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Search Results (3,189)

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12 pages, 207 KB  
Article
On the Impossibility of Dwelling in the Metaverse
by Iago Ramos
Philosophies 2026, 11(3), 100; https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies11030100 (registering DOI) - 20 Jun 2026
Abstract
This paper examines whether genuine dwelling—understood as embodied engagement with a world that resists, endures, and exceeds human control—can occur in the metaverse. Drawing on Heidegger’s account of dwelling and Ingold’s concept of the ‘taskscape’, it argues that the metaverse is structurally unable [...] Read more.
This paper examines whether genuine dwelling—understood as embodied engagement with a world that resists, endures, and exceeds human control—can occur in the metaverse. Drawing on Heidegger’s account of dwelling and Ingold’s concept of the ‘taskscape’, it argues that the metaverse is structurally unable to sustain dwelling in the full ontological sense. The argument unfolds in three steps. First, dwelling is shown to depend on friction: bodily cost, temporal irreversibility, material resistance, and exposure to mortal finitude. Second, the metaverse is interpreted as a technological and commercial project oriented toward reducing these frictions through attenuated bodily burden, reversible action, programmable environments, and artificial scarcity. Third, the paper extends the concept of the metaverse beyond immersive hardware to describe a broader condition of digitalized life in which experience becomes increasingly modifiable, personalized, and optimized. In this wider sense, the difficulty of dwelling in the metaverse is not limited to a niche technology but reveals a tendency within late-digital culture itself. The paper concludes by proposing a politics of friction: a public deliberation over which resistances are unjust and should be transformed, and which are constitutive conditions of ethical, ecological, and responsible life. Full article
26 pages, 31499 KB  
Article
How Digital Technological Innovation Influences the Coordination Between Urban Renewal and Ecological Resilience: Evidence from China’s Yangtze River Economic Belt
by Rongsheng Peng, Yue Hu, Weiqiang Zhang, Tao Shi and Jie Huang
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6322; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126322 (registering DOI) - 19 Jun 2026
Abstract
The coordinated development of urban renewal (UR) and ecological resilience (ER) is essential for regional sustainability and livable city construction. Based on data from 108 cities in the Yangtze River Economic Belt (YREB) during 2012–2023, this study constructs the UR indicator system from [...] Read more.
The coordinated development of urban renewal (UR) and ecological resilience (ER) is essential for regional sustainability and livable city construction. Based on data from 108 cities in the Yangtze River Economic Belt (YREB) during 2012–2023, this study constructs the UR indicator system from the dimensions of urban infrastructure construction, social function development, and cultural and leisure facility construction. ER is evaluated in terms of resistance, adaptability, and recoverability. The spatiotemporal evolution of their coupling coordination degree (CCD) is then examined. In addition, the XGBoost-SHAP model is employed to identify the threshold of digital technological innovation (DTI) on CCD and its interactions with different development conditions. The results show that (1) CCD remained relatively low but improved slowly during the study period. UR lagged behind ER in most cities, indicating that insufficient UR development capacity was the main constraint on coordination between the two systems. (2) CCD exhibited a pronounced core–periphery pattern, with high-value areas mainly concentrated in provincial capitals and centrally administered municipalities within the YREB. (3) DTI was positively associated with CCD and exhibited a nonlinear pattern with a model-derived turning point, while the strength and pattern of this association varied across different development contexts. These findings enrich the understanding of UR-ER coordination and offer policy implications for sustainable urban governance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Adapting Cities: Ecological Resilience and Urban Renewal)
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44 pages, 1000 KB  
Review
Sustainable Athletes’ Career Pathways and Mental Health Support: An Integrative Umbrella Review
by Francesca Di Rocco, Cristian Romagnoli, Simone Ciaccioni, Sabrina Demarie, Mojca Doupona, Laura Capranica, Elvira Padua and Flavia Guidotti
Sports 2026, 14(6), 251; https://doi.org/10.3390/sports14060251 (registering DOI) - 19 Jun 2026
Abstract
The present integrative umbrella review aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the evidence and practices related to mental health and career transitions in elite sport toward the implementation of service provision through digital interventions. Following PRIO guidelines, an extensive search across five [...] Read more.
