Title | : | New imagination in urban architecture (Korean Edition) |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 8932315167 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9788932315164 |
Language | : | Korean |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | - |
Publication | : | Published March 30, 2009 |
New imagination in urban architecture
The book seeks a new direction of urban architecture through Korean cities represented by Seoul. In order to be a great city, the interior space of architecture must be diverse, but the exterior space of the city must be orderly, but Korean urban architecture is not, but the opposite is the opposite. The author, who says that Seoul is Korea itself and is a unique being with all problems and possibilities, is not a representation of Western architecture, but an urban architecture that reflects our urban problems. It examines the problems and conditions and suggests the direction of innovation. To this end, it examines the problems of Korean architecture and cities. In other words, it exposes the phenomena rather than suspends them and closes them and compares them with the universal flow of the world. It is architecture that reflects the lives and cultures of people living in space, and Korean architecture, which has only Western styles, is nothing but heterogeneous without being assimilated with culture. Thus, the author shows the commonalities and differences between Korean and Western architectures based on the principle of morphology that is used anywhere in the world. And criticizing the blind Western architectural orientation, he shows that he can never be separated from urban architecture and the lives of individuals living in cities.
The book seeks a new direction of urban architecture through Korean cities represented by Seoul. In order to be a great city, the interior space of architecture must be diverse, but the exterior space of the city must be orderly, but Korean urban architecture is not, but the opposite is the opposite. The author, who says that Seoul is Korea itself and is a unique being with all problems and possibilities, is not a representation of Western architecture, but an urban architecture that reflects our urban problems. It examines the problems and conditions and suggests the direction of innovation. To this end, it examines the problems of Korean architecture and cities. In other words, it exposes the phenomena rather than suspends them and closes them and compares them with the universal flow of the world. It is architecture that reflects the lives and cultures of people living in space, and Korean architecture, which has only Western styles, is nothing but heterogeneous without being assimilated with culture. Thus, the author shows the commonalities and differences between Korean and Western architectures based on the principle of morphology that is used anywhere in the world. And criticizing the blind Western architectural orientation, he shows that he can never be separated from urban architecture and the lives of individuals living in cities.