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´ã´ç±³¼ö : ÀÌÀÎÈñ
¿¬µµ-Çбâ : 2018/1
±³°ú¸ñ¸í : °ÇÃà°ø°£·Ð(»ê¿ø)
°Àǽð£ : ¸ÅÁÖ ¿ù19:00
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1. ±³¼ö¸ñÇ¥ ¹× °ÀÇ°³¿ä(Course objectives & Description)
1) ±³¼ö¸ñÇ¥
´Ù¾çÇÑ °üÁ¡¿¡¼ ´Ù·ç¾î ¿Â °ø°£ÀÌ·ÐÀÇ ÇнÀÀ» ÅëÇÏ¿© °ÇÃà°ø°£¿¡ °üÇÑ ÀÌÇØÀÇ ÁöÆòÀ» ³ÐÈ÷°í Çö´ëÀû °üÁ¡ÀÇ »õ·Î¿î Æз¯´ÙÀÓ¿¡ ÀÇÇÑ °ø°£ÀÌ·ÐÀ» Ž±¸ÇÏ¿© °ÇÃà°ø°£ÀÇ ´Ù¾çÇÑ °üÁ¡µéÀ» ÀÌÇØÇÑ´Ù.
Promote the comprehension of perspective of the theory from a variety of spatial learning through the understanding of architectural space to widen the horizons of the new paradigm of the modern view of space to explore the theoretical perspectives to understand a variety of architectural space.
2) °ÀÇ°³¿ä
°ÇÃàÀÇ »ç°í´Â Æ÷°ýÀûÀÎ ÁöÆòÀ§¿¡¼ ÀÌ·ç¾îÁú ÇÊ¿ä°¡ ÀÖ´Ù. µû¶ó¼ º» °ÀÇ¿¡¼´Â °ÇÃàÀÇ ´Ü¼øÇÑ ¸Æ¶ô¿¡¼ºÎÅÍ °ÇÃàÀÇ °ø°£Àû °æ°è¸¦ ³Ñ¾î µµ½Ã¿Í ȯ°æÀÇ °Å´ë ¸Æ¶ô¿¡ À̸£´Â Æ÷°ýÀûÀÎ ³»¿ëµéÀ» Å°¿öµå Áß½ÉÀ¸·Î ÇнÀÇÔÀ¸·Î½á ¿ì¸®°¡ »ì°í ÀÖ´Â Çö´ë°ÇÃàÀÇ °ø°£°ú ȯ°æ¿¡ ´ëÇÑ Àü¹ÝÀûÀÎ ÀνÄÀ» °¡Áöµµ·Ï ÇÑ´Ù.
All great ages of architecture are known by their grand period titles - ours will probably be known as ¡®'Architecture in the Age of Consumerism¡¯' arising from the self-indulgent intemperance of the developed world, the declining quality of urban life globally, and a universal disregard for proper stewardship of the natural resources of the planet.
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2. ÁÖ±³Àç(Required textbook) :
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[Frame_01]
Architecture and the Urban Environment - A vision for the New Age, Derek Thomas, Architectural Press, 2002
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[Frame_02]
Matthew Carmona, Public Place_Urban Spaces, 2003 (µµ½Ã¼³°èÀå¼Ò ¸¸µé±âÀÇ ¿©¼¸ Â÷¿ø, °È«ºó¿Ü ¿ª, ´ë°¡, 2009)
Paul Knox & Steven Pinch, Urban Social Geography, 2010 (µµ½Ã»çȸÁö¸®ÇÐÀÇ ÀÌÇØ, ¹Ú°æȯ¿Ü ¿ª, ½Ã±×¸¶ÇÁ·¹½º, 2014)
Matthew Carmona & Steve Tiesdell, Urban design reader, 2007
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3. Æò°¡¹æ¹ý(Requirements & Grading) : Ãâ¼® 10%, Áß°£°í»ç 30%, ±â¸»°í»ç 30%, Åä·Ð ¹× ¼ö¾÷Âü¿© 30%
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[ÁÖº° °ÀÇ°èȹ(Schedule)] ÇØ´ç½Ã°£ÀÇ °ÀÇÀڷḦ Ŭ¸¯->ÀÚ·á ´Ù¿î...!
