URBAN MORPHOLOGY COURSE 2024
APRI LA LOCANDINA def. corso roma3 2024
SCHEDULE – CONTENTS OF THE LECTURES AND ACTIVITIES
8h March – Introduction. Meaning and utility of Urban Morphology for the contemporary architecture.
15h March – Course organization. Schedule. Presentation of the program. Student registration. Guest lecturer MARTIN EBERT Between revolution and reform
22h March Base building: base elements: notion, forming process and relationship with urban pre-existence – Ghetto cartography – groups forming (max. 4 students). classroom exercise
29h March Matter Material: notion, transformation process, contemporary condition. Classroom work. design exsercise
5h April Fabric -Urban Organism – Substrata: the physical form of the city: notion, forming process; contemporary condition – classroom exercise. Guest lecturer ATTILIO PETRUCCIOLI The interpretation of urban fabrics in the eastern city.
12h April Special building: forming process and contemporary examples. Architectural knotting: historic notion and transition to modernity. classroom exercise
19h April . Field Survey: on base building topics (F. De Rosa, R. Salamouni)
26h April Territory: notion, forming process and contemporary condition. classroom exercise
3h Maj Field Survey on special building topics. classroom exercise
10h Maj At the roots of architectural composition: the notions of assembly and aggregation in history and in the contemporary condition. classroom exercise
17h Maj Roman modern architecture. specific features of modern Roman architecture from U.M point of view. Guest lecturers R.CAPOZZI, F. VISCONTI Space and Form in the architecture of Louis Kahn
24h Maj book presentation (?) – Conclusion. and questions about the examination programme (unclear parts of the lectures, supplementary topics, etc.) Student opinions and suggestions.
31st May Short recap/summary of the course main topics (for the examination) Short (2 hours) pre-examination test (optional)
Base texts online
- Strappa, L’architettura come processo, Franco Angeli, Milano 2015
The main chapters translated into English can be found on the teacher’s website (http://www.giuseppestrappa.it/) and are indicated below:
. Notes on base building – http://www.giuseppestrappa.it/?p=8400
. The aggregation process and the form of the fabric, http://www.giuseppestrappa.it/?p=8380
. Special nodal building, http://www.giuseppestrappa.it/?p=8159
. Architectural knotting, http://www.giuseppestrappa.it/?p=8414
. G. Strappa, Territory as architecture, 2019 – http://www.giuseppestrappa.it/?p=8355
Base text in paper format
- Caniggia, G.L. Maffei, Interpreting basic building, Altralinea, Firenze 2017
- Scardigno, N , Salamouni, R, Architecture in the making, Conversation with Giuseppe Strappa on urban morphology and design, Springer, Cham, 2024 (In the process of publication)
Roma Tre Urban Morphology Course – BETWEEN REVOLUTION AND REFORM – Early modern architecture in Germany, 1890 – 1933
lecture by Martin Ebert
Via Aldo Manuzio 86 L (ExMattatoio – Testaccio)
Room Giorgio Labò – 4.00 / 5.30 pm
G.STRAPPA, M. IEVA, N. MARZOT – THE ITALIAN SCHOOL OF PROCESS MORPHOLOGY. ROOTS, METHODS AND FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
G.STRAPPA, M. IEVA, N. MARZOT
THE ITALIAN SCHOOL OF PROCESS MORPHOLOGY.
ROOTS, METHODS AND FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
In SAJ, s e r b i a n a r c h i t e c t u r a l j o u r n a l, VOL.15, 2023 Editor Vladan Djokić
A. THE ORIGINS OF THE MORPHOLOGICAL STUDIES IN ITALY
Giuseppe Strappa
Particularly in the current conditions, I believe, it could be useful to go back to reflecting on the roots of morphological studies in Italy as they are, in fact, the evidence of a concrete approach to the architectural design based on logical and didactically transmissible bases. These studies were aimed, especially in the Roman School, at the formation of general and shared methods derived from the reading of built reality and were aimed at the positive study of how it could be transformed. Studying them is useful, precisely in a period like the present one in which, on the one hand, morphology studies are gradually assuming an increasingly abstract and independent drift from design and, on the other, professional practice is aimed, instead, at the marketing of architecture through interpretations based on the perception and spectacular communication of the results.
The studies from which the researches on the formative processes of the urban form in the Italian area have been developed are above all known, abroad, through the texts of Gianfranco Caniggia. It is also known that these derive from the teachings of Saverio Muratori, whose texts, however, are less known for having never been translated into English. Even less known is the fact that the origin of this school of thought dates back much earlier, at least to the interwar period and to the studies of innovators such as Gustavo Giovannoni, Giovan Battista Milani, Enrico Calandra and others. The common thread that binds these researches, developed largely through teaching in the Faculty of Architecture, is the “reading” of the built reality which not only has the project as its aim but, in many respects, is itself a project.
READ FULL TEXT origine UM in Italia SAJ_15_02_PRINT
U+D n.20 TERRITORIO E CITTA’ – Editoriale
Leggere il territorio.
Prendersi cura del territorio
Giuseppe Strappa
Una riflessione responsabile sulla trasformazione della nozione di territorio, credo, dovrebbe oggi tener conto due condizioni fondamentali.
La prima è la percezione sincronica che abbiamo del mondo costruito, in un contesto dominato dal presente. Percorsi, insediamenti, aree produttive, fanno tutti parte di uno stesso ambiente contemporaneo, le cui ragioni formative sembrano appartenere a un insieme di problemi distanti dalla vita reale. In questa compresenza di tutte le cose, le città coesistono, indistinte, col loro hinterland, col territorio che le circonda e che dovrebbe spiegarle, con le infrastrutture che le annodano.
Sulla constatazione che città e territorio siano, di fatto, la stessa cosa si è sviluppata un’intera letteratura, almeno a partire dall’idea proposta da La città in estensione di Giuseppe Samonà (1976). Punto di vista allora senz’altro utile, ma oggi inattuale per non tener conto della progressiva urbanizzazione di ogni area del nostro pianeta (con le relative polarizzazioni e marginalizzazioni) che forse è la vera chiave di lettura di un fenomeno di concentrazione che sembra contraddire i miti della delocalizzazione in un nuovo universo digitale.
Soprattutto, questa nuova visione sincronica della realtà costruita sembra del tutto estranea alla lettura del divenire storico del territorio. Lettura, ritengo, fondamentale e non eludibile, a partire dalla considerazione elementare che ogni fenomeno si spiega con la sua origine e trasformazione: prima l’uomo si
muove, cammina, migra, traversa crinali e fondovalle di luoghi dei quali acquista coscienza attraverso la reiterazione dei percorsi, quindi si ferma, stabilisce le aree di pertinenza di una comunità (aree culturali) e costruisce gli insediamenti.
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