lens through which to reinterpret inhabited territory. The approach of rottura forma urbe is not 'problem-solving'. On the contrary, the position is learning from what is commonly identified as a 'problem'. Disruption is interpreted as an inversely problematic condition because it reveals the structure but also the contradictions and fragility of the present urban condition. The object of rottura forma urbe are the disruptions of the geography of the Roman urban and beyond. Those disruptions that have to do with infrastructure, including environmental infrastructure such as soil and water. Also included are disruptions resulting from climate change. The sphere of rottura forma urbe is NO-CITY (www.no-city.org), that is, the diffuse urban condition. The disruption is ubiquitous and manifests itself in any urban gradient, from the centre, to the periphery, to the dispersion, to hinterland and the fragments of the geography of the Roman urban. Graham, Stephen (2011) Disruptions. In: Gandy, Matthew [ed.] Urban Constallations. Berlin: Jovis, pp. 65-70.
Haraway, Donna (1988) Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective. Feminist Studies, 14, 3, pp. 575-599. |
2 | ICAR/21 | 25 | - | - | - | Core compulsory activities | ITA |
21002071 -
FINAL EXAM
(objectives)
The educational objective of the final test is to allow students to produce cultural content that represents the synthesis of the interests gained and the skills acquired during the course of study. These cultural contents correspond to the production of a Master Degree thesis, which is an original elaboration made on scientific and cultural themes agreed with the supervisor.
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10 | 125 | - | - | - | Final examination and foreign language test | ITA |
Teachings extracurricular: (hide) |
21010155 - INTEGRATIVE COURSE OF STRUCTURAL MECHANICS | 4 | ICAR/08 | 50 | - | - | - | ITA |
Teachings extracurricular: (hide) |