The present integrative umbrella review aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the evidence and practices related to mental health and career transitions in elite sport toward the implementation of service provision through digital interventions. Following PRIO guidelines, an extensive search across five databases (2015–2025) identified 52 eligible manuscripts (e.g., conceptual, review, and position studies). Data extraction focused on mental health, dual-career pathways, career transition challenges and needs, and identity-related issues among high-performance athletes. The findings revealed a strong consensus that athlete well-being is shaped by the dynamic interaction of mental health symptoms, sport-specific stressors, identity processes, and structural conditions across the athletic lifespan. Mental health vulnerabilities (e.g., anxiety, depression, disordered eating, and distress) were consistently reported, particularly during injury, deselection, and retirement. Dual-career engagement, diversified identities, and proactive career planning emerged as key protective factors, while stigma, limited literacy, and uneven access to psychological services remained persistent barriers. Five main thematic areas (Matrix 1) operationalized in ten higher-order intervention domains (e.g., Matrix 2, screening, monitoring, literacy, and others) and 14 potential online implementation strategies (Matrix 3) were identified. However, the evidence highlights fragmented implementation and a lack of scalable, cross-national tools to support athletes during and beyond their competitive careers. Therefore, a harmonized, evidence-based, multidimensional framework for the development and implementation of digital support resources has been proposed. This integrative review underscores the need for integrated, culturally sensitive, and digitally enabled support systems to promote sustainable transitions and long-term athlete well-being. Full article
36 pages, 34911 KB  
Article
Saimaluu-Tash I Rock Art (Kyrgyzstan): An Integrated Petrographic, Petrophysical, and Iconographic Study
by David M. Freire-Lista, Ramón Jiménez-Martínez, Javier Luengo, Asunción de los Ríos, Sergio Pérez-Ortega, Julia García-Oteyza and Aidai Sulaimanova
Heritage 2026, 9(6), 241; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9060241 - 19 Jun 2026
Abstract
Saimaluu-Tash I, located in a high-altitude glacial valley in Kyrgyzstan, preserves one of Central Asia’s largest and most culturally significant concentrations of rock engravings. Despite extensive archaeological research, the physical, mechanical, and chromatic properties of the sandstone substrates relevant for conservation assessment remain [...] Read more.
Saimaluu-Tash I, located in a high-altitude glacial valley in Kyrgyzstan, preserves one of Central Asia’s largest and most culturally significant concentrations of rock engravings. Despite extensive archaeological research, the physical, mechanical, and chromatic properties of the sandstone substrates relevant for conservation assessment remain poorly characterized. This study integrates petrographic microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, colorimetry, and Vickers hardness testing with the digital documentation of twelve engraved blocks to evaluate weathering processes, engraving practices, and long-term preservation. The engravings are carved into arkosic sandstone with carbonate cement, characterized by a weathered surface enriched in clay minerals and covered by a dark surface coating (patina). Weathered surfaces exhibit significantly lower hardness (0.6 ± 0.2 GPa) than unweathered stone (2.8 ± 0.6 GPa), which facilitated the engraving of the petroglyphs by allowing tools to penetrate more deeply into the stone. Colorimetric analyses reveal a strong chromatic contrast between the surface patina and the lighter sandstone exposed by engraving (ΔE ≈ 22.7). This contrast would have enhanced the original visibility of the petroglyphs and highlights potential conservation issues associated with the progressive reformation of this surface layer. Iconographic analysis identifies recurrent themes related to hunting, herding, mobility, animal management, and symbolic spatial practices within a nomadic high-mountain landscape. Overall, the results demonstrate how an integrated material and interpretative approach contributes to understanding rock art production processes. They support preventive and sustainable conservation strategies for vulnerable engraving landscapes shaped by long-term interactions between geological processes and human activity. Full article
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27 pages, 4822 KB  
Article
Construction and Protection of the Qinling–Bashan Cultural Heritage Corridor: Based on CCSPM-AHP-MCR Modeling
by Sirui Cheng, Xuanyan Meng, Xiaozi Ying, Yueying Zhang, Kefeng Jiao and Ying Tang
Land 2026, 15(6), 1086; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15061086 - 19 Jun 2026
Abstract
Existing studies have paid limited attention to the spatial integration of cultural heritage resources in mountainous regions. To fill this gap, this study analyzes 1479 cultural heritage sites in the Qinling–Bashan Mountains. The kernel density analysis results reveal a spatial agglomeration pattern characterized [...] Read more.
