01.2.2.4. proy. doc. u1 grupos 1.11 y 1.13 (2014-15) inglés
TRANSCRIPT
01.2.2.4. Proy. Doc. U1 grupos 1.11 y 1.13 (2014-15) ingles
SYLLABUS "Urbanism 1"
Lecturer: Ramón Queiro Quijada
Details and Timing of the Course
COURSE CONTENTS AND TIMING
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The course is divided into theory and practice in four types of activities:
-15 units of theory and practice over the 15 weeks that comprise the academic term.
-Collaborative work:
Delivery of a summary of the subject at the end of each theory class as a means to continuallyassess the student´s knowledge gained. Students will be given time to prepare the summarywhich will include images of the cities studied.
-Group assignments:
A group practical study of a part of Seville, whereby students apply the urban-regional subjecttheory studied in each relevant lesson.
- Individual assignments:
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Given that the knowledge of the city has its intervention as the ultimate aim, there will be, in thelast five weeks, an individual practical assignment as the first attempt into the invention in thecity. Once the analysis of the assigned sector is complete, each individual student will present aproposal of a small-scale urban intervention on the urban fragment that may be considered asan enhancement or small acupuncture in the sector analysed.
WEEK 1
Theory (120m)
Unit 01: Conceptual Introduction. Presentation of the subject. Approach to the concept ofUrbanism. Urbanism as a scientific and social discipline. Urbanism as a meta-discipline. Multiple approaches to the understanding of the city (its function, culture, society, politics,history, etc). Teaching guidelines of the Department of Urbanization.
Practical (120m)
Presentation of the cross-group practical. Organisation of groups.
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WEEK 2
Theory (75m)
Unit 02: The origin of urbanism and the first civilizations. The city as "Palimpsesto" andcustodian of identity. El territory of Mesopotamia, the Assyrian Empire, Ancient Egypt, the IndusValley and the Aegean Sea. Collaborative Task (45m)
Practical (120m)
Main Lesson 01: City and Territory.
Approach to Territory: Geography, hypsometry, clinometry and water systems. Theimplementation of the city in the territory. The representation of the territory and city. The matter of scale from 1:100.000 al 1:50.
Use of aerial Orthophotographs. Land registry mapping.
Group work. Cartography (Developing cross-group practicals. Applying theoretical knowledge).
WEEK 3
Theory (75m)
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Unit 03: The Hellenistic World and its rationale: The Greek Poleis.
The classic Greek city. The Hellenistic World: our western culture. Greek innovation andunderstanding of the territory. The Poléis: its fundamental elements and Miletos Hippodamus. Colonies of Magna Greacia. Greek cities. Collaborative task (45m)
Practical (120m)
Main Lesson 02: Representation of the land. Global Mapper: construction and representation ofthe land using Google Earth.
Group work. Cartography (Developing cross-group practicals. Applying theoretical knowledge).
WEEK 4
Theory (75m)
Unit 04: Classic Rome.
The Roman city as the foundation of urbanization and its periphery: the first territorial zoning –centurion – system for cities. Sculptures and monuments. Roman Spain: History of the works ofAugustus, latinization, the first conceptualization of Hispania and territorial articulation. Pre-Rom
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anesque Spain: the Visigoths.
Collaborative Task (45m)
Practical (120m)
Main Lesson 03: The morphogenesis of the city. Recognition strategies. Tools. Group work. Cartography (Developing the cross-group practical. Applying theoretical knowledge).
WEEK 5
Theory (75 m)
Unit 05: The Medieval Christian. Conceptual approach to the medieval city. Morphologicalcomponents [Castrum / Castle / Bridge / City Wall / Gate / Church and Cathedral / Square /Market / Convents / Urban patterns / Outlying areas]. Models of the medieval Christian city[Irregular city / Route or Linear City/ Crucial City / Defensive or Topographic City / RadiocentricCity / Regular City]. The Bastidas. The Ideal City of Eiximenis. Ambrossio Lorenzetti announcesthe Renaissance.
Collaborative task (45 m)
Practical (120 m).
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Group work. Morphogenesis. (Developing the cross-group practical. Applying theoreticalknowledge)
WEEK 6
Theory (75 m)
Unit 06: The Islamic City. Types of Islamic City [Transformation from the classic origin ofregular-pattern cities / Newly-built cities]. The Islamic City, characteristics. . Morphologicalcomponents [City Wall, Castle /alcazaba y Fortress/alcázar, road network, residential fabric,business and commercial spaces, public buildings (mosque, baths), religious spaces.Theoretical framework for a model Islamic city. Survival of the Islamic models.
