Evolved Sustainable Building Engineering in Vernacular Architecture of Kurdistan

Vernacular Architecture in Kurdistan is a widely understudied subject. Whilst rapid development is taking place across the Kurdistan region of Iraq, the lack of a clear knowledge of local building traditions has led to the loss of locality and engineering adaptability of newly developed buildings. A...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dilan M. Rostam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Koya University 2017-04-01
Series:ARO-The Scientific Journal of Koya University
Subjects:
Online Access:http://aro.koyauniversity.org/article/view/111
id doaj-55a992c628634baa890df4d966e06a83
record_format Article
spelling doaj-55a992c628634baa890df4d966e06a832021-05-02T19:46:56ZengKoya UniversityARO-The Scientific Journal of Koya University2410-93552307-549X2017-04-015191910.14500/aro.1014856Evolved Sustainable Building Engineering in Vernacular Architecture of KurdistanDilan M. Rostam0Department of Architectural Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Koya UniversityVernacular Architecture in Kurdistan is a widely understudied subject. Whilst rapid development is taking place across the Kurdistan region of Iraq, the lack of a clear knowledge of local building traditions has led to the loss of locality and engineering adaptability of newly developed buildings. Advances in mass development in the Kurdistan region need to have clear signs of Kurdish cultural heritage alongside lasting and sustainable solutions. The study of mountain villages of rural Kurdistan will provide valuable information about sustainable building practices as well as cultural values in regional settlements. This in turn will be useful in finding more adoptable green choices in the region and identifying the characteristics of the evolved building engineering of these indigenous settlements. This paper will first describes the characteristics of the evolved engineering and sustainable adoptions of Kurdish historical building traditions through selected site visits to Kurdish vernacular settlements and then analyses the building customs of rural communities of Kurdistan for possible adoption in contemporary developments.http://aro.koyauniversity.org/article/view/111evolved engineering, green solutions, kurdistan, sustainable building, vernacular architecture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dilan M. Rostam
spellingShingle Dilan M. Rostam
Evolved Sustainable Building Engineering in Vernacular Architecture of Kurdistan
ARO-The Scientific Journal of Koya University
evolved engineering, green solutions, kurdistan, sustainable building, vernacular architecture
author_facet Dilan M. Rostam
author_sort Dilan M. Rostam
title Evolved Sustainable Building Engineering in Vernacular Architecture of Kurdistan
title_short Evolved Sustainable Building Engineering in Vernacular Architecture of Kurdistan
title_full Evolved Sustainable Building Engineering in Vernacular Architecture of Kurdistan
title_fullStr Evolved Sustainable Building Engineering in Vernacular Architecture of Kurdistan
title_full_unstemmed Evolved Sustainable Building Engineering in Vernacular Architecture of Kurdistan
title_sort evolved sustainable building engineering in vernacular architecture of kurdistan
publisher Koya University
series ARO-The Scientific Journal of Koya University
issn 2410-9355
2307-549X
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Vernacular Architecture in Kurdistan is a widely understudied subject. Whilst rapid development is taking place across the Kurdistan region of Iraq, the lack of a clear knowledge of local building traditions has led to the loss of locality and engineering adaptability of newly developed buildings. Advances in mass development in the Kurdistan region need to have clear signs of Kurdish cultural heritage alongside lasting and sustainable solutions. The study of mountain villages of rural Kurdistan will provide valuable information about sustainable building practices as well as cultural values in regional settlements. This in turn will be useful in finding more adoptable green choices in the region and identifying the characteristics of the evolved building engineering of these indigenous settlements. This paper will first describes the characteristics of the evolved engineering and sustainable adoptions of Kurdish historical building traditions through selected site visits to Kurdish vernacular settlements and then analyses the building customs of rural communities of Kurdistan for possible adoption in contemporary developments.
topic evolved engineering, green solutions, kurdistan, sustainable building, vernacular architecture
url http://aro.koyauniversity.org/article/view/111
work_keys_str_mv AT dilanmrostam evolvedsustainablebuildingengineeringinvernaculararchitectureofkurdistan
_version_ 1721487955601653760