Existing studies have paid limited attention to the spatial integration of cultural heritage resources in mountainous regions. To fill this gap, this study analyzes 1479 cultural heritage sites in the Qinling–Bashan Mountains. The kernel density analysis results reveal a spatial agglomeration pattern characterized by high-density clusters, medium- to low-density extensions, and scattered peripheral areas. This study integrates the cultural corridor spatial potential model (CCSPM), the analytic hierarchy process (AHP), and the minimum cumulative resistance (MCR) model to identify the potential diffusion range of cultural heritage and assess the suitability of cultural heritage corridor construction. On this basis, an integrated cultural heritage corridor pattern is proposed, featuring “one corridor, two belts, two cores, and six zones.” On this basis, this study proposes targeted conservation strategies for cultural heritage corridors from four perspectives: cultural–ecological synergistic protection, cross-regional collaborative governance, digital revitalization of rural cultural tourism, and socio-economic governance. Overall, this study contributes methodological support for the systematic conservation of mountainous cultural heritage and provides a practical reference for rural cultural revitalization and the sustainable utilization of heritage resources in China. Full article
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26 pages, 8435 KB  
Article
An Interoperable Framework for Heritage Building Monitoring Integrating IFC-BIM, CityGML, and Immersive Visualization
by Lea Kristi Agustina, Deni Suwardhi, Iwan Purnama, Ketut Wikantika, Ilham Gumeraruloh Arianto, Wahyunan Andika and Agung Budi Harto
Heritage 2026, 9(6), 240; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9060240 - 18 Jun 2026
Abstract
Preserving cultural heritage sites requires an interoperable digital framework capable of integrating heterogeneous spatial data and supporting immersive interaction for inspection and management. This study investigates the integration of multiple heritage data representations—including IFC-based Heritage Building Information Modeling (HBIM), terrestrial and UAV LiDAR [...] Read more.
Preserving cultural heritage sites requires an interoperable digital framework capable of integrating heterogeneous spatial data and supporting immersive interaction for inspection and management. This study investigates the integration of multiple heritage data representations—including IFC-based Heritage Building Information Modeling (HBIM), terrestrial and UAV LiDAR point clouds, and 3D Gaussian Splatting reconstructions—into a unified digital management environment for the East Hall (Aula Timur) heritage site within the Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB) campus. A semantic–spatial interoperability workflow is proposed to harmonize BIM, point cloud, and landscape-scale data within a common georeferenced context, supported by a CityGML-based base map of the surrounding site. An immersive virtual environment was implemented using a head-mounted display to enable walkthrough-based inspection and damage annotation. All datasets were georeferenced within a unified coordinate system, allowing spatial registration between digital objects and the physical heritage site. The results demonstrate that multi-source heritage datasets can be integrated with high geometric accuracy, achieving TLS registration errors of approximately 2 mm and georeferencing residuals within 11.1 cm (horizontal) and 0.95 cm (vertical), while preserving semantic information and ensuring spatial coherence across HBIM, GIS, and immersive environments. The system is implemented in VR, with an architecture designed to support future MR-based on-site annotation and visualization. The proposed framework establishes a foundation for future heritage digital twin deployments and supports informed conservation decisions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Digital Heritage)
17 pages, 1236 KB  
Article
Multimodal Assessment of Hand Hygiene Quality Using ATP Bioluminescence, Microbiological Culture, and UV-Fluorescence Digital Imaging: A Prospective Before–After Study Across Intensive Care, Hematology, and Gynecology Departments
by Lucrețiu Radu, Marius-Bogdan Novac, Ramona-Constantina Vasile, Alexandra-Daniela Rotaru-Zăvăleanu, Liviu Martin and George-Alin Stoica
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(12), 4756; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15124756 (registering DOI) - 18 Jun 2026
Abstract
Background: Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) remain a critical patient safety challenge. Hand hygiene is considered the most effective preventive measure, yet traditional monitoring captures only compliance, not technique quality. This prospective before–after study evaluated whether real-time visual feedback via the Semmelweis UV-fluorescence system [...] Read more.
