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Urban morphology

Urban morphology is the study of the formation of human settlements and the process of their formation and transformation.[1] The study seeks to understand the spatial structure and character of a metropolitan area, city, town or village by examining the patterns of its component parts and the ownership or control and occupation. Typically, analysis of physical form focuses on street pattern, lot (or, in the UK, plot) pattern and building pattern, sometimes referred to collectively as urban grain. Analysis of specific settlements is usually undertaken using cartographic sources and the process of development is deduced from comparison of historic maps.

Development of the road networks an urban structure of Cologne, Germany, 1845 to 1987

Special attention is given to how the physical form of a city changes over time and to how different cities compare to each other. Another significant part of this subfield deals with the study of the social forms which are expressed in the physical layout of a city, and, conversely, how physical form produces or reproduces various social forms.

The essence of the idea of morphology was initially expressed in the writings of the great poet and philosopher Goethe (1790). However, the term as such was first used in bioscience. Recently it is being increasingly used in geography, geology, philology and other subject areas. In geography, urban morphology as a particular field of study owes its origins to Lewis Mumford, James Vance and Sam Bass Warner. Peter Hall and Michael Batty of the UK and Serge Salat, France, are also central figures.

Urban morphology is considered as the study of urban tissue, or fabric, as a means of discerning the environmental level normally associated with urban design. Tissue comprises coherent neighborhood morphology (open spaces, building) and functions (human activity). Neighborhoods exhibit recognizable patterns in the ordering of buildings, spaces and functions (themes), variations within which nevertheless conform to an organizing set of principles. This approach challenges the common perception of unplanned environments as chaotic or vaguely organic through understanding the structures and processes embedded in urbanisation. Complexity science has provided further explanations showing how urban structures emerge from the uncoordinated action of multiple individuals in highly regular ways.[2] Amongst other things this is associated with permanent energy and material flows to maintain these structures.[3]

Some locked concepts edit

Urban morphology approaches human settlements as generally unconscious products that emerge over long periods, through the accrual of successive generations of building activity. This leaves traces that serve to structure subsequent building activity and provide opportunities and constraints for city-building processes, such as land subdivision, infrastructure development, or building construction. Articulating and analysing the logic of these traces is the central question of urban morphology.

 
Space syntax axial map of Brasilia, showing the most integrated (red) to most segregated (blue) streets in the city network.

Urban morphology is not generally object-centred, in that it emphasises the relationships between components of the city. To make a parallel with linguistics, the focus is placed on an active vocabulary and its syntax. There is thus a tendency to use morphological techniques to examine the ordinary, non-monumental areas of the city and to stress the process and its structures over any given state or object, therefore going beyond architecture and looking at the entire built landscape and its internal logic.

Roger Trancik discusses three major theories of urban spatial design and urban morphology which can guide analysis:

  1. Figure and Ground theory
  2. Linkage theory
  3. Place Theory

Figure and Ground theory is founded on the study of the relationship of land coverage of buildings as solid mass (figure) to open voids (ground) Each urban environment has an existing pattern of solid and voids, and figure and ground approach to spatial design is an attempt to manipulate these relationships by adding to, subtracting from, or changing the physical geometry of the pattern. The objective of these manipulations is to clarify the structure of urban space in a city or district by establishing a hierarchy of spaces of different sizes that are individually enclosed but ordered directionally in relation to each other. Linkage theory focuses on lines formed by streets, pedestrian ways, linear open spaces or other linking elements that physically connect the parts of the city. Place theory operates upon structured systems of human needs and usage.[4]

Schools of thought edit

In a broad sense there are three schools of urban morphology: Italian, British, and French.

Italian school edit

 
The evolution of the urban structure of Venice. The plan on the right of the series shows the latest state (1958) of the urban structure of the S. Bartolomio block. Three successive plans offer a retrospective periodization of the phases of the formation of the urban structure

The Italian school centres around the work of Saverio Muratori and dates from the 1940s. Muratori attempted to develop an 'operational history' for the cities he studied (in particular Venice and Rome), which then provided the basis for the integration of new architectural works in the syntax of the urban tissue. Stemming from this view are contributions such as Gianfranco Caniggia's, which conceptualise the city as an organic result of a dynamic procedural typology, which see political-economic forces as shaping a built landscape already conditioned by a particular logic, set of elements, and characteristic processes.

