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The Architecture of Home in Cairo - Socio-Spatial Practice of the Hawari's Everyday Life (Hardcover, New Ed)
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The Architecture of Home in Cairo - Socio-Spatial Practice of the Hawari's Everyday Life (Hardcover, New Ed)
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The hawari of Cairo - narrow non-straight alleyways - are the basic
urban units that have formed the medieval city since its foundation
back in 969 AD. Until early in the C20th, they made up the primary
urban divisions of the city and were residential in nature.
Contemporary hawari, by contrast, are increasingly dominated by
commercial and industrial activity. This medieval urban maze of
extremely short, broken, zigzag streets and dead ends are
defensible territories, powerful institutions, and important social
systems. While the hawari have been studied as an exemplar for
urban structure of medieval Islamic urbanism, and as individual
building typologies, this book is the first to examine in detail
the socio-spatial practice of the architecture of home in the city.
It investigates how people live, communicate and relate to each
other within their houses or shared spaces of the alleys, and in
doing so, to uncover several new socio-spatial dimensions and
meanings in this architectural form. In an attempt to re-establish
the link between architecture past and present, and to understand
the changing social needs of communities, this book uncovers the
notion of home as central to understand architecture in such a city
with long history as Cairo. It firstly describes the historical
development of the domestic spaces (indoor and outdoor), and
provides an inclusive analysis of spaces of everyday activities in
the hawari of old Cairo. It then broadens its analysis to other
parts of the city, highlighting different customs and
representations of home in the city at large. Cairo, in the context
of this book, is represented as the most sophisticated urban centre
in the Middle East with different and sometimes contrasting
approaches to the architecture of home, as a practice and spatial
system. In order to analyse the complexity and interconnectedness
of the components and elements of the hawari as a 'collective
home', it layers its narratives of architectural and social
developments as a domestic environment over the past two hundred
years, and in doing so, explores the in-depth social meaning and
performance of spaces, both private and public.
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