Background: Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) remain a critical patient safety challenge. Hand hygiene is considered the most effective preventive measure, yet traditional monitoring captures only compliance, not technique quality. This prospective before–after study evaluated whether real-time visual feedback via the Semmelweis UV-fluorescence system is associated with improved hand hygiene quality, measured by ATP bioluminescence and microbiological culture. Methods: Three clinical departments (the Intensive Care Unit, Hematology, and Gynecology) at a Romanian tertiary hospital were purposively selected. Seventy-one healthcare workers (HCWs) were enrolled. The 12-week study comprised Phase 1 (baseline, weeks 1–4), Phase 2 (active intervention with Semmelweis feedback, weeks 5–8), a one-week washout (week 9), and Phase 3 (sustainability assessment, weeks 10–12). Paired ATP-CFU samples were collected weekly. Within-group comparisons used Kruskal–Wallis H tests with post hoc Dunn’s tests and Bonferroni correction. Secondary outcomes included Semmelweis global and zone-specific coverage and the correlation between subject-level Semmelweis coverage and ATP bioluminescence (Spearman’s rho). Results: A total of 781 paired ATP-CFU samples and 497 Semmelweis evaluations were analyzed. Mean ATP declined from 195.9 RLU at baseline to 148.2 RLU in Phase 2 (−24.4%) and 154.8 RLU in Phase 3 (−21.0%; Kruskal–Wallis H = 102.73, p < 0.001). CFU/mL declined from 84.8 to 66.2 (−21.9%) and 70.7 (−16.6%; H = 22.48, p < 0.001). Post hoc comparisons confirmed significant Phase 1 versus Phase 2 and Phase 1 versus Phase 3 differences for both markers (all p < 0.01), while Phase 2 versus Phase 3 was non-significant, indicating stabilization at an improved level. Subject-level Semmelweis coverage correlated negatively with ATP (rho = −0.665, 95% CI −0.778 to −0.510, p < 0.001), supporting construct validity at the operator level. Semmelweis global coverage was 93.1% (Phase 2) and 90.6% (Phase 3); interdigital spaces showed the highest inadequacy rate (73.9% protocol-based, 92.5% targeted). Conclusions: Real-time visual feedback via UV-fluorescence imaging was associated with significant and sustained improvements in hand hygiene quality beyond baseline. ATP, CFU, and Semmelweis assessments captured complementary, non-redundant dimensions, supporting multimodal evaluation. Interdigital spaces and fingertips remained persistent failure points requiring targeted educational reinforcement. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Clinical Management and Long-Term Prognosis in Intensive Care)
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24 pages, 50826 KB  
Article
Conservation Beyond Geometry: Hybrid 3D Documentation and Digital Restoration of a Byzantine Leather Bag from Rhodes
by Eleftheria Iakovaki, Markos Konstantakis, Georgios Koutsouflakis, Ekaterini Malea and Dimitrios Makris
Heritage 2026, 9(6), 238; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9060238 - 18 Jun 2026
Abstract
The documentation and reconstruction of fragile underwater organic artifacts remain among the most challenging tasks in digital heritage practice. This study presents a conservation-first, contact-minimizing protocol applied to a rare Byzantine leather bag recovered from the commercial port of Rhodes, Greece. Due to [...] Read more.
