The Courtyard House: Can a Sustainable Future Learn from a Context Relevant Past

This paper looks at the courtyard house as a traditional urban dwellings of yesteryears with a view to explore its potential in informing the housing developments of the future.  In order to address the question, the paper starts with a historical overview of this built form as an urban dwellings t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hocine Bougdah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Experts for Research Enrichment and Knowledge Exchange 2016-12-01
Series:Environmental Science and Sustainable Development
Subjects:
Online Access:https://press.ierek.com/index.php/ESSD/article/view/17
id doaj-e8d12c8ba3544912b6dc4fc36601ecdd
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e8d12c8ba3544912b6dc4fc36601ecdd2020-11-24T21:17:13Zeng International Experts for Research Enrichment and Knowledge ExchangeEnvironmental Science and Sustainable Development2357-08492357-08572016-12-0111839510.21625/essd.v1i1.1715The Courtyard House: Can a Sustainable Future Learn from a Context Relevant PastHocine Bougdah0The Canterbury School of Architecture, University for the Creative Arts, UKThis paper looks at the courtyard house as a traditional urban dwellings of yesteryears with a view to explore its potential in informing the housing developments of the future.  In order to address the question, the paper starts with a historical overview of this built form as an urban dwellings that fulfilled its functional and spatial requirements in times gone by. It then goes on to highlight the inadequcy of post colonial housing solutions in Algeria and to look into two important aspects of this traditional housing typology; its socio-cultural relevance and environmental performance. The analysis is carried out using both secondary research in the form of three examples from the literature. and primary research carried out as field work in the form of temperature measurements inside a house, during the hot season, in Boussaada (Algeria). The discussion and concluding remarks attempts to make an arguments for re-considering what could be learned from such traditional housing typology to inform future urban development that would subscribe to the values of sustainable development.  Courtyard house, urabn development, typology, cultural relevance, environmental performance, traditional architecture, sustainable developmenthttps://press.ierek.com/index.php/ESSD/article/view/17Courtyard house, urabn development, typology, cultural relevance, environmental performance, traditional architecture, sustainable development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hocine Bougdah
spellingShingle Hocine Bougdah
The Courtyard House: Can a Sustainable Future Learn from a Context Relevant Past
Environmental Science and Sustainable Development
Courtyard house, urabn development, typology, cultural relevance, environmental performance, traditional architecture, sustainable development
author_facet Hocine Bougdah
author_sort Hocine Bougdah
title The Courtyard House: Can a Sustainable Future Learn from a Context Relevant Past
title_short The Courtyard House: Can a Sustainable Future Learn from a Context Relevant Past
title_full The Courtyard House: Can a Sustainable Future Learn from a Context Relevant Past
title_fullStr The Courtyard House: Can a Sustainable Future Learn from a Context Relevant Past
title_full_unstemmed The Courtyard House: Can a Sustainable Future Learn from a Context Relevant Past
title_sort courtyard house: can a sustainable future learn from a context relevant past
publisher International Experts for Research Enrichment and Knowledge Exchange
series Environmental Science and Sustainable Development
issn 2357-0849
2357-0857
publishDate 2016-12-01
description This paper looks at the courtyard house as a traditional urban dwellings of yesteryears with a view to explore its potential in informing the housing developments of the future.  In order to address the question, the paper starts with a historical overview of this built form as an urban dwellings that fulfilled its functional and spatial requirements in times gone by. It then goes on to highlight the inadequcy of post colonial housing solutions in Algeria and to look into two important aspects of this traditional housing typology; its socio-cultural relevance and environmental performance. The analysis is carried out using both secondary research in the form of three examples from the literature. and primary research carried out as field work in the form of temperature measurements inside a house, during the hot season, in Boussaada (Algeria). The discussion and concluding remarks attempts to make an arguments for re-considering what could be learned from such traditional housing typology to inform future urban development that would subscribe to the values of sustainable development.  Courtyard house, urabn development, typology, cultural relevance, environmental performance, traditional architecture, sustainable development
topic Courtyard house, urabn development, typology, cultural relevance, environmental performance, traditional architecture, sustainable development
url https://press.ierek.com/index.php/ESSD/article/view/17
work_keys_str_mv AT hocinebougdah thecourtyardhousecanasustainablefuturelearnfromacontextrelevantpast
AT hocinebougdah courtyardhousecanasustainablefuturelearnfromacontextrelevantpast
_version_ 1726013494835281920