To read this content please select one of the options below:

Between Tradition and Modernity: Determining Spatial Systems of Privacy in the Domestic Architecture of Contemporary Iraq

Ali Al-Thahab (phd. researcher, School of Architecture and the Built Environment, University of Wolverhampton)
Sabah Mushatat (Director of Studies, School of Architecture and the Built Environment, University of Wolverhampton)
Mohammed Gamal Abdelmonem (Lecturer in Architecture School of Planning, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Queens' University Belfast)

Open House International

ISSN: 0168-2601

Article publication date: 1 March 2016

37

Abstract

The notion of privacy represents a central criterion for both indoor and outdoor social spaces in most traditional Arab settlements. This paper investigates privacy and everyday life as determinants of the physical properties and patterns of the built and urban fabric and will study their impact on traditional settlements and architecture of the home in the contemporary Iraqi city. It illustrates the relationship between socio-cultural aspects of public and private realms using the notion of the social sphere as an investigative tool of the concept of social space in Iraqi houses and local communities (Mahalla). This paper reports that in spite of the impact of other factors in articulating built forms, privacy embodies the primary role under the effects of Islamic rules, principles and culture. The crucial problem is the underestimation of traditional inherited values through opening social spaces to the outside that giving unlimited accesses to the indoor social environment creating many problems with regard to privacy and communal social integration.

Keywords

Citation

Al-Thahab, A., Mushatat, S. and Abdelmonem, M.G. (2016), "Between Tradition and Modernity: Determining Spatial Systems of Privacy in the Domestic Architecture of Contemporary Iraq", Open House International, Vol. 41 No. 1, pp. 74-81. https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-01-2016-B0010

Publisher

:

Open House International

Copyright © 2016 Open House International

Related articles