Damascus

Analysis of Spatial Structure and Social Significance of a Sample of Hammams in Mediterranean Cities

Type
journal article
Year
2008
The hammam is a public building which is traditionally closely linked to socio cultural norms of the society that is supposed to serve. This paper seeks to answer questions about the logic by which such buildings respond to those complex socio cultural relations and the potentials offered by their spatial structures. The hypothesis in analyzing the internal layout is based on the ability of forms to adapt to socio cultural norms of certain societies and that they could be shaped to respond to social needs and to produce appropriate behavior. This study is based on the analysis of the morphological characteristics of the internal layouts of several hammams, the socio-historical information, the direct observation of the spaces and face to face interviews with staff especially those working in hammam Ammuna in Damascus. The main objective is to explore the following questions: 1) How are hammams “designed” to fulfill users’ social needs and their well-being in the internal spaces? 2) How architectural settings in the internal spaces of the hammam are “coded” or “structured” to produce appropriate social practice or behavior? This paper demonstrates that hammams are the witnesses of a genius locus of adaptation of a building to sociocultural norms.

Citation

Aboukhater, Roula. "Analysis of Spatial Structure and Social Significance of a Sample of Hammams in Mediterranean Cities," in ArchNet-IJAR: International Journal of Architectural Research, vol. 2, issue 3 (2008).

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Copyright

Roula Aboukhater

Terms of Use

Public Domain

Country

Algeria
Egypt

Language

English

Keywords