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Change, Continuity and Home: The Tent, Traditional Dwelling and Squatter House in Turkey

Hülya Turgut Yýldýz (Istanbul Technical University; Faculty of Architecture, Istanbul, Turkey)

Open House International

ISSN: 0168-2601

Article publication date: 1 December 2006

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Abstract

This article aims to explore the changes and continuity in housing patterns of Turkish society comparing traditional and contemporary usage. In this context, the spatial and social structures of housing patterns are studied comparatively from an historical perspective. The article is based on research projects carried out by the author that aimed to identify the effects of socio-cultural and psychological factors on the spatial formation, meaning and use of domestic space in different types of Turkish dwellings. Examples chosen from a number of case studies in different housing patterns are mainly those of the Middle Asian Tent, the Traditional Turkish House and Squatter Housing ‘Gecekondu’. The article consists of six sections. In the first two, the aim and the general concept of the paper are defined, the research field is explained and the problem is specified. In the third section, the formation of spatial setting in different housing pattern of Turkish settlers will be analysed by comparing the tent, traditional house and squatter house. The fourth section focuses on related theoretical concepts in environmental behavioural studies with the conceptual model of culture and space interaction system in terms of meaning and use of home space. In the last two sections, the field study is presented and the article builds on the findings of the case studies to offer some proposals for new design principles.

Keywords

Citation

Yýldýz, H.T. (2006), "Change, Continuity and Home: The Tent, Traditional Dwelling and Squatter House in Turkey", Open House International, Vol. 31 No. 4, pp. 40-48. https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-04-2006-B0006

Publisher

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Open House International

Copyright © 2006 Open House International

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