{"id":167716,"date":"2022-11-15T09:33:18","date_gmt":"2022-11-15T08:33:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aarch.dk\/visioner-om-bygninger\/"},"modified":"2022-12-02T10:42:31","modified_gmt":"2022-12-02T09:42:31","slug":"visions-for-buildings","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/aarch.dk\/en\/visions-for-buildings\/","title":{"rendered":"Visions for Buildings"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Research projects<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div><\/section>\n

VISIONS FOR BUILDINGS<\/h1>\n<\/div><\/section>\n

The research project highlights the consequences of building legislation to architecture over 500 years until the present in selected Danish towns. It also examines how architecture is crucial to the creation of new building legislation.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/section>\n\n<\/div><\/div><\/main><\/div><\/div>

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How can knowledge about architecture and urban areas help influence Danish building legislation in a positive direction? And how does building legislation influence the kind of towns we have built in different periods of history and build today? These are the questions the research project ‘Visions for Buildings – Danish Building and Building Legislation over 500 Years’ helps answer.<\/p>\n

Buildings are frameworks of life. People have shaped their houses, but the houses have also shaped the people who live in them. We live differently in earth huts, in cramped backyard apartments, in modern detached houses, and in splendid palaces. Regardless of the kind of building we live in, we need to adjust to other people. For centuries, one of the ways we have done this has been through building legislation, legislation based on the perceptions of different periods of what constituted the best society, the best living conditions and the best architectural values.<\/p>\n

The research project examines the interaction between building legislation and architecture’s development from the early 1500s to the present day. It sheds light on how the ideologically, economically and technologically determined legal requirements have influenced architectural ideals \u2013 and vice versa. The study is based on selected Danish towns, including Copenhagen, Fredericia and Aalborg.<\/p>\n

The research project creates new knowledge of the relationship between construction and building legislation in a historical and contemporary perspective. And the knowledge resulting from the research will therefore be relevant to e.g. developers, architects, politicians and authorities \u2013 and in particular as a contribution to the future work of designing and administrating building legislation. The results of the research project will also be used for teaching architecture students at Aarhus School of Architecture.<\/p>\n

The team comprises the following people:<\/strong><\/p>\n