British school edit

The British school centres around the work of M.R.G. Conzen, who developed a technique called 'town-plan analysis.' The key aspects for analysis according to Conzen are:

  1. The town plan
  2. Pattern of building forms
  3. Pattern of land use

The town plan in turn contains three complexes of plan element:

  1. Streets and their arrangement into a street-system
  2. Plots (or lots) and their aggregation into street-blocks
  3. Buildings, in the form of the block-plans.

For Conzen, understanding the layering of these aspects and elements through history is the key to comprehending urban form. Followers of Conzen such as J.W.R. Whitehand have examined the ways in which such knowledge can be put to use in the management of historic and contemporary townscapes.

French school edit

The French school, based principally at the Versailles School of Architecture, has generated extensive methodological knowledge for the analysis of urbanisation processes and related architectural models. Much emphasis is placed upon the importance of built space for sustaining social practices; the relationship between the built landscape and the social world is dialectical, with both shaping the other.

Chicago School edit

As an urban-industrial city, Chicago's socio-economic problems were obvious and crying out to be studied in depth. Therefore, several urban sociologists and geographers belonging to the so-called Chicago School, such as W.I. Thomas (concerned with migration), Robert E Park and Ernest Burgess, attempted to analyse the morphology of Chicago in order to solve these problems.

Burgess employed an ecological approach in placing emphasis on the relationship between organisms and their environment. He used similar biological factors used in explaining plant distribution and established a concentric-zonal theory which included a Central Business District (CBD), an area of transition (invaded by business and migrants), and area of upper class apartments and several commuter zones and suburbs on the edge of the city.

Morphogenetic School edit

The scientist Maitri Singhai and the mathematician Nikos Salingaros have created a new school of urban morphology based on morphogenesis and emergence. In The Nature of Order Alexander proposes that urban development is a computational process similar to that of cell growth in an organism, and that the unfolding of these processes produces the urban landscape and its typologies. Some urbanists have sought to transform this theory into a practical emergent urbanism.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kropf, Karl (2017). Handbook of urban morphology. Chichester: Wiley.
  2. ^ Batty, M. (2009). Cities as Complex Systems: Scaling, Interaction, Networks, Dynamics and Urban Morphologies. In Encyclopedia of Complexity and Systems Science. Springer.
  3. ^ Salat, Serge; Bourdic, Loeiz (2011). "Power Laws for Energy Efficient and Resilient Cities". Procedia Engineering. 21: 1193–8. doi:10.1016/j.proeng.2011.11.2130.
  4. ^ Trancik 1986, pp. 97.

Further reading edit

  • Conzen, M.R.G., Alnwick, Northumberland: A study in town-plan analysis, London, Institute of British Geographers, 1969
  • Moudon, Anne Vernez, Urban morphology as an emerging interdisciplinary field in Urban Morphology. 1997. 1 (1): 3–10.
  • Ley, Karsten: Understanding Urban Forms as Results of a Conditioning System of Interrelated Factors. Some Thoughts on the Issue of Morphologically Defining the City., RWTH Aachen 2010, [electronic resource].
  • Malfroy, Sylvain and Gianfranco Caniggia, L'approche morphologique de la ville et du territoire. Zürich: Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule, Lehrstuhl fur Städtebaugeschichte, October 1986 (A Morphological Approach to Cities and Their Regions, Zurich: Triest 2022.
  • Moudon, Anne Vernez, Built for Change: Neighbourhood Architecture in San Francisco.' Cambridge MA, MIT Press, 1986.
  • Moudon, Anne Vernez, Getting to Know the Built Landscape: Typomorphology. in Franck, Karen A and Lynda H Schneekloth, Ordering Space: Types in Architecture and Design New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1994.
  • Panerai, Philippe, Jean-Charles Depaule, Marcelle Demorgon, and Michel Veyrenche, Elements d'analyse urbaine. Brussels: Editions Archives d'Architecture Moderne, 1980.
  • Salat, Serge, Cities and Forms: on sustainable urbanism, Hermann Ed., 2011.

