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dc.contributor.authorSamalavičius, Almantas Liudas
dc.date.accessioned2023-09-18T17:07:36Z
dc.date.available2023-09-18T17:07:36Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifier.issn1757-8981
dc.identifier.urihttps://etalpykla.vilniustech.lt/handle/123456789/119951
dc.description.abstractSustainability, resilience and other concepts have recently emerged as a response to the most urgent problems of our time including the ones of the built environment. Throughout the last century little attention if any at all was paid to the adaptability of the built environment to nature and the needs of human beings. The ideology that shaped Modernism was hostile to the psychological qualities of the built environment and instead cared about shaping new aesthetics and advanced technology in building industry. The ascent of Modernism during the last century among other things was associated with dissemination of certain building doctrines and dogmas that neglected environmental issues and played their role in discrediting traditional ways of building architectural structures as well as traditional urbanism. As a result the built environment lost its adaptability to natural environment as well as its human qualities. Thus a new approach to building and rethinking of the legacy of Modernism as well as current practices is urgently needed. Though the rise of environmental consciousness gave an impetus to reconsider present quality of built environment, more steps in this direction are required. Reconsideration of architectural and urban design practices could and should be triggered by the new findings in psychology, neuroscience as well as re-reading of pioneering work in architectural and urban theory done by Christopher Alexander and his co-workers and more recently revisited by Nikos Salingaros. Reasoning that the development of technology in itself can solve the problems of the built environment is deeply flawed and thus should be transcended.eng
dc.formatPDF
dc.format.extentp. 1-8
dc.format.mediumtekstas / txt
dc.language.isoeng
dc.relation.isreferencedbyScopus
dc.relation.isreferencedbyIOP Science
dc.source.urihttp://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1755-1315/213/1/012001/pdf
dc.titleBeyond sustainability: reconsidering the healing qualities of the built environment
dc.typeStraipsnis konferencijos darbų leidinyje Scopus DB / Paper in conference publication in Scopus DB
dcterms.references31
dc.type.pubtypeP1b - Straipsnis konferencijos darbų leidinyje Scopus DB / Article in conference proceedings Scopus DB
dc.contributor.institutionVilniaus Gedimino technikos universitetas
dc.contributor.facultyArchitektūros fakultetas / Faculty of Architecture
dc.subject.researchfieldH 003 - Menotyra / Art studies
dc.subject.vgtuprioritizedfieldsSD0303 - Architektūra ir urbanistinė aplinka / Architecture and Built Environment
dc.subject.ltspecializationsL102 - Energetika ir tvari aplinka / Energy and a sustainable environment
dc.subject.enurbanism
dc.subject.ensustainability
dc.subject.enresilience
dc.subject.enhealing environment
dc.subject.endesign patterns
dcterms.sourcetitleIOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science. The 2nd International Conference on Sustainability in Architectural Design and Urbanism, 29 August 2018, Semarang, Indonesia
dc.description.volumevol. 2013
dc.publisher.nameIOP Publishing
dc.publisher.cityBristol
dc.identifier.doi2-s2.0-85060029554
dc.identifier.doi10.1088/1755-1315/213/012001
dc.identifier.elaba33455878


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