Collaborative task (45 m) Practical (120 m)
Main lesson 04: Form and structure of the city. Uses. Building Typologies. Growth Forms.Group work. Morphogenesis. (Developing the cross-group practical. Applying theoretical knowledge)
WEEK 7
Theory (75 m)
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Unit 08: The Renaissance and Baroque City. The Renaissance [Historical-ChronologicalEvolution / Origin y Fundamentals of the Renaissance / Urban Planning, new search for orderand the introduction of the mainstream]. Restructuring the city by opening a new network ofmain streets. Creation of new public spaces (squares). Theories on the ideal city and layout of alimited number of new cities. Fortificationsystems. The concept of the Baroque city with parks and landscaped areas. Paris [Layout of the grandboulevards / Creation of the axis of the Champs-Elysees / The Ninth Bridge / The five squaresof the royal statues / Works to the outskirts of the city (Vaux-le-Vicomte, Versalles)]. Aranjuez. La Granja de San Ildefonso.
Collaborative task (45 m) Practical (120 m).
Group Work. Morphology. (Developing the cross-group practical. Applying theoreticalknowledge)
WEEK 8
Theory (75 m)
Unit 09: The Industrial Revolution and the Utopians: The industrial revolution and the explosionof urbanism [Background/ Chronology, origin and start / Urban disfunctionality and the origin ofurban development]. The industrial and residential suburb. The post-Industrial city, diverseapproaches. The utopian socialists, initial responses to the urban land problem [Robert Owen /Charles Fourier / Jean Baptiste André Godin / Etienne Cabet]. Religious communities in theUnited States.
Collaborative task (45 m) Practical (120 m)
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Group work. Morphology. (Developing the cross-group practical. Applying theoreticalknowledge)
WEEK 9
Theory (75 m)
Unit 10: The Linear City and the Garden City. The nineteenth-century city and its urbanalternatives, formal response models to the urban problem. The Linear City [Arturo Soria andMata / Analysis / Diagnosis, solution and proposal].
Structure of the Linear City [Implementation and layout /The railway as backbone / el roadnetwork and infrastructure / Plots and blocks modelling / Residential architecture]. The presentlinear city. The Garden City [Ebenezer Howard / Analogy to the three magnets / Analysis / Diagnosis, solutiony proposal]. Structure of the Garden City [Urban-territorial organisation and hierarchicalstructure / New growth model]. Letchworth Garden City. Welwyn Garden City. Evolution of the Garden City [Effects on urban-territorial planning / Bypassing the Garden Cityand Garden Suburb].
Collaborative task (45 m) Practical (120 m)
Main Lesson 04: Contemporary intervention strategies in the city. Practical cases. Group work.Morphology. (Developing the cross-group practical. Applying theoretical knowledge)
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WEEK 10
Theory (75 m)
Unit 11: Expansion: El Ensanche, pragmatic model in response to the urban problem and theindustrial city. Haussman and the Paris Plan. The Expansion District, development of the newcity [Theoretical principles / Types of Ensanche]. Barcelona [Ildefonso Cerdá / History / Physicalelements of the land / Geometry of Ensanche / Geometry of Grid system and its evolution/ TheJaussely Plan]. Madrid [Carlos María de Castro / History / Geometry of Ensanche / The newdistricts of Madrid]. European Expansion, the case of Vienna.
Collaborative task (45 m)
Practical (120 m)
Delivery of the gross-group assignment.
Individual assignments (Developing the practical. Applying theoretical knowledge)
WEEK 11
Theory (75 m)
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Unit 12: The rationalistic city and the Modernism Movement. Rationalistic Urbanism of theAthens Charter and the Polygon as a form of urban growth. The Modernism Movement orRationalism [Beginnings of the Modernism Movement / Misunderstanding of the territorialdimension of urbanism / The three human establishments]. The CIAM and the Athens Charter. The Corbusier [the contemporary city for three million inhabitants / the Radiant City / UrbanPlanning (Voisin Plan, Obús Plan, the Plan forBuenos Aires, Maciá Plan)]. Cities of the Modernism Movement [Chandigarh / Brasilia]. Thearchitecture of the Modernism Movement [The Modulor / Characteristics of the new architecture/ New building types]. The Polygon as a growth form of the rationalistic city [Origin and source oflocalization / morphology]. Consequences of functionalist theories.
Collaborative task (45 m) Practical (120 m)
Individual assignment. Intervention (Developing the practical. Applying theoretical knowledge)
WEEK 12
Theory (75 m)
Unit 13: Understanding the urban-territorial phenomenon: the Metropolitan Areas:
Theories and models explaining the structure of the city [La School of Chicago / The concentriczoning model / The radiating areas model / The multiple core model]. History of the origin of themetropolitan phenomenon. Metropolitan Area conceptualization. The Metropolitan Area as aprocess (Initial, intermediate and advanced processes). Problems of Metropolitan Areas.Metropolitan planning in Spain (Seville). Importance of metropolitan peripheries. The new urban-regional city of the 21st century. Improving the metropolitan model.
