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HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

Amos Rapaport

The form that housing takes is related


to the culture in which that housing is
built

We focus on the monumental while


much of the built environment is
housing, and most of this is done
without the benefit of architects.

Primitive housing produced by


societies defined as primitive

Vernacular housing involvement of


tradesmen . . .
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

Vernacular:

the owner is a participant


lack of theoretical or aesthetic
pretensions
working with site and climate
respect for other people and their
environment
variations within an idiom
Limited range of expression but open-
ended within that.
a culturally accepted model
few building types
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

Tradition disappears:

complexity more building types


loss of shared values
originality a premium is placed on
being original

Production of built form changes:

primitive very few building types,


model with few variations, built by all
preindustrial vernacular greater
number of building types, more
individual variation, built by tradesmen
high-style/modern many specialized
building types, each an original
creation, designed and built by teams of
specialists.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

Differentiation of space:
Jung the lack of sharp boundaries between man and animals in the primitive world

Kabylie man and animal in same room


Switzerland under same roof but separate spaces
French farmhouse separated but close

Similarly In urban space


living/working/workshop spaces.

Then widely separated.


HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

ALTERNATIVE THEORIES OF HOUSE FORM


- a single cause for house form?

PHYSICAL
climate and the need for shelter
materials and technology
site

SOCIAL
economics
defense
religion
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

CLIMATE
Climatic determinism
We build houses to keep in a consistent climate,
and to keep out predators. We grow, gather and
eat food to keep our metabolism on an even
keel. (p19)

the courtyard house is a southern form while


the hearth belongs to the north

Beijing courtyard housing


but courtyard housing is found in the temperate
climate of Beijing as well as the desert climate of
north Africa.

Many different forms of housing within limited


number of climatic zones.

Changing form based on economic activity the


Hidastsa in the Missouri valley (p20)

The hearth in Wrights Robie House


HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

Ceremonial & religious beliefs, prestige and


status will often override climatic
requirements

Iquitos (p21) solid walls instead of open


(for ventilation) because of status and privacy

Japan (p22) traditional house varies little


from Hokkaido in the north to Kyushu in the
south.

South Seas (p22) European houses are seen


as a mark of power and good fortune and so
are used despite their inappropriateness for
the climate.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

MATERIALS, CONSTRUCTION,
TECHNOLOGY
For thousands of years wood and stone have
determined the character of buildings. The
theory that forms develop as man learns to master
more complex building techniques. However
even within one culture housing may be primitive
while ceremonial buildings are elaborate with
sophisticated roof structures.

Sometimes technology may be available but not


used. the Egyptians knew the vault [but] they
rarely used it, and then only where it could not be
seen, since it was at odds with their image or idea
of the building. (p24-5)

Sometimes social values take precedence over


technological advances. Piped water vs well
water.(P25)

Of course wood and stone can be used to create


may different kinds of structures, the form of
which will be determined more by the culture than
the material.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

SITE

The theory that topography can be a form


determinant.
Eg the hill towns of Italy.

Feng shui considers many aspects of


geography in determining the orientation
and shape of a building. However this has
a cosmological basis. Siting can take on
mystical importance which can lead to
persistence of sites because of their
traditional nature.

The choice of a good site will depend on a


cultural definition.

Sometimes the form will not change even


though the topography has the Latin
American courtyard house.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

DEFENSE
this has been cited to account for
tight urban patterns more than to
explain the form of dwellings
themselves.

the compact towns in the Greek


islands have been attributed to the
needs of defense, lack of money (so
that the houses themselves had to
form the city wall), lack of arable
land and the need to conserve it, and
the need for shading for climatic
reasons. All of these undoubtedly
played a part, which means that no
single cause could be possible.

Defense is handled differently in the


Cameroons (see pg 32)
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

ECONOMICS

scarcity of resources as a determining factor


in house form. However, even under
conditions of scarcity there are examples of
herders living among agricultural people
and continuing to refuse to accept that way
of life. Some will build beyond their means.
(34).
Even where collaboration is used it is often
not used for strictly economic reasons but
socio-cultural ones.