External links edit

  • International Seminar on Urban Form
  • Urban Morphology and Complex Systems Institute, Paris
  • Urban Morphology Research Group, Birmingham
  • Urban Morpohology Institute
  • Gianfranco Caniggia: A Structural Reading of Florence (video 1984 / 2022) HES-SO channels, HEIA-FR - Architecture

urban, morphology, study, formation, human, settlements, process, their, formation, transformation, study, seeks, understand, spatial, structure, character, metropolitan, area, city, town, village, examining, patterns, component, parts, ownership, control, occ. Urban morphology is the study of the formation of human settlements and the process of their formation and transformation 1 The study seeks to understand the spatial structure and character of a metropolitan area city town or village by examining the patterns of its component parts and the ownership or control and occupation Typically analysis of physical form focuses on street pattern lot or in the UK plot pattern and building pattern sometimes referred to collectively as urban grain Analysis of specific settlements is usually undertaken using cartographic sources and the process of development is deduced from comparison of historic maps Development of the road networks an urban structure of Cologne Germany 1845 to 1987 Special attention is given to how the physical form of a city changes over time and to how different cities compare to each other Another significant part of this subfield deals with the study of the social forms which are expressed in the physical layout of a city and conversely how physical form produces or reproduces various social forms The essence of the idea of morphology was initially expressed in the writings of the great poet and philosopher Goethe 1790 However the term as such was first used in bioscience Recently it is being increasingly used in geography geology philology and other subject areas In geography urban morphology as a particular field of study owes its origins to Lewis Mumford James Vance and Sam Bass Warner Peter Hall and Michael Batty of the UK and Serge Salat France are also central figures Urban morphology is considered as the study of urban tissue or fabric as a means of discerning the environmental level normally associated with urban design Tissue comprises coherent neighborhood morphology open spaces building and functions human activity Neighborhoods exhibit recognizable patterns in the ordering of buildings spaces and functions themes variations within which nevertheless conform to an organizing set of principles This approach challenges the common perception of unplanned environments as chaotic or vaguely organic through understanding the structures and processes embedded in urbanisation Complexity science has provided further explanations showing how urban structures emerge from the uncoordinated action of multiple individuals in highly regular ways 2 Amongst other things this is associated with permanent energy and material flows to maintain these structures 3 Contents 1 Some locked concepts 2 Schools of thought 2 1 Italian school 2 2 British school 2 3 French school 2 4 Chicago School 2 5 Morphogenetic School 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksSome locked concepts editUrban morphology approaches human settlements as generally unconscious products that emerge over long periods through the accrual of successive generations of building activity This leaves traces that serve to structure subsequent building activity and provide opportunities and constraints for city building processes such as land subdivision infrastructure development or building construction Articulating and analysing the logic of these traces is the central question of urban morphology nbsp Space syntax axial map of Brasilia showing the most integrated red to most segregated blue streets in the city network Urban morphology is not generally object centred in that it emphasises the relationships between components of the city To make a parallel with linguistics the focus is placed on an active vocabulary and its syntax There is thus a tendency to use morphological techniques to examine the ordinary non monumental areas of the city and to stress the process and its structures over any given state or object therefore going beyond architecture and looking at the entire built landscape and its internal logic Roger Trancik discusses three major theories of urban spatial design and urban morphology which can guide analysis Figure and Ground theory Linkage theory Place Theory Figure and Ground theory is founded on the study of the relationship of land coverage of buildings as solid mass figure to open voids ground Each urban environment has an existing pattern of solid and voids and figure and ground approach to spatial design is an attempt to manipulate these relationships by adding to subtracting from or changing the physical geometry of the pattern The objective of these manipulations is to clarify the structure of urban space in a city or district by establishing a hierarchy of spaces of different sizes that are individually enclosed but ordered directionally in relation to each other Linkage theory focuses on lines formed by streets pedestrian ways linear open spaces or other linking elements that physically connect the parts of the city Place theory operates upon structured systems of human needs and usage 4 Schools of thought editIn a broad sense there are three schools of urban morphology Italian British and French Italian school edit nbsp The evolution of the urban structure of Venice The plan on the right of the