TAG Talk #26: New Vernacular Architecture. A talk by Jonathan Weatherill.

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  • Опубліковано 23 вер 2023
  • New Vernacular Architecture
    Creating Identity of Place - Research and Practice - by Jonathan Weatherill
    Vernacular architecture and urban design can be used as a tool to help heal damage done to urban, suburban and rural space in the past 100 years.
    In badly planned places with little or no clear past identity, New Vernacular architecture can be created to become intrinsically representative of the identity of that place.
    The case in point is Rozzano, a suburban dormitory town built in Milan’s green belt in the ‘60s and ’70s, to house immigrant workers from Southern Italy.
    The basic principles behind the creation of Vernacular architecture are illustrated in a previous study that is the seed of ongoing research. These principles are then applied to the case of Rozzano.
    The results of this research and the resulting project could represent a new direction for architecture and urban design; a small step to resist the proliferation of anonymous and uniform building that continues to erase the identities of places worldwide
    Jonathan Weatherill is an Associate professor of the Rome Program of the University of Notre Dame School of Architecture. He is a practising architect who has lived in Italy since graduating from the Architectural Association in London over 25 years ago. He runs his own practice and has also collaborated with 2014 Driehaus laureate Pier Carlo Bontempi since they met in Milan thirty years ago. His professional experience has spanned the genres of Modernism and Classicism, in a wide range of fields from industrial design to restoration and urban planning.
    He is inspired by the timelessness of the rural vernacular and the elegant equilibrium of architectural language of the past. His work is the result of an eclectic education informed by his varied experience and the comprehension of local reality through investigation and on-site and archival documentation.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 16

  • @kylejmarsh3988

    Thank you for the excellent presentation Mr. Weatherill - your approach to placemaking and deep respect for local vernacular architecture should be a model for others to aspire to. It seems so simple in principle - to simply look around at the existing patterns and use them to inform the design of the project, infusing them with a knowledge of placemaking to create a result to which nothing need be added, and nothing removed. It represents in one project the slow historical building up of a local Architecture which is not only Human in it's execution, but is logically defensible in it's detailing and grounded in the Tradition of the place. This is certainly not the short-attention-span slop which forms the core of the 'creeping crud' quickly destroying the countryside - this is long-attention-span Architecture which dignifies both the Architect, and those future residents with the mind to see and understand it. Kudos.

  • @katiatrost3759

    Great presentation, I hope traditional architecture makes a big comeback. I hope never to live in a modernist architecture again. It feels soulless and looks ugly.

  • @user-wh4wm3mw7l
    @user-wh4wm3mw7l 9 годин тому

    Traditional architecture is beautiful and what is built today, since modernism, is horrible and depressing.

  • @ppuzzello64

    This presentation should not be a critique about modernity, but about mediocrity. I see plenty of sameness with traditional architecture. The "traditionalists" do not own the idea of placemaking.