This document is a syllabus developed for the course "Architecture and the Environment," by Dr. Nasser Rabbat of MIT Department of Architecture, School of Architecture and Planning.
Course Description
This course proposes to study how Islamic architecture and urban planning coped with environmental constraints in various areas and different climates and turned them into constructive design tools. It examines the environmental strategies behind the design of selected examples ranging in scale from the region, to the city, the house, the garden, and the single architectural element. It explores the social, cultural, symbolic, and psychological dimensions of environmental design as they developed over time to enrich, modify, or even obscure their functional origins.
Topics Covered:
The Image of Paradise and its models: Koranic gardens, Dome of Heaven, Celestial Dome; Muqarnas
Movable Architecture: tents, yurts, and camps.
Shadow and Shading devices; Trees; Tiles; Colors
Wind catchers and other cooling techniques
Orientation and the city scape: streets, openings, houses.
Water Architecture: fountains, sabils, qanat, shadirwan, waterwheel, aqueducts, Hammams
Andalusian Examples: Madinat al-Zahra, Alhambra, Generalife
Chahar Bagh symbolism: Representation of garden in painting
Timurid, Mughal, Ottoman, and Persian Gardens
Representation of garden in painting (Nasuh, Persian, Mughal, Qajar)
Architecture and Travel: Caravanserai (Ottoman chimneys), Grand Hotels
The Courtyard House: Hasan Fathy's notion on Courtyard houses.
Contemporary indulgences: Diplomats' section in Riyadh, Hollywood's representations, Summer villas in the Mediterranean.
The city scape: streets, openings, houses
A Brief Introduction to the History and Ecology of the Islamic World
Reading
Environment, Climate, and Architecture in the Islamic World
Historical Precedents
Movable Architecture: Tents, the dwelling of the nomad.
Rural and Urban Settlements in Arabia
Early Islamic Settlements
Mecca, Medina: The house of the Prophet at Medina.
The first garrison towns of Islam: Kufa, Basra, Fustat, Qayrawan
Readings
Umayyad Settlements
Paradisial environment? Ideal environment? Or symbolic environment?
Pre Islamic prototypes:
Byzantine, Greco-Roman, and Hellenistic prototypes.
Mesopotamian, Parthian, and Sassanian prototypes.
Levantine, Arabian, and South-Arabian influences.
The Image of Paradise and its models: Koranic gardens, Dome of Heaven
Readings
Medieval Links
Fustat Houses
Residential medieval architecture: Mamluk Qa‘as: the spreading of the royal model.
Residences on the move: Caravansaries, the hostels of the great trading routes.
The Rab‘: A unique medieval urban residential types
Readings
The Alhambra in Granada
The Islamic Versions of the Villa Urbana and Villa Rustica
Madinat al-Zahra
Granadine Villas
Readings
Water and The Islamic Garden
Water Architecture: fountains, sabils, qanat, shadirwan
Readings
Planned Royal Cities
Baghdad and Samarra as models
Cairo: royal residence of the Fatimid Caliphs
The Mughal Royal Palaces: Fatehpur Sikri
Isfahan: The Creation of the Safavid Capital
Readings
The Chahar Bagh
Timurid, Mughal, Ottoman, and Persian Gardens
Symbolism: Representation of Garden in Painting
Readings
Traditional Houses
Courtyard Houses
Iranian Houses and Pavilions.
Ottoman Residences and Pavilions
Adobe Architecture:
Earth: Building Materials and their Environmental Properties
Readings
Environmental Responsiveness in Traditional Architecture
Shadow and Shading devices
Wind catchers and other cooling techniques
Orientation and the city scape: streets, openings, houses.
The Interplay of History, Culture, and the Climate in Traditional Architecture (Heschong)
Readings
Revival of the Vernacular
H. Fathy, W. Wassif, N. Khalili
Hasan Fathy's conceptualization of the courtyard house.
Readings
The Environmental Theme and Developing Countries
Contemporary examples: the environmental category in the Aga Khan Award for Architecture
Students presentations of examples chosen from the Aga Khan Award projects
Readings
This document is a syllabus developed for the course "Architecture and the Environment," by Dr. Nasser Rabbat of MIT Department of Architecture, School of Architecture and Planning.
