Urban analysis techniques and role of morphology in post crisis urban design: the case of Rubattino and Ortica districts in Milan

Delsante, Ioanni and Bertolino, Nadia (2014) Urban analysis techniques and role of morphology in post crisis urban design: the case of Rubattino and Ortica districts in Milan. In: ISUF 21st International Seminar on Urban Form: Our common future in Urban Morphology, 3-6 July 2014, Porto, Portugal.

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Abstract

Urban spaces and towns are facing different and contradictory dynamics, between "endless" expansion and "shrinking" trends. Post financial crisis urban renovation also deals with different practices, between real estate development and temporary use entailing reappropriation of urban areas. It is nowadays almost impossible, at least in Europe, to realize major town plans similar to those carried out in the past decades, but new forms of urban renovation, much more complex and fragmented, or temporary and low cost, are now spreading. They allow the participation of different actors (public /private partnerships), flexible timing and spatial organization, with the not secondary goal of reusing urban territories and buildings. The aim of renovation projects is more and more focused on social issues and challenges, for example in terms of quality of life and health, also by means of innovative housing programs, and sustainable layouts over the years: which will be the effects of this "programmatic" architecture on urban morphology? The completion of elaborate programmes requires deep and integrated urban analysis, based on a "reading of the town" through multiple and complementary methodologies (i.e. considering the town as combination of layers, the town seen as an archipelago or a "town within the town"). Urban morphology plays an important role in defining urban strategies, especially within fragmented or superimposed layouts. Rubattino and Ortica districts in Milan represent a meaningful case study for research and design: it could be described as a multi-layered and multicomposed scenario, considering its various parts and their "complementary", "separated" and even "contradictory" status, as opposed to a homogeneous and uniform one.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Subjects: K100 Architecture
K400 Planning (Urban, Rural and Regional)
K900 Others in Architecture, Building and Planning
Department: Faculties > Engineering and Environment > Architecture and Built Environment
Depositing User: Nadia Bertolino
Date Deposited: 06 Apr 2017 10:33
Last Modified: 01 Aug 2021 02:06
URI: http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/30353

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