‘Architectural Design for Procuring Thermal Comfort’: Hassan Fathy, Nubia, and Desert Building

Contenu

Titre
‘Architectural Design for Procuring Thermal Comfort’: Hassan Fathy, Nubia, and Desert Building
Créateur
Reynolds, Nancy Y.
Date
2024
Dans
International Journal of Islamic Architecture
Résumé
As part of an indigenous building movement in the Global South, the United Nations published two books by Egyptian architect Hassan Fathy (1900–89): one on building ‘for the poor’ and the other on passive cooling in vernacular architecture from hot environments. Using his correspondence, reports, designs, published writings, and built forms, this article tracks Fathy’s changing use of a crucial technique, mud-brick vaulting, that he learned in Nubia, an area of Egypt’s arid south largely destroyed by dams in the twentieth century. I show how Fathy mined Nubia rhetorically and materially to use, and later attempt to copyright, its residents’ ‘instinctive’ skills for living in hot arid lands. Over time, Fathy’s appropriations helped to transform Nubia’s vernacular morphology into a universal commons of desert and ‘Islamic’ forms, which enabled him to expand the geographic scope of his practice into the Arabian Peninsula in Oman and Saudi Arabia and into the southwestern United States.
Sujet
Architecture -- Oman
Langue
eng
volume
13
numéro
2
pages
361-391
doi
10.1386/ijia_00145_1
issn
2045-5895, 2045-5909

Reynolds, Nancy Y., “‘Architectural Design for Procuring Thermal Comfort’: Hassan Fathy, Nubia, and Desert Building”, 2024, bibliographie, consulté le 21 décembre 2024, https://ibadica.org/s/bibliographie/item/23253

Position : 3147 (25 vues)