The Spatial Culture of Traditional and Contemporary Housing in Qatar. A Comparative Analysis based on Space Syntax
Date
2019-01Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Residential architecture is the product of various influential factors that 
directly relate to the needs and wants of the occupants, subjecting residential 
architecture to transformation on an urban scale. In the context of the State of Qatar, 
the forces of globalization have affected socio-cultural factors, and this change is 
reflected in the spatial form of Qatari houses during rapid urbanization over the 
previous decades. The contemporary construction of housing tends to reflect the 
requirements of a global market instead of local architectural identity. Thus, a 
comparative assessment is established to contemplate the housing transformation in 
Qatar over the history of its urban development. A comparative investigation of 
spatial form in traditional and contemporary Qatari houses can provide useful insights 
into the embedded socio-cultural patterns influencing the development of housing in 
Qatar ever since the discovery of oil in the 1930s-50s. This research study uses space 
syntax analysis, supported by other simulation and visualization techniques, to 
examine these socio-cultural patterns in a selected sample of traditional and 
contemporary Qatari houses. Despite changes over time and across different eras, the 
study reveals that specific factors such as (1) privacy, (2) gender segregation and (3) 
hospitality tend to determine the spatial form of both vernacular and modern models 
of Qatari housing. The study concludes that these findings can help positively 
contribute towards the development of a distinctive architectural identity based on social sustainability and tradition for the urban regeneration of the built environment. 
Such efforts are directed toward fulfilling the future urban strategies defined by Qatar 
National Vision 2030 and Qatar National Development Framework that seek to guide 
the development process of the country to a sustainable path for achieving a balanced 
growth model between locality and globalization.
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/12881Collections
- Urban Planning and Design [44 items ]