There is an economic need to store, but even


this will be done differently according to a
number of variables. (p36)

Even mobility, strongly motivated by


economic conditions (scarcity of resources),
does not result in similarity of house form.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

RELIGION

Some have taken the view that physical


determinants are not nearly as important as
symbolic and religious determinants. the
sacredness of the house.

The sacredness of the threshold and portal,


and hence the separation of the sacred and
profane realms, can be achieved through
the use of numerous and varied forms. Is a
stranger allowed in the house? Some
places yes, others no.

Shape of the house will vary according to


understanding of the cosmos. North-south
orientation, circular? (p41)
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

PHYSICAL DETERMINISM
The physical environment provides possibilities, not imperatives.
Mumford suggests that man was a symbol-making animal before he was a tool-making
animal. (42).
More than the physical environment, it is our symbols and rituals that give form to that
environment.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

SOCIO-CULTURAL FACTORS

The house is an institution, not just a Culture- the total equipment of ideas
structure. and institutions and conventionalized
activities of a people
In addition to physical influences on built Ethos the organized conception of
form (which are considered to be more the Ought.
secondary or modifying), there is a whole World View the way people
range of socio-cultural factors primary characteristically look out upon the
forces a vision of the ideal life (p47). world.
National Character the personality
Religion type of a people, the kind of human
being which, generally occurs in this
Family Structure society (p48)

Criticality
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

RELIGION

The image of the cosmos in built form

The Dogon (p50) the whole landscape


reflects the cosmic order. Villages are
laid out in the way parts of the body lie
with respect to each other. Balinese
housing compounds have similar
features.

Solskifts in the Baltic (p51) reproduce the


daily path of the sun in the layout of their
villages.

Feng Shui as shown in the previous


lecture

Symbolic space inside the house


HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

FAMILY STRUCTURE

Monogamy husband still


separated from wife and children

Polygamy where the man has no


real house and visits his wives,
each of whom has her own house.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

Family structure
and the centre.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

CRITICALITY
Criticality eg. in flight, a
There are many factors influencing the rocket has higher criticality
form of the house. The more forceful the
physical constraints, and the more than an airplane because it is
limited the technology and command of more severely constrained by
means, the less are nonmaterial aspects
able to act. But they never cease to
technical requirements.
operate. There is a scale or set of scales Slower airplanes have more
that we could use here. A climatic scale freedom in design (lower
ranging from very severe to very benign,
an economic scale from bare subsistence criticality) than do jets. A
to affluence, a technological scale from pedestrian path has more
the barest to the most sophisticated,
materials from a single local material to freedom than an expressway.
unlimited choice. Even where the The degree of choice
constraints are the most severe, cultural
factors are still operating.
depends on the value system.
The degree of freedom in choice can be
understood through the concept of
criticality.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

BASIC NEEDS
The concept of basic needs is brought into
question since most basic needs involve
value judgments and therefore choice.
Those choices are based on peoples
attitudes towards their environment.

There are a number of factors that affect


built form:

Some basic needs


Family
Position of women
Privacy
Social intercourse
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

Some Basic Needs

look at breathing as a basic need. This will have


an effect on house form. The need for fresh air or
the acceptance of smells (such as cooking) will
alter house form. The Eskimo accepts very high
smell concentrations, and the smell of the toilet is
accepted in the traditional Japanese house. In
some cultures smoke is sacred and therefore
encouraged in the house.
Even the concept of comfort seems highly variable.
The basic need of eating will vary in its rituals
from culture to culture and necessarily affect house
form.
Sitting (a basic need?) will affect house form too
depending on how one sits. On the floor, on a
chair, a mat? If you sit on a chair, this will affect
where and how you place openings.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

FAMILY

family structure will have a profound affect on house form. Extended


family/nuclear family. The choice of communal living (eg the Iroquois longhouse)
or separate living (the Western mingles apt).

Polygamy or monogamy, of course, will affect form.


HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

POSITION OF WOMEN

where women are cloistered in the house, the


need for privacy will increase, thus changing
the house form.