The documentation and reconstruction of fragile underwater organic artifacts remain among the most challenging tasks in digital heritage practice. This study presents a conservation-first, contact-minimizing protocol applied to a rare Byzantine leather bag recovered from the commercial port of Rhodes, Greece. Due to its incomplete preservation and structural instability, exclusively non-invasive methodologies were employed. High-resolution close-range photogrammetry and structured-light 3D scanning were integrated to capture both micro-topographic detail and metrically stable geometry. Quantitative deviation analysis (nearest-neighbor cloud-to-mesh distances) indicated that most geometric differences remain below 0.5 mm. The resulting models were processed through controlled mesh optimization, UV remapping, and conservation-oriented digital completion workflows. In addition, radiance field visualization techniques such as Gaussian Splatting were explored as complementary visualization approaches for incomplete geometries. These methods were evaluated primarily in terms of visual continuity and interpretative support rather than as reconstruction tools. The study demonstrates that the integration of photogrammetry, structured-light scanning, and Gaussian Splatting can significantly enhance the documentation and visualization of fragile underwater organic heritage. At the same time, it highlights the necessity of methodological transparency and ethical framing when incorporating probabilistic reconstructions into conservation workflows. Full article
36 pages, 73784 KB  
Article
A Systematic Three-Dimensional Cultural Gene Identification Framework for Digital Conservation of Stone Arch Bridge Heritage: A Case Study of Hongji Bridge in Handan, China
by Xiang Chen, Linyue Jia and Haoyu Tao
Buildings 2026, 16(12), 2423; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16122423 - 18 Jun 2026
Abstract
Stone arch bridges represent culturally significant heritage assets that exhibit distinct regional characteristics. At present digital preservation largely attends to geometric modeling and typically neglects the identification and conformance of core culture genes. This oversight has resulted in a disconnect between technological application [...] Read more.
Stone arch bridges represent culturally significant heritage assets that exhibit distinct regional characteristics. At present digital preservation largely attends to geometric modeling and typically neglects the identification and conformance of core culture genes. This oversight has resulted in a disconnect between technological application and core heritage values, a prevalent issue globally. To address this, this study employs cultural gene theory to formulate a systematic framework for investigating the architectural cultural genes of stone arch bridges from the three dimensions: material–morphological, technical–behavioral, and cultural–symbolic. This study takes the Hongji Bridge in Handan as an example and uses literature research and 3D laser scanning and UAV oblique photogrammetry and qualitative extraction and visual presentation of the architectural genetic characteristics of stone arch bridges. This study identifies 11 core genetic indicators from the dimensions of genetic architecture, inheritance, and evolution, for the architectural cultural genes for the Chinese stone arch bridges The Zhaozhou Bridge (China) and Serranos Bridge (Europe)’s cross-cultural comparative analyses are adopted to validate the generalizability of the framework and the genetic uniqueness of the Chinese stone arch bridge. This research introduces a gene-based model of digital conservancy that fosters the transition of heritage preservation from technology-driven to value-driven. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Structures)
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44 pages, 4043 KB  
Article
The Mechanism of Digital–Real Integration Empowering Tourism Ecological Efficiency: Evidence from the Taihang Mountains in China
by Zhenyan Wang, Gangmin Weng, Jinjie Li and Chuncheng Wang
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6260; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126260 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 49
Abstract
The integration of the digital and real economies is a pivotal engine driving the development of new, quality productive forces. Tourism ecological governance is the concrete manifestation of the green dimension of new-quality productive forces in the cultural and tourism sector, as well [...] Read more.
