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  • The Routledge Companion to the Philosophy of Architectural Reconstruction

    The Routledge Companion to the Philosophy of Architectural Reconstruction by Somhegyi, Zolt;

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    Product details:

    • Edition number 1
    • Publisher Routledge
    • Date of Publication 2 November 2025

    • ISBN 9781032368344
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages424 pages
    • Size 246x174 mm
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 56 Illustrations, black & white; 56 Halftones, black & white
    • 700

    Categories

    Short description:

    This book investigates the foundations determining the conditions of possibility and the limits that make the conservation, readaptation, and transformation of past buildings legitimate operations.

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    Long description:

    This companion investigates the philosophical and theoretical foundations determining the conditions of possibility and the limits that make the conservation, readaptation, and transformation of past buildings legitimate operations.


    As increasing ecological and economic challenges question opportunities for new construction, the process of restoring, transforming, and readapting buildings for new or continued use is becoming an essential part of architectural practice. At the same time, the role of building conservation is changing from mere material preservation to being part of a broader strategy for social regeneration, eco-awareness, and inclusive urban planning. Chapters of this volume explore the complex set of considerations that inform decisions to merely preserve, accurately restore or variously reuse a building. They also look at the broader philosophical concerns such as ethical and aesthetic values, combined with ideas of heritage, history, and collective identity. Case studies on reconstruction after war, gentrification, the restoration of ancient edifices, reconstruction following the effects of climate change, and the use of technology solutions among many others, make this a timely and urgent volume.


    Adopting a broad transcultural perspective with contributions from five continents, the volume combines theoretical approaches with more practical, case study-based investigations and will be of great interest to upper-level students and academics working in the fields of architecture, conservation, urban design, aesthetics, and heritage management.

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    Table of Contents:


    Rethinking, restoring, readapting: An introduction to the philosophy of architectural reconstruction PART I: Theoretical inquiries 1. Theory and practice in heritage decision-making 2. Lives and afterlives of architectural objects 3. Integrity in cultural heritage preservation: Unveiling the challenges 4. Preservation as a moral disposition: The values embedded within cultural heritage 5. Narrative meaning and the reconstruction of architectural heritage 6. Questioning heritage PART II: Applying theories 7. Regenerating heritage processes and practices in historical reconstruction 8. Narrative and the legitimacy of change to historic buildings 9. How to conserve a fake ruin? Heritage dilemmas between aesthetics and practice 10. Heritage, biophilic reconstruction, and climate change 11. The use of light installations in architectural reconstruction: New technological solutions for the public sphere 12. Reusing Roosevelt? Tainted monuments and the architectural reuse strategy PART III: Areas and districts 13. Aesthetics in a renovated city: Historical view of mundane Cityscape in Modern Japan 14. The transformation trap: Redeveloping the historic Chinese Baroque area in Harbin 15. The question of Al Seef in Dubai. A case of historicist architecture compared to the global principles of architectural heritage 16. The Swahili House - a heritage in the East African City  17. Post-war ruins: Relics of the past or unwanted "urban scars." Reconstruction of the dissonant heritage of the Recovered Territories in Poland 18. Architectural reconstruction reconsidered: Cases from the postwar reconstruction of Germany 19. Miami Art Deco architecture, climate change, and puzzles for historic preservation PART IV: Buildings 20. "This magnificent pile". The cathedral of Trondheim from ruin to heritage 21. The restoration of Chartres Cathedral: Theories and practices 22. "To build still more deliberately": Architectural reconstruction and the house that Thoreau built 23. When memory fades and resources run dry: Three cases of neglect and loss 24. Restoration and adaptive reuse of the Fi

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