Tracing the Progression of Inhabitation through Interior Surface in Semarang Old Town

The capacity of the interior to adapt and transform through time has made the interior space bears the consequences from its past occupancies. The trails of the past are imprinted within the layers of interior surfaces. This paper argues that by utilising the idea of Anthropocene, these surfaces cou...

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Main Authors: AA Ayu Suci Warakanyaka, Yandi Andri Yatmo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Architecture Universitas Indonesia 2018-02-01
Series:Interiority
Subjects:
Online Access:https://interiority.eng.ui.ac.id/index.php/journal/article/view/9
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spelling doaj-bcca5e79d40b492ab62f657b30970ac62020-11-25T01:01:29ZengDepartment of Architecture Universitas IndonesiaInteriority2614-65842615-33862018-02-0111647810.7454/in.v1i1.99Tracing the Progression of Inhabitation through Interior Surface in Semarang Old TownAA Ayu Suci Warakanyaka0Yandi Andri Yatmo1Universitas Indonesia, IndonesiaUniversitas Indonesia, IndonesiaThe capacity of the interior to adapt and transform through time has made the interior space bears the consequences from its past occupancies. The trails of the past are imprinted within the layers of interior surfaces. This paper argues that by utilising the idea of Anthropocene, these surfaces could become the medium to trace the inhabitation processes that happen throughout the life of the building, whether it was in the past, in the present or to predict the future. In particular, this paper attempts to explore and speculate on the progression of inhabitations through the interior surfaces of the buildings in Semarang Old Town, Central Java, Indonesia. The investigations are presented through the stories of the facades, the paints and the tiles, to reveal how these interior layers narrate the idea of the deep time in which the past inhabitation is embedded. These layers of interior surfaces suggest the role of time and continuous transformation in affecting and producing the current interior spaces. An understanding of deep time, as reflected in the layers of interior surfaces, also suggests the agency of human inhabitation within the transformation of interior space and highlights the ability of interior space to manoeuvre in time.https://interiority.eng.ui.ac.id/index.php/journal/article/view/9anthropocenedeep timesurfacelayersinhabitation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author AA Ayu Suci Warakanyaka
Yandi Andri Yatmo
spellingShingle AA Ayu Suci Warakanyaka
Yandi Andri Yatmo
Tracing the Progression of Inhabitation through Interior Surface in Semarang Old Town
Interiority
anthropocene
deep time
surface
layers
inhabitation
author_facet AA Ayu Suci Warakanyaka
Yandi Andri Yatmo
author_sort AA Ayu Suci Warakanyaka
title Tracing the Progression of Inhabitation through Interior Surface in Semarang Old Town
title_short Tracing the Progression of Inhabitation through Interior Surface in Semarang Old Town
title_full Tracing the Progression of Inhabitation through Interior Surface in Semarang Old Town
title_fullStr Tracing the Progression of Inhabitation through Interior Surface in Semarang Old Town
title_full_unstemmed Tracing the Progression of Inhabitation through Interior Surface in Semarang Old Town
title_sort tracing the progression of inhabitation through interior surface in semarang old town
publisher Department of Architecture Universitas Indonesia
series Interiority
issn 2614-6584
2615-3386
publishDate 2018-02-01
description The capacity of the interior to adapt and transform through time has made the interior space bears the consequences from its past occupancies. The trails of the past are imprinted within the layers of interior surfaces. This paper argues that by utilising the idea of Anthropocene, these surfaces could become the medium to trace the inhabitation processes that happen throughout the life of the building, whether it was in the past, in the present or to predict the future. In particular, this paper attempts to explore and speculate on the progression of inhabitations through the interior surfaces of the buildings in Semarang Old Town, Central Java, Indonesia. The investigations are presented through the stories of the facades, the paints and the tiles, to reveal how these interior layers narrate the idea of the deep time in which the past inhabitation is embedded. These layers of interior surfaces suggest the role of time and continuous transformation in affecting and producing the current interior spaces. An understanding of deep time, as reflected in the layers of interior surfaces, also suggests the agency of human inhabitation within the transformation of interior space and highlights the ability of interior space to manoeuvre in time.
topic anthropocene
deep time
surface
layers
inhabitation
url https://interiority.eng.ui.ac.id/index.php/journal/article/view/9
work_keys_str_mv AT aaayusuciwarakanyaka tracingtheprogressionofinhabitationthroughinteriorsurfaceinsemarangoldtown
AT yandiandriyatmo tracingtheprogressionofinhabitationthroughinteriorsurfaceinsemarangoldtown
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