In Egypt men and women are always separated,


rich people having separate rooms and poor
ones using different corners of their house.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

Privacy As stated above privacy is partly affected by the


position of women. In some cultures privacy is achieved
through social convention. The place of the individual in
society may decide whether a communal house is left open
and unsubdivided or is divided. This relates to the separation
of domains. In India, Iran and Latin American buildings
traditionally face inwards. In Anglo-American houses they
face outwards.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

Privacy (p66) inward


facing and little concern for
what happens on the street
(is this an example of the
commons?). In traditional
settlements, however, the
narrow, shady streets
become full of life as they
serve some social
functions. Streets in the
Punjab, for example, link
the three elements of the
village house, temple,
and bazaar. Widenings in
the streets provide room for
a small tree or a well,
around which a storyteller
or small market will set up
shop and help the street
serve a social function.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

The transition between street and private domain of the house becomes very important in
this case. (SEE JACOBS ON THIS)

Western architects often think of privacy as a basic need, but it is a complex and varied
phenomenon that defies easy solutions. (FIG 2)
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

SOCIAL
INTERCOURSE
the concern is where to meet
whether in the house, the cafe,
the bath, the street, the well.
All of these will affect the form
of the house. In many cultures
meeting in the house is not
done. Socializing takes place
elsewhere. This means that the
house cannot be seen in
isolation from the settlement.
Because the living pattern
always extends beyond the
house to some degree, the form
of the house is affected by the
extent to which one lives in it
and the range of activities that
take place in it.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

RELATION OF HOUSE AND SETTLEMENT


Dispersed and concentrated settlements.

Two traditions of concentrated settlements:


the whole settlement has been considered as the setting for life. The
dwelling is a more private enclosed part of that. E.g. the Latin,
Mediterranean village, vernacular
The dwelling is the total setting for life and the settlement is the connective
tissue and secondary in nature. E.g. the Anglo-American city, high style

This distinction between types may be due partly to written or unwritten


laws which limit the behavior patterns in the different domains public or
private by prohibiting some and allowing others. This is an expression of
world view and other attitudes, and is one way in which a culture is linked to
the way people use space. In the same way the distinction may be due partly
to the effect of religion on social attitudes and family, and hence on the
separation of domains. (p70)

How is the street viewed in different cultures? (Japan, p73)


HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

SETTLEMENTS AND SITING


The initial choice of a site for settlements will be based on many factors.
Among them are the physical factors access to food or water, exposure to
wind, defensive potential, land for agriculture, transportation potential, trade
potential. Some of these are social factors which may also include family or
clan structure and grouping.

How do we understand this relationship of man to his surroundings?

Religious and cosmological


Symbiotic
Exploitative (see page 75)

In the first two there is a personal relationship established an I-Thou


relationship. Nature is to be worked with. In the third there is an I-It
relationship where nature is worked on.

In the first two man is in nature. There is no difference between the two. The
whole landscape is sacred as is the house in it.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

CONSTANCY AND CHANGE


If we place too much importance on culturally linked aspects of form, form would become
meaningless outside the culture. Yet we know this is not true. Some things will change
with a change in culture, some things will remain constant. In physiology man has changed
little. Biological responses to the environment are essentially unchanged. Are perception
and behavior culturally linked or inborn (physiological) and unchanging? Both?
The need for sensory stimulation and satisfaction visual and social complexity in the
environment seems constant for both man and animals (79)

The need for security may be constant but how that is expressed may vary greatly. (This
notion takes on greater importance when we look at Defensible Space)

Symbols vary but the need for communication is constant.

The territorial instinct the need for identity and place is constant. How we define
territory and the ideal environment will vary. What elements are changeable and which are
constant will have a profound effect on the form of both the dwelling and the city.
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

Distinctions are made between different types of space: physical, economic, social, etc.

Architects make a distinction between technological space (bathrooms, services spaces)


and symbolic spaces (living areas). The former will change according to changes in
equipment. The latter will tend to remain more constant (is this really true? Perhaps, but
only in the sense that it is space defined by furnishings which in themselves will change
form culture to culture rather than equipment specifications).

It is through the latter spaces that we define ethnic domains. So, for example, the
sanctity of the threshold remains constant from culture to culture but how that is
identified and defined will vary considerably. (FIG 3.15, p.80)
HOUSE FORM & CULTURE Environmental Psychology ARC 359

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