The integration of the digital and real economies is a pivotal engine driving the development of new, quality productive forces. Tourism ecological governance is the concrete manifestation of the green dimension of new-quality productive forces in the cultural and tourism sector, as well as being a path for converting ecological value to drive regional sustainable development. The relationship and mechanisms between digital–real integration and tourism ecological governance are critical issues requiring urgent breakthroughs. However, existing research primarily explores the economic factors influencing tourism ecology and has yet to systematically reveal the intrinsic mechanisms through which digital–real integration affects tourism ecological efficiency from the perspective of typical ecological functional zones. Based on data from 78 counties (municipalities, districts) in China’s Taihang Mountains from 2011 to 2023, this study examines the impact of digital–real integration on tourism ecological efficiency and its operational pathways. The findings are as follows: Firstly, from a temporal evolution perspective, tourism ecological efficiency in the Taihang Mountains underwent a phase of dynamic adjustment and gradual improvement between 2011 and 2023, while the level of digital–real integration experienced a phase of general enhancement and phased advancement. From a spatial evolution perspective, neighboring sub-regions within the Taihang Mountains exhibit positive spatial correlations in terms of both digital–real integration and tourism ecological efficiency. From the perspective of spatiotemporal transfer characteristics, changes in tourism ecological efficiency and the level of integration of the digital and real economies in the Taihang Mountains are influenced by neighboring regions. The development processes of tourism ecology and digital–real integration exhibit a relatively stable and gradually improving pattern, driving the agglomeration of regions toward higher levels. Secondly, digital–real integration has a positive impact on improving tourism ecological efficiency by releasing ecological pressure, promoting industrial synergy agglomeration, and driving green innovation development. Heterogeneity analysis reveals that the positive effect of this integration on tourism ecological efficiency is more pronounced in national e-commerce demonstration cities. Digital–real integration has had a positive impact on improving tourism ecological efficiency in the Southern and Western Taihang Mountain regions, while its impact on the Eastern Taihang Mountain region was not statistically significant. This study incorporates digital–real integration with tourism ecological efficiency, as well as environmental, structural, and capacity factors, into a unified analytical framework, providing theoretical references and practical insights for exploring pathways of digital transformation and innovative tourism ecological governance in ecologically sensitive functional zones. Full article
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20 pages, 6016 KB  
Article
A Computational Evaluation of Visitor Perception in a Historic District: Implications for Built Heritage Conservation and Spatial Management in Nanjing Fuzimiao
by Tao Chen, Feng Wang, Haolan Zhang, Guanghao Li and Linhui Hu
Buildings 2026, 16(12), 2416; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16122416 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 53
Abstract
Historic districts are complex built heritage environments where conservation, commercial activities, and public use continuously interact. A key challenge is maintaining cultural meaning and spatial authenticity while meeting contemporary demands for leisure and accessibility. Taking the Fuzimiao–Qinhuai Scenic Belt in Nanjing, China, as [...] Read more.
Historic districts are complex built heritage environments where conservation, commercial activities, and public use continuously interact. A key challenge is maintaining cultural meaning and spatial authenticity while meeting contemporary demands for leisure and accessibility. Taking the Fuzimiao–Qinhuai Scenic Belt in Nanjing, China, as a representative case, this study develops a computational mixed-methods framework to evaluate visitor perception and diagnose experiential imbalances in the built heritage environment. A total of 2940 online reviews (2020–2025) were analysed using TF-IDF, Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA), StructBERT sentiment analysis, and Importance–Performance Analysis (IPA). Six experiential dimensions were identified, covering cultural inheritance, nightscape and leisure, rituals and museum visits, architectural space, value evaluation, and practical services. Results reveal a clear disparity: nightscape and value-related dimensions received the highest attention and positive sentiment, whereas rituals and museum interpretation underperformed despite their central heritage significance. Based on the IPA diagnosis, the study proposes three strategies: reallocating resources from over-supplied services to underperforming cultural cores, integrating immersive digital technologies (VR/AR) to revitalise heritage interpretation, and embedding cultural narratives into nightscape experiences. These strategies support a paradigm shift from visual attraction to cultural resonance in the conservation-oriented regeneration of historic districts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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38 pages, 2085 KB  
Article
From Archive to Sustainable Urban Memory: Evidence-Based Digital Interpretation of the Lost Fazlı Pasha Palace in Istanbul
by Ahmet Masrı and Figen Kıvılcım Çorakbaş
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6238; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126238 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 59
Abstract
This study investigates the vanished Fazlı Pasha Palace in Istanbul as a case of lost architectural heritage, addressing the challenges of heritage interpretation, presentation, and integration into contemporary urban contexts. Drawing on contemporary conservation frameworks, the research situates the palace within a broader [...] Read more.