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Collaborative task (45 m) Practical (120 m)
Individual assignment. Intervention (Developing the practical. Applying theoretical knowledge)
WEEK 13
Theory (75 m)
Unit 14: Urbanism and Sustainability. The new paradigm. Contemporary criteria for interventionin the city. Global issues. Collaborative task (45 m)
Practical (120 m)
Individual assignment. Intervention (Developing the practical. Applying theoretical knowledge).WEEK 14
Test of theory (120 m) Practical (120 m)
Individual assignment (Developing the practical. Applying theoretical knowledge) WEEK 15
Submit individual assignments.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY AND ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
General Bibliography
Arias Sierra,P.: PERIFERIAS Y NUEVA CIUDAD. El problema del paisaje en los procesos dedispersión urbana. U de Sevilla. 84-472-0805-2
Benévolo, L.: DISEÑO DE LA CIUDAD 2. El arte y la ciudad antigua. G.G.
Benévolo L.: EL ARTE Y LA CIUDAD MEDIEVAL. G.G. 84-252-1025
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Benévolo L.: HISTORIA DE LA ARQUITECTURA MODERNA. G.G.. 84-252-0797-5
Benito Martín, F.: LA FORMACIÓN DE LA CIUDAD MEDIEVAL. Universidad de Valladolid.84-8448-002-X
Bernales B, J.: EL ARTE DEL BARROCO. Urbanismo y arquitectura. Gever. 84-7566-019-3
Bonachia, J.: LA CIUDAD MEDIEVAL. Universidad de Valladolid . 84-7762-677-4
Capel, H.: LA MORFOLOGÍA DE LAS CIUDADES. Ediciones del Serbal. 84-7628-391-1
Casar Pinazo, JI.: GEOGRAFÍA HUMANA. CLAVES PARA CONOCER LA CIUDAD. Akal SA.84-7600-355-2.
Casar J. y Castejón, R.: CONSTRUCTORES DE LA CIUDAD CONTEMPORANEA. DptoUrbanismo U de Navarra. 84-89656-86-X
Cotterel, A.: HISTORIA DE LAS CIVILIZACIONES ANTIGUAS: Egipto, Oriente Próximo,...CríticaS.L. 84-8432-097-9 tomo1
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Chueca Goitia, F.: BREVE HISTORIA DEL URBANISMO. Alianza Editorial. 84-206-3519-7
De Terán, F.: EL PASADO ACTIVO. Del uso interesado de la hist. para el entendimiento y laconst.de la ciudad. AkalS.A. 978-84-460-2965-6.
Espinar y García: LA CIUDAD MEDIEVAL Y SU TERRITORIO: URBANISMO, SOCIEDAD YECONOMÍA . Cádiz Ediciones. 978-84-96191-08-2
Fernández de Córdoba, M.: LA ORDENACIÓN DEL TERRITORIO EN ESPAÑA. …su prácticaen el siglo XX. U de Sevilla. 84-472-0869-9
Forrat, JC.: INTRODUCCIÓN A LA HISTORIA DEL URBANISMO. Universidad Politécnica deValencia. 84-970-42-5
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García y Bellido, A.: URBANÍSTICA DE LAS GRANDES CIUDADES DEL MUNDO ANTIGUO.CSIC. 978-84-00-08878-1
López de Lucio, R.: CIUDAD Y URBANISMO A FINALES DEL SIGLO XX. Universitat deValencia. 84-370-1439-5.
Medianero Hernández, JM.: HISTORIA DE LAS FORMAS URBANAS MEDIEVALES. Universidad de Sevilla. 84-472-0841-9
Montero Vallejo, M.: HISTORIA DEL URBANISMO EN ESPAÑA I. Del Eneolítico a la Baja EdadMedia. Cátedra. 84-376-1469-4
Morris, A.E.J.: HISTORIA DE LA FORMA URBANA. Desde sus orígenes hasta la Rev.Industrial .Arquitectura/ Perspectivas. 84-252-1181-6
Muratore G.: LA CIUDAD RENACENTISTA. Gabrielle Mazzotta Editore. 84-7088-251-1.
Sica, P.: HISTORIA DEL URBANISMO. El siglo XX. Instituto de Estudios de Administración
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local. 84-7088-275-9.
