Azeddine Belakehal
Daylight, view-out, and windows: the sensorial-based design of Ottoman-era mosques.
Belakehal, Azeddine; Tabet Aoul, Kheira Anissa; Bennadji, Amar; Benkhalfallah, Ikram; Bounhas, Djihan
Authors
Kheira Anissa Tabet Aoul
Amar Bennadji
Ikram Benkhalfallah
Djihan Bounhas
Contributors
Kheira Anissa Tabet Aoul
Editor
Mohammed Tariq Shafiq
Editor
Daniel Efurosibina Attoye
Editor
Abstract
Daylighting and outside view, as window design parameters, are often the main ambience-generating design factors that connect the users' sensorial relationship to their external environment. These relationships and their resulting ambiences vary by building type and carry a heightened value in some specific typologies of which, religious buildings hold a paramount place. Indeed, the sophistication of openings’ design strategies applied throughout centuries in religious buildings, are good learning grounds on the use of daylighting and its resulting sensorial impact on users. In addition to a literature review related to Ottoman religious architecture, this paper reports on an in-situ field investigation that explored these relationships in a corpus of forty-five (45) mosques in Bursa, Edirne, and Istanbul, dating back to the Ottoman era (1299-1923). Breaking with past schemes, the new design paradigm introduced drastic changes in plans, openings, windows, views, and daylight, which resulted in unique ambiences. The variables investigated in this study include: i) the window location within the mosque envelope (zenithal and/or lateral), ii) the window location concerning the conventional prayer direction referred to as "Qibla" wall, and iii) the window transparency that permits or stops/blocks the outside view. In addition, the view content encompasses the identification and categorization of the objects, as seen by the worshipers while performing their prayers, through the ground-level windows. The collected information was converted into a database for statistical analysis. By focusing on the human sensorial-based design in the Ottoman mosques, the results revealed the daylighting design specificities of the building envelope and the windows as well as the nature of the view out content Both of them attested to the human-centered design by Ottoman builders offering worshipers a strong connection to the external environment, thus creating ambiences conducive to spiritual fervor and beatitude.
Citation
BELAKEHAL, A., TABET AOUL, K.A., BENNADJI, A., BENKHALFALLAH, I. and BOUNHAS, D. 2021. Daylight, view-out, and windows: the sensorial-based design of Ottoman-era mosques. In Tabet Aoul, K.A., Shafiq, M.T. and Attoye, D.E. (eds.) Proceedings of 8th Zero energy mass custom home international conference 2021 (ZEMCH 2021), 26-28 October 2021, Dubai, UAE. Al Ain: ZEMCH Network [online], pages 285-302. Available from: http://zemch.org/proceedings/2021/ZEMCH2021.pdf
Conference Name | 8th Zero energy mass custom home international conference 2021 (ZEMCH 2021) |
---|---|
Conference Location | Dubai, UAE |
Start Date | Oct 26, 2021 |
End Date | Oct 28, 2021 |
Acceptance Date | Jul 30, 2021 |
Online Publication Date | Oct 28, 2021 |
Publication Date | Dec 31, 2021 |
Deposit Date | Feb 4, 2022 |
Publicly Available Date | Feb 4, 2022 |
Publisher | ZEMCH Network |
Pages | 285-302 |
Series Title | ZEMCH international conference proceedings |
Series ISSN | 2652-2926 |
Book Title | Proceedings of 8th Zero energy mass custom home international conference 2021 (ZEMCH 2021), 26-28 October 2021, Dubai, UAE |
ISBN | 9789948310006 |
Keywords | Daylighting; Window design; View out; Heritage ambience; Ottoman mosques |
Public URL | https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/1585306 |
Publisher URL | http://zemch.org/proceedings/2021/ZEMCH2021.pdf |
Files
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Publisher Licence URL
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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