This study investigates the vanished Fazlı Pasha Palace in Istanbul as a case of lost architectural heritage, addressing the challenges of heritage interpretation, presentation, and integration into contemporary urban contexts. Drawing on contemporary conservation frameworks, the research situates the palace within a broader discourse on cultural and urban sustainability, emphasising the interdependence of tangible and intangible heritage values. As a methodology, this study employs a multi-layered, interdisciplinary framework that synthesises archival empirical data, architectural historiography, and GIS-based geospatial analytics. Unlike traditional descriptive methods, this research introduces an integrated digital heritage interpretation model grounded in an evidence-grading system. This system categorises architectural data into three distinct epistemic levels: documented (empirical), inferred (analogous), and hypothetical (conjectural). By implementing this tripartite structure, the design ensures a structured communication of uncertainty, effectively bridging the gap between historical fragmentation and spatial data and stratification while strictly adhering to contemporary conservation approaches that critically limit speculative reconstruction in the cases of lost urban layers. The findings, supported by GIS spatial mapping, demonstrate how the palace’s administrative footprint influenced 18th-century Ottoman Istanbul’s urban fabric, of which there is very limited spatial knowledge. Moreover, proposals for effectively reintegrating lost architectural heritage into contemporary urban memory without compromising authenticity or the integrity of existing urban fabric are developed. In doing so, the study contributes to urban sustainability by offering a non-intrusive, reversible, and critically evidence-based approach to heritage interpretation. Beyond the specific case of the Fazlı Pasha Palace, the proposed model provides a transferable methodological framework for the interpretation of lost heritage in complex historic cities, supporting the continuity of cultural memory, identity, and place-based narratives. The research thus advances current debates on digital in-situ presentation of lost heritage, authenticity, and sustainable urban conservation by demonstrating how the memory of vanished buildings can be meaningfully presented and communicated within contemporary urban environments. Full article
36 pages, 4490 KB  
Review
Reconsidering Fluidity in Architectural Design in the Digital Era: A Conceptual Review of Scientific Articles from the Past Three Decades (1995–2025)
by Bojana Jerković-Babović and Ana Nikezić
Buildings 2026, 16(12), 2396; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16122396 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 166
Abstract
This study critically explores theoretical concepts of fluidity in architectural design, addressing its positioning, challenges, and evolving role within digital-era developments in scientific research over the past three decades. The aim of this article is to critically review the fluidity research gap in [...] Read more.
This study critically explores theoretical concepts of fluidity in architectural design, addressing its positioning, challenges, and evolving role within digital-era developments in scientific research over the past three decades. The aim of this article is to critically review the fluidity research gap in architectural design, shifting the concept away from ambiguous and inconsistent formal metaphors toward recognizing its importance within the interdisciplinary context of digitization and networking. The research method employs a four-level content analysis based on a deductive approach. The development of an interdisciplinary conceptual framework of fluidity is examined, alongside its changing scope, meanings, and positioning within the field of architectural design research. The study employs the definition and systematization of key terms and spatial aspects to trace the transformation of fluidity. This is achieved through the analysis of a selected corpus of peer-reviewed scientific articles, structured along cultural and technological lines of thought. The results reveal (1) the manner in which fluidity is situated within the domain of architecture in relation to adjacent scientific fields, along technological and cultural lines, and (2) the manner in which corresponding spatial aspects and demands for new forms of knowledge in architectural design have emerged and transformed from predominantly formal and expressive interpretations and metaphors towards a more operational and methodological role. This paper contributes to architectural design research through the development of a structured conceptual and analytical framework that positions fluidity within architectural inquiry. The study addresses the opportunities and challenges of conceptualizing the continuous variability of the notion of fluidity and the spatial aspects it is based on in architectural design processes in response to cultural and technological transformations. Furthermore, the study extends fluidity beyond its role as a design language for articulating complex spatial formations and their experiential implications by establishing a conceptual bridge between digital notions of fluidity and constructural design thinking, thereby reframing fluidity as a performative condition that structures access, movement, and exchange within evolving socio-technical flow systems. Full article
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18 pages, 7321 KB  
Article
Microtopography Enhances Surface Runoff Regulation and Plant Growth in Urban Relocation Green Spaces: Evidence from Shanghai Expo Cultural Park
by Aiqing Zhu, Dongmei Zhang, Yulan Luo and Lang Zhang
Forests 2026, 17(6), 704; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17060704 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 140
Abstract
Urban microtopography plays an important role in regulating soil processes and vegetation performance in newly constructed green spaces, yet its effects on surface runoff, soil nutrients, and plant growth remain insufficiently quantified in urban relocation sites. This study investigated how slope gradient, slope [...] Read more.
