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Change (and continuity) in Domestic Space Design: a comparative study of nineteenth and early twentieth century houses in Britain and Recife, Brazil PDF

501 Pages·1994·58.135 MB·English
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Change (and continuity) in Domestic Space Design: a comparative study of nineteenth and early twentieth century houses in Britain and Recife, Brazil. EDJA BEZERRA FARIA TRIGUEIRO Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of the Built Environment THE BARTLETT SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON 1994 2 ABSTRACT This thesis investigates the spatial configuration of late nineteenth and early twentieth century houses in Britain and Recife, Brazil. Its underlying purpose is to verify whether the British preeminence over the country’s economical and political life of that period, a fact thought to have promoted alterations in socio-cultural modes of behaviour, has left any detectable traces in the way houses are designed to enable the realisation of those modes in space. The central assumption of the methodology — known as space syntax —applied to this research is that cultural ideas are present in buildings as they are present in the minds of their designers and inhabitants. It follows that a study of the spatial structures of houses in Britain and Recife, a major focus of British presence in Brazil, could reveal the extent of the influence of one culture over the other, as well as contribute to further the knowledge of the domestic architecture in both countries. House plans designed between 1840 and 1930 in Britain are analysed and results compared with those drawn from the investigation of dwellings in Recife. These provide representative examples of the housing panorama before and after the arrival of British residents in the city. The work attempts to show that the spatial configuration of post-colonial houses built during and immediately after the period in which the British presence in Recife was stronger defines a theme of cultural continuity. This helps to refute the myth that these houses are testimonies of a culturally debased architectural period. It also minimises the importance of the role that the British presence in Recife might have had in reshaping cultural modes of behaviour. 3 To: Mariana, Luiza and Gabriel 4 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Thanks are due to: Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) for funding the PhD programme. Prof. Bill Hillier, for his unfailing open-minded supervision. And for his constant and much needed reassurance. Beatriz Campos, Kayvan Karimi, Aso Jaff, Anne Pink, fellow students and members of staff at the Bartlett School for practical aid and general support. In particular to Luiz Amorin for his generous help. Students and staff at the Departamento de Arquitetura, UFRN, for stimuli and unrestricted collaboration. Staff at the Divisão de Operações, COMPESA, Recife, specially to Mr. Elias Higino. Anita Compton and Josilda Carvalho for helping with textual and photographic material. Special thanks are given to my parents, husband and children for renouncing attention and coping with my prolonged absence. And, again, to Prof. Bill Hillier and to Dr. Julienne Hanson, for having invented space syntax. 5 CONTENTS ABSTRACT 2 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 4 CONTENTS 5 FIGURES AND TABLES 9 DISK CONTENTS 16 INTRODUCTION 17 CHAPTER 1 21 1.1. The problem 21 1.2. The method 30 1.2.1. On the built form and some paradigms 30 1.2.2. On some morphological approaches 41 1.2.3. On space syntax 46 1.2.4. On domestic space 53 1.3. The data 56 1.3.1. The British sample 57 1.3.2. The Brazilian sample 60 1.4. Analytical techniques 62 CHAPTER 2 66 2.1. Size as index of status 66 2.1.1. Counting spaces 67 2.1.2. Sorting out functions 69 2.2. Of size and functions 69 2.2.1. Labels as deceiving clues 70 2.2.2. On the availability of certain rooms 71 2.3. Of size and time 77 2.3.1. The ‘war effect’ 77 2.4. Of functions and labels 81 6 2.4.1. Labels as valuable clues 82 2.5. Of size, time, labels and social groups 92 CHAPTER 3 96 3.1. Walls, doorways and social nexus 96 3.1.1. Spatial configuration and the quest for privacy 97 3.2. Observations 100 3.2.1. Measurements 101 3.2.1.1. Of social groups and structuring 105 3.2.2. Of most integrated functions 112 3.2.2.1. Of functions and general configuration 117 3.2.2.2. Of functions and hierarchy 120 3.2.3. Searching for genotypes 122 3.2.3.1. Of genotypes and time 124 3.2.3.2. Of genotypes, time and social groups 126 3.2.3.3. Capturing genotypes 130 3.2.3.3.1. Nineteenth century 131 3.2.3.3.2. Turning the century 132 3.2.3.3.3. Wartime 134 3.2.3.3.4. Post-war 134 3.3. An overview of British homes 137 CHAPTER 4 142 4.1. The prewar sub-sample 142 4.2. Analytical procedures 144 4.3. A syntactic overview 