Embedded Boundaries

This thesis is an investigation of landscape as boundary: a study of its formation, inhabitation, and symbolic meaning. The study is situated in a valley located south of Jerusalem’s Old City walls; known as both Gei Ben-Hinnom and Wadi al- Rababa, it is an ethnic, cultural, socioeconomical, and myt...

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Main Author: Bresler, Liana
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/5276
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-52762013-10-04T04:10:12ZBresler, Liana2010-06-18T19:26:20Z2010-06-18T19:26:20Z2010-06-18T19:26:20Z2010http://hdl.handle.net/10012/5276This thesis is an investigation of landscape as boundary: a study of its formation, inhabitation, and symbolic meaning. The study is situated in a valley located south of Jerusalem’s Old City walls; known as both Gei Ben-Hinnom and Wadi al- Rababa, it is an ethnic, cultural, socioeconomical, and mythological boundary. In the ethnically polarized Jerusalem, valleys often act as boundaries between Jewish and Palestinian populations. For nineteen years an official no-man’s-land divided the Hinnom/Rababa Valley, a result of an armistice agreement between Israel and Jordan. Since the 1967 annexation of East Jerusalem to Israel, the valley has transformed into a boundary between the two populations. Responding to this boundary, the thesis addresses an urgent need for a wastewater treatment facility, proposing new infrastructure as a vehicle to explore the ability of architecture to embody multiple narratives. By documenting built form, geology, hydrology, history, and mythology, the thesis illustrates the Hinnom/Rababa Valley as the space of the in-between, neither east nor west, bridging the urban hilltops with the underworld. The boundary partakes in both and neither sides simultaneously. Building on its multiplicity of meanings – of its ‘stories so far’ – the thesis attempts to re-imagine a new relationship to the ground.enJerusalemcontested spaceswastewater treatmentGreen LineinfrastructurelandscapeabjectmultiplicityEmbedded BoundariesThesis or DissertationSchool of ArchitectureMaster of ArchitectureArchitecture
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Jerusalem
contested spaces
wastewater treatment
Green Line
infrastructure
landscape
abject
multiplicity
Architecture
spellingShingle Jerusalem
contested spaces
wastewater treatment
Green Line
infrastructure
landscape
abject
multiplicity
Architecture
Bresler, Liana
Embedded Boundaries
description This thesis is an investigation of landscape as boundary: a study of its formation, inhabitation, and symbolic meaning. The study is situated in a valley located south of Jerusalem’s Old City walls; known as both Gei Ben-Hinnom and Wadi al- Rababa, it is an ethnic, cultural, socioeconomical, and mythological boundary. In the ethnically polarized Jerusalem, valleys often act as boundaries between Jewish and Palestinian populations. For nineteen years an official no-man’s-land divided the Hinnom/Rababa Valley, a result of an armistice agreement between Israel and Jordan. Since the 1967 annexation of East Jerusalem to Israel, the valley has transformed into a boundary between the two populations. Responding to this boundary, the thesis addresses an urgent need for a wastewater treatment facility, proposing new infrastructure as a vehicle to explore the ability of architecture to embody multiple narratives. By documenting built form, geology, hydrology, history, and mythology, the thesis illustrates the Hinnom/Rababa Valley as the space of the in-between, neither east nor west, bridging the urban hilltops with the underworld. The boundary partakes in both and neither sides simultaneously. Building on its multiplicity of meanings – of its ‘stories so far’ – the thesis attempts to re-imagine a new relationship to the ground.
author Bresler, Liana
author_facet Bresler, Liana
author_sort Bresler, Liana
title Embedded Boundaries
title_short Embedded Boundaries
title_full Embedded Boundaries
title_fullStr Embedded Boundaries
title_full_unstemmed Embedded Boundaries
title_sort embedded boundaries
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/5276
work_keys_str_mv AT breslerliana embeddedboundaries
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