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[Frame_01]
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Á¦ 1ÁÖÂ÷ : Introduction
All great ages of architecture are known by their grand period titles - ours will probably be known as ¡®'Architecture in the Age of Consumerism¡¯' arising from the self-indulgent intemperance of the developed world, the declining quality of urban life globally, and a universal disregard for proper stewardship of the natural resources of the planet.
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Á¦ 2ÁÖÂ÷ : The Urban Habitat(19-36) : A CANVAS FOR ARCHITECTURE
In the planning and design of the urban setting the aim should be to create ¡®'ennobling¡¯' and ¡®'enabling¡¯' environments. Inevitably this demands a process based on peope-driven dynamics, in other words, based on the perceptions of the users of urban space.
- Universal cultural needs 19, Cultural needs and urban space 21, The urban ecosystem 24, Socio-spatial patterning 27, Movement corridors and destinations 32
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Á¦ 3ÁÖÂ÷ : Directions in Architecture(37-55) : CHARACTERISATION
In the context of our environmentally stressed planet, it is not responsible to think of architecture as being ¡®'good¡¯' only in terms of past design maxims.
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Á¦ 4ÁÖÂ÷ : Cultural Rhythms(56-74) : RESPONSE TO LIFESTYLE
In the urban environment, the failure to meet the cultural needs of the community, the end user, threatens the amenity value of the social environment with potentially dire sociological consequences -
Spaces that liberate 56, Sense of community 58, Optimum norms for shared streets 64, Busy streets and pedestrians 64, Outdoor urban life 66, Security through the presence of others 67, Territorial needs 69, Commercial opportunity 69, Space for informal marketing and jobs 71, Recreational needs 73, Urban culture and natural regimes 74
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Á¦ 5ÁÖÂ÷ : Urban Design in Response(75-120)1 : THE POTENTIAL CATALYST...
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Á¦ 6ÁÖÂ÷ : Urban Design in Response(75-120)2 : URBAN DESIGN GUIDELINES...
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Á¦ 7ÁÖÂ÷ : Urban Design in Response(75-120)3 : SENSE OF PLACE AND SPACE...
The rigorous design axioms of the Modern Movement have caused streets to lose their attraction as gathering places. ¡®'As a consequence individual attitudes to urban space have been radically altered... Functionalism, which laid the groundwork for our loss of traditional space, became obsessed with efficiency.¡¯' (Trancik 1986) -
- THE POTENTIAL CATALYST 75
- URBAN SPATIAL SYSTEMS 77, Movement corridors 78, Meaningful urban space 80
- URBAN DESIGN GUIDELINES 82, Public squares free of buildings 83, Shape and size criteria for public squares 84, Visual closure and visual order 86, Planned outdoor amenities 88, Places to linger 90, Controls on sun and wind 91, Pedestrian density in a public area 92, Pedestrians-only streets 95, The residential/public interface 95, Pollution-free spaces 96 -
-SENSE OF PLACE AND SPACE 98, A sense of neighbourhood 100, Clusters 101,Common land 104, Personal space 104 -
- OPTIMUM USER LEVELS 106, Sustainable density options 106, The courtyard house 106, Small stands 108, Density test criteria 110 -
- URBAN IMPRINTS ON NATURAL REGIMES 111, Conserve ecological diversity 112, Biogeographical principles 114, Offset geomorphic impacts 116
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Á¦ 8ÁÖÂ÷ : mid-examination
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Á¦ 9ÁÖÂ÷ : Sensory Attributes(121-134) : PROPORTION AND SCALE...
Nowhere do mathematics, science, philosophy and the natural senses permeate one another so intimately as in the understanding of the character of a piece of architecture and that of urban space.
- PROPORTION AND SCALE 121, Proportion and aesthetics 123, Human-related scale 124, Movement affecting proportion and scale 125 -
- COLOUR AND TEXTURE 126, Colour terminology 128, Colour systems 130, Modifying properties of texture 130, Notion of noticeable differences133
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Á¦10ÁÖÂ÷ : substitute holiday(chidren's day)
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Á¦11ÁÖÂ÷ : Architecture in Response(135-147)1 : THE CONTEXTUAL EDGE
Much of what is currently presented under the banner of architecture and, curiously rewarded and applauded by architects themselves, is preoccupied with excess - such as designs which are inappropriate to climate, such as glass curtainwall structures in hot, sun-drenched climates, necessitating complete reliance on high-energy resources. -
- THE CONTEXTUAL EDGE 135, Active building fronts 136, Building edge design 137, Architectural protocol 138, Contemporary into traditional settings 139, Sense of place 141, Conservation 146
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Á¦12ÁÖÂ÷ : Architecture in Response(148-171)2 : SUSTAINABLE DESIGN...