Course Description
This course proposes to study how Islamic architecture and urban planning coped with environmental constraints in various areas and different climates and turned them into constructive design tools. It examines the environmental strategies behind the design of selected examples ranging in scale from the region, to the city, the house, the garden, and the single architectural element. It explores the social, cultural, symbolic, and psychological dimensions of environmental design as they developed over time to enrich, modify, or even obscure their functional origins.
Topics Covered:
The Image of Paradise and its models: Koranic gardens, Dome of Heaven, Celestial Dome; Muqarnas
Movable Architecture: tents, yurts, and camps.
Shadow and Shading devices; Trees; Tiles; Colors
Wind catchers and other cooling techniques
Orientation and the city scape: streets, openings, houses.
Water Architecture: fountains, sabils, qanat, shadirwan, waterwheel, aqueducts, Hammams
Andalusian Examples: Madinat al-Zahra, Alhambra, Generalife
Chahar Bagh symbolism: Representation of garden in painting
Timurid, Mughal, Ottoman, and Persian Gardens
Representation of garden in painting (Nasuh, Persian, Mughal, Qajar)
Architecture and Travel: Caravanserai (Ottoman chimneys), Grand Hotels
The Courtyard House: Hasan Fathy's notion on Courtyard houses.
Contemporary indulgences: Diplomats' section in Riyadh, Hollywood's representations, Summer villas in the Mediterranean.
The city scape: streets, openings, houses
A Brief Introduction to the History and Ecology of the Islamic World
Reading
Environment, Climate, and Architecture in the Islamic World
Historical Precedents
Movable Architecture: Tents, the dwelling of the nomad.
Rural and Urban Settlements in Arabia
Early Islamic Settlements
Mecca, Medina: The house of the Prophet at Medina.
The first garrison towns of Islam: Kufa, Basra, Fustat, Qayrawan
Readings
Umayyad Settlements
Paradisial environment? Ideal environment? Or symbolic environment?
Pre Islamic prototypes:
Byzantine, Greco-Roman, and Hellenistic prototypes.
Mesopotamian, Parthian, and Sassanian prototypes.
Levantine, Arabian, and South-Arabian influences.
The Image of Paradise and its models: Koranic gardens, Dome of Heaven
Readings
Medieval Links
Fustat Houses
Residential medieval architecture: Mamluk Qa‘as: the spreading of the royal model.
Residences on the move: Caravansaries, the hostels of the great trading routes.
The Rab‘: A unique medieval urban residential types
Readings
The Alhambra in Granada
The Islamic Versions of the Villa Urbana and Villa Rustica
Madinat al-Zahra
Granadine Villas
Readings
Water and The Islamic Garden
Water Architecture: fountains, sabils, qanat, shadirwan
Readings
Planned Royal Cities
Baghdad and Samarra as models
Cairo: royal residence of the Fatimid Caliphs
The Mughal Royal Palaces: Fatehpur Sikri
Isfahan: The Creation of the Safavid Capital
Readings
The Chahar Bagh
Timurid, Mughal, Ottoman, and Persian Gardens
Symbolism: Representation of Garden in Painting
Readings
Traditional Houses
Courtyard Houses
Iranian Houses and Pavilions.
Ottoman Residences and Pavilions
Adobe Architecture:
Earth: Building Materials and their Environmental Properties
Readings
Environmental Responsiveness in Traditional Architecture
Shadow and Shading devices
Wind catchers and other cooling techniques
Orientation and the city scape: streets, openings, houses.
The Interplay of History, Culture, and the Climate in Traditional Architecture (Heschong)
Readings
Revival of the Vernacular
H. Fathy, W. Wassif, N. Khalili
Hasan Fathy's conceptualization of the courtyard house.
Readings
The Environmental Theme and Developing Countries
Contemporary examples: the environmental category in the Aga Khan Award for Architecture
Students presentations of examples chosen from the Aga Khan Award projects
Readings