Conflict, Space and Architecture

Introduction

Journal Article (2016)
Author(s)

M.G.H. Schoonderbeek (TU Delft - OLD Public Buiding)

M. Shoshan (TU Delft - OLD History of Architecture & Urban Planning)

Research Group
OLD Public Buiding
Copyright
© 2016 M.G.H. Schoonderbeek, M. Shoshan
More Info
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Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Copyright
© 2016 M.G.H. Schoonderbeek, M. Shoshan
Research Group
OLD Public Buiding
Issue number
2
Volume number
10
Pages (from-to)
1-12
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Footprint 19 focuses on the more recent roles of architecture in the contemporary spaces of conflict. Departing from a spatial understanding of geopolitical, climatological and economical conflicts, the various contributions highlight the large scale and phenomenal transitions in the physical world and in society by extrapolating, through examples, the abundance of relations that can be traced between conflict, territory and architecture. Conflict areas often prove to be fertile grounds for innovation and for the emergence of new spatial forms. The issue reports on the state of perpetual global unrest in architecture through a series of articles and case studies that highlight the consequences of conflicts in the places and spaces that we inhabit. In the introduction, these are discussed as an interlinked global reality rather than as isolated incidents. In doing so, the contemporary spaces of conflict are positioned in the context of emerging global trends, conditions, and discourses in the attempt to address their indicative symptoms while reflecting on their underlying causes.