- SUSTAINABLE DESIGN 148, Respect for the site 152, Working with the climate 155, Checklist for energy-conserving design 158, STAINABLE CONSTRUCTION 166, Minimise resource consumption 169, Maximise resource reuse and recycling 171
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Á¦13ÁÖÂ÷ : Architecture in Response(172-193)2 : LANDSCAPING THE ENVIRONMENT...
- LANDSCAPING THE ENVIRONMENT 172 -
- PROTECT THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT 176, Conserve site biodiversity 177, Permaculture - living design 177 -
- HOLISM IN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN 178, End user and the design process 180, Green principles and technological advance 180, Sound aesthetic principles 182
- ORGANIC DESIGN IN ARCHITECTURE 183, Fractal geometry 185, Fractal geometry and architectural design 189
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Á¦14ÁÖÂ÷ : On Environmental Economics(194-212) : PROFIT THROUGH CONSERVATION...
This branch of economics, otherwise resource economics, is perhaps the key to bridging the current huge divide between the expediency of big business enterprise on the one hand and a more conservationist vision on the other.
- PROFIT THROUGH CONSERVATION 194, Blueprint for a green economy 197
- APPLICAT ION OF ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES 206, The user-pays principle 206, The pay back principle 208, ALTERNATIVE TECHNOLOGIES 211
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Á¦15ÁÖÂ÷ : The Timeless Way
The imprint of history shows that from earliest times there have been social inequalities in living conditions. This is generally congruent with the widening gap between the ¡®'haves¡¯' and the ¡®'have-nots¡¯' as the affluent, through economic and political strength, have gained greater access to resources.
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Á¦16ÁÖÂ÷ : Final exanimation
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[Frame_02]
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Á¦ 1° : µµ½Ã¼³°èÀÇ ÀÌÇØ(1) : µµ½Ã¼³°èÀÇ ÀÌÇØ - lecture_01 understanding urban design
traditional thought in urban design | new-urbanism
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Á¦ 2° : µµ½Ã¼³°èÀÇ ÀÌÇØ(2) : µµ½Ã¼³°èÀÇ º¯È - lecture_02 urban change
urban space design | transformation of urban design and urban form
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Á¦ 3° : µµ½Ã¼³°èÁ¢±Ù(1) : µµ½Ã°ø°£ÀÇ ÇüÅÂÇÐ - lecture_03 urban morphology
urban morphology | morphological dimension in urban design
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Á¦ 4° : µµ½Ã¼³°èÁ¢±Ù(2) : µµ½Ã°ø°£ÀÇ Àå¼Ò¼º - lecture_04 sence of place
environmental perception | construction of place
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Á¦ 5° : µµ½Ã¼³°èÁ¢±Ù(3) : Áö¼Ó°¡´ÉÇÑ µµ½Ã¼³°è - lecture_05 urban Sustainability
environmental crisis & sustainable development(1) | environmental crisis & sustainable development(2)
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Á¦ 6° : µµ½Ã¼³°èÁ¢±Ù(4) : »çȸÇÐÀû µµ½Ã°ø°£ - lecture_06 socio Geography
urban politics & social organization(1) | urban politics & social organization(2)
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Á¦ 7° : µµ½Ã¼³°èÁ¢±Ù(5) : Visual Dimension - lecture_07 visual_dimension
patterns and aesthetic order | urban space
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Á¦ 8° : µµ½Ã¼³°èÁ¢±Ù(6) : Functional Dimension - lecture_08 functional_dimension
public space and interface | privacy, mixed use and density
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Á¦ 9° : µµ½Ã¼³°èÁ¤Ã¥(1) : Development Process in Urban Design - lecture_09 development process
development method and model | role & actors
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Copyright@ LEE Inhee. All rights reserved. Department of Architecture, Pusan National University, Korea Email : samlih@pusan.ac.kr Back to top
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