Urban morphology of informally built dwellings: counter-mapping coastal cities of Montenegro

IF 1.8 1区 艺术学 0 ARCHITECTURE
Goran Ivo Marinovic
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

PurposeInformal dwellings describe makeshift lodgings made from temporary materials, such as plastic, corrugated iron, sheeting, packing cases, or wood. These units allow low-income groups to informally occupy land and create their habitable space in a phased manner. This article focuses on elements of the urban morphology, such as density, accessibility, and operating assortment of informally built areas in the southern region of Montenegro.Design/methodology/approachThe author examines the urban morphologies of four urban areas, whose informality is traditionally viewed as markers of decline and despair. Using observations, questionnaires, and semi-structured interviews, the investigator maps dwellings in Ulcinj, Budva, Tivat, and Herceg Novi neighbourhoods. The researcher interrogated participants about land distribution during the construction of sheds, buildings' outline and orientation toward the street, and activities performed in their dwellings, such as living, working, and accommodating relatives and guests. This methodology tests the hypothesis, formulated as a deeper understanding of urban morphology for examining the interweaving of informally built settlements with the rest of the city.FindingsA cartographic investigation is used to reframe customary rights of low-income populations to land inclusion and their place in the city. The results clearly show that the location and lifestyle are designed to obfuscate the vulnerable populations from the public view, disconnected from policymaking, and ignored by urban planning projects. However, the interviewees' destinations orientation away from the downtowns represents the possibility of reconfiguring existing urban planning practices. For creating alternative urbanisation, the orientation of less visible neighbourhoods presents a model for building regulations embedded in social forces and cultural habits of all social and ethnic groups.Research limitations/implicationsThis study did not address the implementation of social hosing policies and the logistical limitations of realising them by the local and national governments. During firework, the author encountered dwellers outside four studied low-income neighbourhoods in the south region of Montenegro. Mapping morphological elements of these generally small clusters of informal built units are left for future research. Future studies could examine how informality is performed in Montenegro by moderate and high-income groups as an assemblage of different power relationships and urban practices.Practical implicationsThe argument is based on counter urbanism as the orientation and destination of less visible neighbourhoods for creating building regulations embedded in social forces and cultural habits of all social and ethnic groups. This study showed that the urban morphology of informality in the coastal cities of Montenegro lays the ground for alternative urban planning practices based on the different interconnection of districts. The outcome is a strong link between different social and ethical groups through self-building practices.Social implicationsIn coastal cities of Montenegro, Roma, Ashkali, and Egyptian live with other low-income groups in unsanitary settlements characterised by poor living conditions, low-quality illegally built housing, no plumbing or sewage systems, and overcrowded urban areas. Mapping morphological elements of less visible urban areas propose shifting from top-down urban planning policies to a participatory model of developing urban areas.Originality/valueThe assemblage of informally built urban areas legitimise place in the city that goes against the housing market's dominant logic and exceeds alternative logics of building production. This article outlined the urban morphologies of four urban areas for turning the image of informality away from decline and despair to lessons of urban interconnection. By creating different maps, the author presented a diverse orientation of four case studies based on density, accessibility, and operating assortment.
非正式建筑住宅的城市形态:黑山沿海城市的反测绘
非正式住宅是指由临时材料制成的临时住所,如塑料、波纹铁、薄板、包装箱或木材。这些单元允许低收入群体非正式地占用土地,并以分阶段的方式创造他们的可居住空间。本文关注的是黑山南部地区城市形态的要素,如密度、可达性和非正式建成区的经营分类。设计/方法/方法作者考察了四个城市地区的城市形态,这些地区的非正式性传统上被视为衰落和绝望的标志。通过观察、问卷调查和半结构化访谈,研究者绘制了Ulcinj、Budva、Tivat和Herceg Novi社区的住宅地图。研究人员询问了参与者在建造棚屋期间的土地分配,建筑物的轮廓和朝向街道,以及他们在住所中进行的活动,如生活,工作,接待亲戚和客人。这种方法测试了假设,作为对城市形态的更深入理解,用于检查非正式建造的定居点与城市其他部分的交织。通过地图调查,重新定义了低收入人群在土地纳入方面的习惯权利及其在城市中的地位。结果清楚地表明,设计的位置和生活方式使弱势群体从公众视野中模糊,与政策制定脱节,并被城市规划项目所忽视。然而,受访者的目的地定位远离市中心代表了重新配置现有城市规划实践的可能性。为了创造可替代的城市化,不太显眼的社区的方向为建立嵌入所有社会和种族群体的社会力量和文化习惯的法规提供了一种模式。研究限制/影响本研究没有涉及社会住房政策的实施以及地方和国家政府实现这些政策的后勤限制。在燃放烟花期间,撰文人在黑山南部地区所研究的四个低收入社区外遇到了居民。这些非正式建筑单元的一般小集群的形态元素映射留给未来的研究。未来的研究可以考察黑山中高收入群体如何将非正式性作为不同权力关系和城市实践的集合。实际意义该论点基于反城市化作为不太显眼的社区的方向和目的地,以创建嵌入所有社会和种族群体的社会力量和文化习惯的建筑法规。这项研究表明,黑山沿海城市的非正式城市形态为基于不同地区相互联系的替代城市规划实践奠定了基础。其结果是通过自我建设实践在不同的社会和伦理群体之间建立了牢固的联系。在黑山的沿海城市,罗姆人、阿什卡利人和埃及人与其他低收入群体一起生活在不卫生的定居点,其特点是生活条件差,非法建造的房屋质量低,没有管道或污水系统,城市地区过于拥挤。绘制不太显眼的城市地区的形态要素,建议从自上而下的城市规划政策转向发展城市地区的参与式模式。创意/价值非正式建造的城市区域的组合使城市中的位置合法化,这违背了住房市场的主导逻辑,超越了建筑生产的替代逻辑。本文概述了四个城市区域的城市形态,以将非正式的形象从衰落和绝望转变为城市互联的教训。通过创建不同的地图,作者根据密度、可达性和经营分类提出了四个不同的案例研究方向。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
35.50%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: Archnet-IJAR: International Journal of Architectural Research is an interdisciplinary scholarly journal of architecture, urban design and planning, and built environment studies. The journal aims at establishing a bridge between theory and practice in these fields. The journal acts as a platform that reports on the latest research findings for examining buildings and urban environments and debates innovative approaches for creating responsive environments. Archnet-IJAR is truly international and aims at strengthening ties between scholars, academics, and practitioners from the global north and the global south with contributors and readers reaching across the boundaries of cultures and geographies.
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