Morphology of quarters in traditional Arab Islamic city: A case of the traditional city of Damascus

Studies on the quarters of traditional Arab Islamic cities have stressed the idea of an urban structure that corresponds to social groupings and to a collection of local regions or even of “inchoate” neighborhood units. This spatial model has often provided the rationale for the intervention in thes...

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Main Author: Loai M. Dabbour
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2021-03-01
Series:Frontiers of Architectural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095263520300741
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spelling doaj-bcf3576657084e07b0c979ba39183a8c2021-03-22T12:49:25ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Frontiers of Architectural Research2095-26352021-03-011015065Morphology of quarters in traditional Arab Islamic city: A case of the traditional city of DamascusLoai M. Dabbour0Department of Architecture, Faculty of Architecture and Design, AlZaytoonah University of Jordan, Amman, JordanStudies on the quarters of traditional Arab Islamic cities have stressed the idea of an urban structure that corresponds to social groupings and to a collection of local regions or even of “inchoate” neighborhood units. This spatial model has often provided the rationale for the intervention in these cities and in the design of new housing layouts. This study aims to examine this issue through syntactic measures and observations to describe and analyze the structure and morphology of quarters through connectivity and visibility analysis of pedestrian movement through space syntax. Whether the structure of these cities presents a global whole in contrast to the assumptions of physical subareas of social groupings is discussed. The city of Damascus is used as a model of analysis in which the urban morphology of quarters is described and characterized. This study reports several findings that are potentially relevant to the understanding of traditional laws that relate the physical layout of quarters to the social structure and their local subareas to the global whole that dominate and unify the parts. On this basis, the design approach in these cities may be better understood.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095263520300741Islamic cityNeighborhood quarterQuarter's morphologySpace syntaxSocial groupingDamascus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Loai M. Dabbour
spellingShingle Loai M. Dabbour
Morphology of quarters in traditional Arab Islamic city: A case of the traditional city of Damascus
Frontiers of Architectural Research
Islamic city
Neighborhood quarter
Quarter's morphology
Space syntax
Social grouping
Damascus
author_facet Loai M. Dabbour
author_sort Loai M. Dabbour
title Morphology of quarters in traditional Arab Islamic city: A case of the traditional city of Damascus
title_short Morphology of quarters in traditional Arab Islamic city: A case of the traditional city of Damascus
title_full Morphology of quarters in traditional Arab Islamic city: A case of the traditional city of Damascus
title_fullStr Morphology of quarters in traditional Arab Islamic city: A case of the traditional city of Damascus
title_full_unstemmed Morphology of quarters in traditional Arab Islamic city: A case of the traditional city of Damascus
title_sort morphology of quarters in traditional arab islamic city: a case of the traditional city of damascus
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
series Frontiers of Architectural Research
issn 2095-2635
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Studies on the quarters of traditional Arab Islamic cities have stressed the idea of an urban structure that corresponds to social groupings and to a collection of local regions or even of “inchoate” neighborhood units. This spatial model has often provided the rationale for the intervention in these cities and in the design of new housing layouts. This study aims to examine this issue through syntactic measures and observations to describe and analyze the structure and morphology of quarters through connectivity and visibility analysis of pedestrian movement through space syntax. Whether the structure of these cities presents a global whole in contrast to the assumptions of physical subareas of social groupings is discussed. The city of Damascus is used as a model of analysis in which the urban morphology of quarters is described and characterized. This study reports several findings that are potentially relevant to the understanding of traditional laws that relate the physical layout of quarters to the social structure and their local subareas to the global whole that dominate and unify the parts. On this basis, the design approach in these cities may be better understood.
topic Islamic city
Neighborhood quarter
Quarter's morphology
Space syntax
Social grouping
Damascus
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095263520300741
work_keys_str_mv AT loaimdabbour morphologyofquartersintraditionalarabislamiccityacaseofthetraditionalcityofdamascus
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