Showing 2 results for Habibi
Mohammad Reza Naeemi, Milad Habibi Lialestani, Hassan Ali Pourmand,
year 12, Issue 30 (7-2022)
Abstract
During the second Pahlavi period, modernism was supported at the cultural level of society, which extended to the design of mosques and led to the construction of Modern mosques. Afterwards, with the institutional support of the government given the capacities of Iranian traditional and regional architecture by holding conferences, in parallel with the criticisms of the rapid modernization of this era, the regionalist approach emerged, which was the critical approach of the stylistic features of modernism as well as the legacy of the past. The question is, what are the similarities between the modern mosques of these two decades and what are the differences between the regionalist mosques as a reaction to the modern mosques? What factors have led to the change of design approach in modern mosques? This paper deals with the evolution of the design of modern mosques in Iran between ١٩٦٠ and ١٩٧٩ with a descriptive-analytical method. In this study, the theory of critical regionalism is used to analyze and categorize modern mosques and show the changes in the design of regional mosques of the ١٩٧٠s compared to modern mosques of the ١٩٦٠s. The paper aims to categorize legibly and more reasonably the evolution of modern mosque design approaches concerning the historical context and theoretical currents of architecture to provide a basis for reading modern mosque design approaches after the Islamic Revolution. The regional mosques of the ١٩٧٠s unlike modern mosques of the ١٩٦٠s, which can only be perceived by the visual perspective, are the tactile or multi-sensory works. The regional mosques of the ١٩٧٠s are innovative and new in terms of volume, like Al-Javad Mosque, but in their design approach, sensitivity to cultural identity and attention to the local matter can be followed. However, in the process of designing with a critical approach, they have made a synthesis of the tradition of Iranian architecture with modern style and technology, which does not show imitation or historical return like the Tehran University Mosque.
Hossein Kashi, Maryam Mohammadi, Mitra Habibi,
year 13, Issue 33 (3-2023)
Abstract
Urban context and environment and changes thereto, are among the factors affecting place attachment that by itself influences different personal and social features like personal relationships and feelings. Depending on how environmental changes and place attachment influence each other, the way users perceive environmental changes is different regarding their attachment to place. The way of perception has different consequences and responses from the users. Few studies have been conducted on the way in which people perceive environmental changes regarding place attachment. Little attention has been paid to the relationship between place attachment and the way of perception of urban changes in most of the studies, and these studies are more descriptive than experimental, being more concerned with individual and their individual characteristics. The present paper aims to examine how people perceive, interpret, evaluate and respond to the various environmental changes especially physical, regarding people's attachment to place.
This study was conducted using content analysis and Grounded Theory methods and with inductive and interrogative strategy. Its purpose is to achieve a model related to how the residents of Daryan No and Eastern Marzdaran neighborhoods (located in District 2 of Tehran) perceive and respond to environmental changes by discovering concepts and categories and the relationship between them. Finally, based on the users' perception, it was found that place attachment caused by urban physical changes has dimensions including: non-physical factors, type of physical changes and its speed and extent, psychological responses (psychological feelings and motivations) and practical responses. It is formed in a specific time and place. Based on the results, the response to changes can be defined as two categories of either stay or move (displacement) with different physical to behavioral actions.