series shows the latest state 1958 of the urban structure of the S Bartolomio block Three successive plans offer a retrospective periodization of the phases of the formation of the urban structure The Italian school centres around the work of Saverio Muratori and dates from the 1940s Muratori attempted to develop an operational history for the cities he studied in particular Venice and Rome which then provided the basis for the integration of new architectural works in the syntax of the urban tissue Stemming from this view are contributions such as Gianfranco Caniggia s which conceptualise the city as an organic result of a dynamic procedural typology which see political economic forces as shaping a built landscape already conditioned by a particular logic set of elements and characteristic processes British school edit The British school centres around the work of M R G Conzen who developed a technique called town plan analysis The key aspects for analysis according to Conzen are The town plan Pattern of building forms Pattern of land use The town plan in turn contains three complexes of plan element Streets and their arrangement into a street system Plots or lots and their aggregation into street blocks Buildings in the form of the block plans For Conzen understanding the layering of these aspects and elements through history is the key to comprehending urban form Followers of Conzen such as J W R Whitehand have examined the ways in which such knowledge can be put to use in the management of historic and contemporary townscapes French school edit The French school based principally at the Versailles School of Architecture has generated extensive methodological knowledge for the analysis of urbanisation processes and related architectural models Much emphasis is placed upon the importance of built space for sustaining social practices the relationship between the built landscape and the social world is dialectical with both shaping the other Chicago School edit As an urban industrial city Chicago s socio economic problems were obvious and crying out to be studied in depth Therefore several urban sociologists and geographers belonging to the so called Chicago School such as W I Thomas concerned with migration Robert E Park and Ernest Burgess attempted to analyse the morphology of Chicago in order to solve these problems Burgess employed an ecological approach in placing emphasis on the relationship between organisms and their environment He used similar biological factors used in explaining plant distribution and established a concentric zonal theory which included a Central Business District CBD an area of transition invaded by business and migrants and area of upper class apartments and several commuter zones and suburbs on the edge of the city Morphogenetic School edit The scientist Maitri Singhai and the mathematician Nikos Salingaros have created a new school of urban morphology based on morphogenesis and emergence In The Nature of Order Alexander proposes that urban development is a computational process similar to that of cell growth in an organism and that the unfolding of these processes produces the urban landscape and its typologies Some urbanists have sought to transform this theory into a practical emergent urbanism See also editUrban design Urban geography Urban Planning Landscape urbanism Settlement geography New urbanism Activity centre Transit oriented development Space syntaxReferences edit Kropf Karl 2017 Handbook of urban morphology Chichester Wiley Batty M 2009 Cities as Complex Systems Scaling Interaction Networks Dynamics and Urban Morphologies In Encyclopedia of Complexity and Systems Science Springer Salat Serge Bourdic Loeiz 2011 Power Laws for Energy Efficient and Resilient Cities Procedia Engineering 21 1193 8 doi 10 1016 j proeng 2011 11 2130 Trancik 1986 pp 97 sfn error no target CITEREFTrancik1986 help Further reading editConzen M R G Alnwick Northumberland A study in town plan analysis London Institute of British Geographers 1969 Moudon Anne Vernez Urban morphology as an emerging interdisciplinary field in Urban Morphology 1997 1 1 3 10 Ley Karsten Understanding Urban Forms as Results of a Conditioning System of Interrelated Factors Some Thoughts on the Issue of Morphologically Defining the City RWTH Aachen 2010 electronic resource Malfroy Sylvain and Gianfranco Caniggia L approche morphologique de la ville et du territoire Zurich Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule Lehrstuhl fur Stadtebaugeschichte October 1986 A Morphological Approach to Cities and Their Regions Zurich Triest 2022 Moudon Anne Vernez Built for Change Neighbourhood Architecture in San Francisco Cambridge MA MIT Press 1986 Moudon Anne Vernez Getting to Know the Built Landscape Typomorphology in Franck Karen A and Lynda H Schneekloth Ordering Space Types in Architecture and Design New York Van Nostrand Reinhold 1994 Panerai Philippe Jean Charles Depaule Marcelle Demorgon and Michel Veyrenche Elements d analyse urbaine Brussels Editions Archives d Architecture Moderne 1980 Salat Serge Cities and Forms on sustainable urbanism Hermann Ed 2011 External links editInternational Seminar on Urban Form Urban Morphology and Complex Systems Institute Paris Urban Morphology Research Group Birmingham Urban Morpohology Institute Gianfranco Caniggia A Structural Reading of Florence video 1984 2022 HES SO channels HEIA FR Architecture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Urban morphology amp oldid 1217394048, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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