145 4.4. A house by house perusal 147 4.4.1. E=R>C cases 147 4.4.2. E>R>C cases 157 4.4.3. C>E=R cases 163 4.4.4. E/C>R cases 168 4.4.5. E>C>R cases 171 4.5. Five genotypes, a central theme and some variations 173 4.6. A glimpse forward 179 7 4.6.1. E>C>R cases 181 4.6.2. Cooking centred complexes 185 4.7. A move backwards 189 CHAPTER 5 196 5.1. Earlier times 197 5.1.1. Impressions 200 5.2. The capital 214 5.2.1. Mutations 215 5.3. Remains 217 CHAPTER 6 221 6.1. The sample 221 6.2. Analytical procedures 221 6.3. As a prelude to investigation 222 6.3.1. From the repertoire: a house-by-house syntactic analysis 228 6.3.2. Trends 236 6.3.3. A little speculation 238 6.4. Exploring earlier remains 242 6.4.1. Sobrados 244 6.4.2. Casas térreas 251 6.5. Two space codes and a few variations 256 6.5.1 A summary of colonial space basics 262 CHAPTER 7 265 7.1. The sample 265 7.2. Analytical procedures 266 7.3. A comparative overview 266 7.4. A general approach 269 7.5. A case-by-case approach 270 7.5.1. E>R>C cases 270 7.5.2. Other genotypes 280 7.5.2.1. E=R>C and R>E>C cases 280 7.5.2.2. E>C>R cases 282 8 7.5.2.3. E>C=R types 285 7.6. A foot in the past another in the air 288 CHAPTER 8 292 8.1. Back to the British 292 8.2. Before the British 297 8.3. After the British 298 8.4. A comparative view 299 8.5. On myths and findings 306 AFTERWORD 311 REFERENCES 313 FIGURES AND TABLES 321 9 FIGURES AND TABLES CHAPTER 1 322 Figure 1. Example of procedure applied to all plans 323 Table 1. British Sample. Basic General Data 324 CHAPTER 2 334 FIGURES Figure 2. Correlation between the total number of interior spaces and the number of main living rooms 335 Figure 2.1. Correlation between the total number of interior spaces and the number of main living rooms across time 336 Figure 2.2. Correlation between the total number of interior spaces and the number of main living at successive time periods 337 Figure 2.3. Correlation between the total number of interior spaces and the number of main living at successive time periods 338 TABLES Table 2. British plans. Basic data 339 Table 2.1. British plans. Availability of main function rooms across the sample 340 Table 2.2. British plans. Basic data across size clusters according to the number of main function rooms 340 Table 2.3. British plans. Basic data across size clusters and type of ground occupation 341 Table 2.4. British plans. Basic data across size clusters and time 342 Table 2.5. Frequency distribution of the availability of main day living rooms in prewar houses 343 Table 2.6. Frequency distribution of the availability of main day living rooms in postwar houses 344 Table 2.7. Frequency distribution of the availability of rooms for main day function 345 Table 2.8. Families of main living rooms 345 Table 2.9. Main label categories and size 346 Table 2.10. Labels of spaces mainly used for eating 346 10 Table 2.11. Frequency distribution of main families of living room across size (restricted by the number of bedrooms) and time 347 Table 2.12. Requirements and restrictions for sorting out the sample according to social status 349 CHAPTER 3 350 FIGURES Figure 3. Example of procedure applied to all plans (minimal living complex) 351 Figure 3.1. Correlation between mean integration (mean RRA) and differentiation in integration values (BDF) in the whole sample 352 Figure 3.2. Correlation between mean integration (mean RRA) and other variables 353 Figure 3.3. Correlation between the differentiation in integration values (BDF) and other variables 354 Figure 3.4. Correlation between average integration (mean RRA) and differentiation in integration (BDF) across social groups and time 355 Figure 3.5. Correlation between average integration (mean RRA) and differentiation in integration (BDF) across social groups and time (regression) 356 Figure 3.6. Correlation between average integration (mean RRA) and differentiation in integration (BDF) for ‘single-function-centred’ complexes across time 357 Figure 3.7. Variation in integration (RRA) for each function in ‘single-function-centred’ complexes across time. 358 Figure 3.8. Correlation between average integration (mean RRA) and differentiation in integration (BDF) in genotypes across class (1843-1893) 359 Figure 3.9. Correlation between average integration (mean RRA) and differentiation in integration BDF) in genotypes across class (1894-1914) 360 Figure 3.10. Correlation between average integration (mean RRA) and differentiation in integration (BDF) in genotypes across class (1915-1922) 361 Figure 3.11. Correlation between average integration (mean RRA) and differentiation in integration (BDF) in genotypes across class (1923-1930) 362 TABLES Table 3. British plans. Basic syntactic data 363 Table 3.1. Basic general and syntactic data across class 370 Table 3.2. Basic general and syntactic data across class and time 370

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