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Keywords = Yazd courtyard house

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19 pages, 7040 KiB  
Article
Courtyards and Adjacent Spaces: Analyzing 26 Cases of Second-Order Proximity in Traditional Courtyard Houses of Yazd
by Mina Zolfagharkhani and Ahmad-Reza Foruzanmehr
Buildings 2024, 14(9), 2639; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14092639 - 25 Aug 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2055
Abstract
Iranian traditional residential architecture is renowned for its central-courtyard houses, which are admired for their grandeur. While the courtyards and nearby spaces receive considerable artistic and historical appreciation, those situated further away often receive less attention. These areas are typically considered auxiliary and [...] Read more.
Iranian traditional residential architecture is renowned for its central-courtyard houses, which are admired for their grandeur. While the courtyards and nearby spaces receive considerable artistic and historical appreciation, those situated further away often receive less attention. These areas are typically considered auxiliary and less functional for living, thereby receiving limited attention in architectural discussions. This study examines 26 traditional central-courtyard houses to investigate how spaces located farther from the courtyard (‘second-order’) compare to those directly adjacent (‘first-order’). It challenges the assumption that distance from the courtyard correlates with reduced functionality. Surprisingly, the analysis identifies similar architectural characteristics in both second-order and first-order spaces, suggesting that distant areas may serve functional roles comparable to those nearer the courtyard. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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15 pages, 5750 KiB  
Article
Deep Learning in Historical Architecture Remote Sensing: Automated Historical Courtyard House Recognition in Yazd, Iran
by Hadi Yazdi, Shina Sad Berenji, Ferdinand Ludwig and Sajad Moazen
Heritage 2022, 5(4), 3066-3080; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage5040159 - 12 Oct 2022
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 3317
Abstract
This research paper reports the process and results of a project to automatically classify historical and non-historical buildings using airborne and satellite imagery. The case study area is the center of Yazd, the most important historical site in Iran. New computational scientific methods [...] Read more.
This research paper reports the process and results of a project to automatically classify historical and non-historical buildings using airborne and satellite imagery. The case study area is the center of Yazd, the most important historical site in Iran. New computational scientific methods and accessibility to satellite images have created more opportunities to work on automated historical architecture feature recognition. Building on this, a convolutional neural network (CNN) is the main method for the classification task of the project. The most distinctive features of the historical houses in Iran are central courtyards. Based on this characteristic, the objective of the research is recognizing and labeling the houses as historical buildings by a CNN model. As a result, the trained model is tested by a validation dataset and has an accuracy rate of around 98%. In Sum, the reported project is one of the first works on deep learning methods in historical Iranian architecture study and one of the first efforts to use automated remote sensing techniques for recognizing historical courtyard houses in aerial images. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Heritage)
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22 pages, 6742 KiB  
Article
The Spatial Structure of Yazd Courtyard Houses: A Space Syntax Analysis of the Topological Characteristics of the Courtyard
by Mina Zolfagharkhani and Michael J. Ostwald
Buildings 2021, 11(6), 262; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11060262 - 19 Jun 2021
Cited by 42 | Viewed by 9689
Abstract
An important “architectural type” in Iranian history is the Yazd courtyard house. This historic building type features a walled boundary that contains a complex pattern of open (to the sky), semi-enclosed and enclosed spaces. The planning of the courtyard in these houses has [...] Read more.
An important “architectural type” in Iranian history is the Yazd courtyard house. This historic building type features a walled boundary that contains a complex pattern of open (to the sky), semi-enclosed and enclosed spaces. The planning of the courtyard in these houses has typically been interpreted as either a response to changing socio-cultural values or to local climatic conditions. Such theories about the planning of these houses are based on a series of assumptions about (i) the numbers of courtyards and rooms they contain, (ii) their unchanging nature over time and (iii) a topological pattern existing in the relationship between the courtyard and the rest of the plan. Yet, these assumptions, all of which have an impact on the socio-cultural or climatic interpretation of this famous architectural type, have never been tested. In response, this paper uses a computational and mathematical method drawn from Space Syntax to measure the spatial topology of 37 plans of Yazd’s most significant courtyard houses. These houses, which are classified by the Yazd Cultural Heritage Organization, were constructed between the 11th and 20th CE centuries and are all exemplars of this type. This paper develops three hypotheses around the assumptions found in past research about the characteristic planning of the Yazd courtyard house. Then, using quantitative measures derived from plan graph analysis, the paper develops a series of longitudinal trends to test the hypotheses and explore changes that have occurred in this architectural type over time. Full article
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