Waste Field, Front Field
(2017) ASBM01 20171Department of Architecture and Built Environment
- Abstract
- For years the body of Tarlabası community has been squeezed into a container to protect the neo-liberal socio-economical representation of Istanbul. Today a subject of Turkish regeneration policies its deteriorating architectural heritage is sunken in piles of waste and entirely cut off from the municipal waste management system.
Waste Field, Front Field proposes a rehabilitation of Tarlabası,preserving the collective memory and historical tissue and emerging as a mixed income district. The project adopts a strategy revolving around re-cycle, re-use and re-distribution circuit. The waste as the untreated component on neighbourhood level is seen as the urban trigger and major resource to be enclosed in a continuous loop. The architecture... (More) - For years the body of Tarlabası community has been squeezed into a container to protect the neo-liberal socio-economical representation of Istanbul. Today a subject of Turkish regeneration policies its deteriorating architectural heritage is sunken in piles of waste and entirely cut off from the municipal waste management system.
Waste Field, Front Field proposes a rehabilitation of Tarlabası,preserving the collective memory and historical tissue and emerging as a mixed income district. The project adopts a strategy revolving around re-cycle, re-use and re-distribution circuit. The waste as the untreated component on neighbourhood level is seen as the urban trigger and major resource to be enclosed in a continuous loop. The architecture will be repurposed into structurally new typologies and will accommodate a waste management element - the chute. As a result the revitalized Tarlabası will boost up on site micro-economy, generate infrastructure, provide income and allow for a new collective mentality to emerge. The circuit can be perceived as cathartic, serve to the real owners of Tarlabası
and therefore contribute to a more sustainable lifestyle and development. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/8980962
- author
- Foteva, Atanaska LU
- supervisor
- organization
- alternative title
- Modular Incremental Re-cycling of Waste and Fabric
- course
- ASBM01 20171
- year
- 2017
- type
- H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
- subject
- keywords
- waste, circuit, recycle reuse, gentrification, rehabilitation, architecture, sustainable, micro-economy
- language
- English
- id
- 8980962
- date added to LUP
- 2019-06-11 10:48:27
- date last changed
- 2020-06-01 06:22:13
@misc{8980962, abstract = {{For years the body of Tarlabası community has been squeezed into a container to protect the neo-liberal socio-economical representation of Istanbul. Today a subject of Turkish regeneration policies its deteriorating architectural heritage is sunken in piles of waste and entirely cut off from the municipal waste management system. Waste Field, Front Field proposes a rehabilitation of Tarlabası,preserving the collective memory and historical tissue and emerging as a mixed income district. The project adopts a strategy revolving around re-cycle, re-use and re-distribution circuit. The waste as the untreated component on neighbourhood level is seen as the urban trigger and major resource to be enclosed in a continuous loop. The architecture will be repurposed into structurally new typologies and will accommodate a waste management element - the chute. As a result the revitalized Tarlabası will boost up on site micro-economy, generate infrastructure, provide income and allow for a new collective mentality to emerge. The circuit can be perceived as cathartic, serve to the real owners of Tarlabası and therefore contribute to a more sustainable lifestyle and development.}}, author = {{Foteva, Atanaska}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Waste Field, Front Field}}, year = {{2017}}, }