Silva Otero A. y Mariela Mata de Grossi, M.: LA LLAMADA REVOLUCIÓN INDUSTRIAL.Universidad Católica Andrés Bello.980-244-172-4.
Tafuri, M.: SOBRE EL RENACIMIENTO. Principios, ciudades y arquitectos. Cátedra.84-376-1342-6
Wolfflin, H.: RENACIMIENTO Y BARROCO. Paidós. 84-7509-350-7.
Hall, P.: CIUDADES DEL MAÑANA. Historia del urbanismo del siglo XX. Ediciones del Serbal.84-7628-190-0.
Specific Bibliography
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Abad A, I y Solórzano, JA y Arizaga, B.: EL FENÓMENO URB. MEDIEVAL CANTÁBRICO-DUERO . Asoc. Histor. de Cantabria. 84-6074-010-2
Alonso P, JM.: LA CIUDAD LINEAL DE MADRID. Arquithemas. 84-922594-2-6
Álvarez M, A.: LA CIUDAD JARDÍN 100 AÑOS DESPUÉS. Universidad de Valladolid. 84-8448-167-0
Arévalo, F.: LA REPRESENTACIÓN DE LA CIUDAD EN EL RENACIMIENTO. Levantamiento urbano y territorial. Fund.C Arqu. 84-932-5426-6
Arias G, P y Recuenco, L.: CONSIDERACIONES SOBRE LA NUEVA CIUDAD. Sevilla ante larevisión de su Plan.. U de Sevilla.84-472-0529-0
Arrayán M, I.: MORFOLOGÍA HISTÓRICA DEL TERRITORIO DE TARRACO. Siglos III-I a. C..Universitat de Barcelona. 84-475-3007-8
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Azuar, R y Gutiérrez, S y Valdés,F.: URBANISMO MEDIEVAL DEL PAIS VALENCIANO. Polifemo. 84-86547-21-0
Blázquez, J.M..: URBANISMO Y SOCIEDAD EN HISPANIA.
Busquets, J.: GESTIÓN DEL PAISAJE. Manual de protección, gestión y ordenación del paisaje.ARIELPatrimonio. 978-84-344-2890-4.
Cervera V, L.: LAS CIUDADES TEÓRICAS DE HIPODAMO DE MILETO. Real Academia deBellas Artes de Sta Isabel de Hungría.
Collins, R.: LA ESPAÑA VISIGODA (409-711). Crítica S.L.. 84-8432-636-5.
Corominas i A, M.: LOS ORÍGENES DEL ENSANCHE DE BARCELONA. Suelo, técnica einiciativa. EdicionsUPC. 84-8301-571-4
Corzo S, R. LAS VÍAS ROMANAS EN ANDALUCÍA.
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Chueca G, F.: HISPANIA ROMANA
Keay, S.J..: HISPANIA ROMANA. Mundo Antiguo. 84-86329-80-9
Kemp, B.: EL ANTIGUO EGIPTO. Anatomía de una civilización. Crítica. 84-8432-485-0
Ladero Q, MA.: CIUDADES DE LA ESPAÑA MEDIEVAL. Dykinson S.L.. 978-84-9849-868-4
Leick ,G.: MESOPOTAMIA. La invención de la ciudad. Paidós Ibérica S.A. 84-493-1275-2
Liverani, M.: URUK. La primera ciudad. Bellaterra Arqueología. 84-7290-334-0
Martin L, J.: HISTORIA DE LA CARTOGRAFÍA Y LA TOPOGRAFÍA . Centro Nacional deInformación. 84-9517-234-8
Monclús F, JM y Oyon B, L.: ELEMENTOS DE COMPOSICION URBANA. Ediciones UPC.84-8301-502-1
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Palazon B, M.: FLORENCIA, ROMA Y LOS ORÍGENES DEL RENACIMIENTO. Akal, Arte yEstética31. 84-460-0190-X
Pérez I, J.: MANZANAS, BLOQUES Y CASAS. Formas const. y formas del suelo en la ciud.Contemp. . U Polit. deValencia. 84-9705-850-X
Sainz, J.: EL JARDÍN EN LA ARQUITECTURA DEL SIGLO XX. Reverté S.A..978-84-291-2114-8
Solana S, JM y Sagredo, L.: LA RED VIARIA ROMANA EN HISPANIA. Siglos I-IV d.C. U deValladolid. 84-8448-381-9
Pardo, P.: UR, ciudad de los Sumerios. Aldebarán. 84-95414-38-4
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Additional Information
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
1. http://www.ign.es (Instituto Geográfico Nacional)
2. http://www.bing.com/maps/
3. http://www.sedecatastro.gob.es/
4. http://http://www.maps.google.es/
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