Urban microtopography plays an important role in regulating soil processes and vegetation performance in newly constructed green spaces, yet its effects on surface runoff, soil nutrients, and plant growth remain insufficiently quantified in urban relocation sites. This study investigated how slope gradient, slope position, and slope curvature influence surface runoff, soil nutrient distribution, and tree growth in Shanghai Expo Cultural Park. Field monitoring was conducted in 36 plots planted with Cinnamomum camphora and Ginkgo biloba in 2017, 2020, and 2024. Microtopographic characteristics were quantified using terrestrial and handheld three-dimensional laser scanning, point-cloud processing, and digital elevation models (DEMs), and plant growth, calculated runoff, and soil physiochemical properties were analyzed using analysis of variance (ANOVA) and regression analysis. Annual DBH increments were greatest on meso slopes (mean = 0.558 cm), followed by gentle slopes (0.513 cm) and abrupt slopes (0.511 cm). Growth was also greater at slope-tail positions than at slope-head positions and greater on concave slopes than on convex slopes. The mean calculated runoff increased from gentle to meso and abrupt slopes, and soil organic matter, total nitrogen, hydrolysable nitrogen, available phosphorus, available potassium, and cation exchange capacity were generally higher at slope-tail positions. These results indicate that micrographic design affects tree growth mainly through runoff-mediated redistribution of water and soil nutrients. These findings provide practical guidance for optimizing microtopographic design, tree species selection, and soil management in urban green spaces established on relocation sites. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Urban Forestry)
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19 pages, 456 KB  
Article
Personal Health Data in Healthcare: Important Factors Considered by Health Students—A Qualitative Study
by Sjors W. M. Groeneveld, Gaya Bin Noon, Mathieu Figeys, Lisette van Gemert-Pijnen, Rudolf M. Verdaasdonk, Plinio Pelegrini Morita, Shaniff Esmail, Harmieke van Os-Medendorp and Marjolein E. M. den Ouden
Healthcare 2026, 14(12), 1731; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14121731 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 115
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Digital technologies and data-driven approaches are rapidly transforming healthcare practice and enabling more personalized and preventive care. As personal health data becomes increasingly embedded in healthcare systems, understanding how future healthcare professionals interpret these developments is essential for shaping responsive health education. [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Digital technologies and data-driven approaches are rapidly transforming healthcare practice and enabling more personalized and preventive care. As personal health data becomes increasingly embedded in healthcare systems, understanding how future healthcare professionals interpret these developments is essential for shaping responsive health education. This study aims to identify the factors that students in health-related programs consider important regarding the increasing use of personal health data in healthcare. Methods: An exploratory qualitative focus group study was conducted between March 2024 and July 2025 across five higher education institutions in Australia, Canada, and the Netherlands. Seven focus groups were conducted with forty students from health-related programs, including nursing, public health, occupational therapy, and social work. Participants discussed the use of personal health data in healthcare and reflected on short fictional future scenarios designed to stimulate discussion about possible developments in data-driven healthcare. Data were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis using ATLAS.ti. Results: Three overarching domains were identified: (1) personalization and prevention, (2) data quality and ethical considerations, and (3) organizational implications and conditions. Students described personal health data as a powerful tool for personalization, prevention, and informed decision-making. At the same time, they raised concerns about data reliability, overreliance on automated systems, patient anxiety, potential dehumanization of care, privacy risks, and emerging inequalities related to access to and representation within data systems. Overall, students appeared neither purely techno-optimistic nor technophobic, but articulated nuanced ethical, cultural, and professional tensions surrounding data-driven care. Conclusions: Preparing future healthcare professionals for data-driven healthcare requires integrating critical data literacy, ethical reflection, interdisciplinary collaboration and opportunities to critically engage with the societal and professional implications of data-driven technologies into health professional education, while ensuring that organizational conditions support the responsible use of personal health data. Full article
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