Regional Science and Technology Fund
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Esta é uma presença online oficial do Governo dos Açores
Objectives
The research aims to reflect on the contribution of the architectural narrative to contemporary intervention practices in classified landscapes, namely the possibility of operating, reconfiguring and mediating them without coming into conflict. Taking the Pico Island Vineyard Landscape as its object and as case studies 10 rural settlements that constitute ‘the most significant examples of traditional architecture, landscape construction, ways of life, uses and traditions of its inhabitants’, the aim is to study the forms in their qualitative and not just quantitative component, purifying them to their essence, structure, logics and connotations, as well as the qualities that give them consistency and coherence. They will be analysed at 3 levels:
On the assumption that this research is primarily a contribution to architecture practice, the aim is to build a methodological tool with a double general objective: to know in order to operate (to detect the elementary forms in order to fix the matrix permanences and transform the variables) and to know in order to participate (to question the regulatory framework resulting from the UNESCO classification and propose a sustained and well-founded revision). This project tool has the following specific objectives:
Results & Impact
It is expected that the research will contribute to the operationalization of this cultural landscape and that it will constitute a useful project methodology tool, which, instead of crystallizing and musealizing the constructions, allows intervention in a contextualized and integrated way. Above all, it encourages reflection on the balance between permanence and transformation in the Pico Island Vineyard Landscape, which is essential for its revitalization, under penalty of converting it into a place of memory, devoid of dynamics, interaction and life. At the same time, promote a dialogue about architectural practice, in contemporary interventions in classified landscapes, notably, the possibility of operating, reconfiguring and mediating them, without necessarily coming into conflict. A combination that reinforces the idea that a territory capable of preserving its landscape, updating it in an intelligent and coherent way, is more likely to keep it active and, therefore, transmit it to future generations.