(De)Linking with the Past through Memorials

Author:

Zaninović Tamara1ORCID,Omićević Nerma2ORCID,Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci Bojana1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urban Planning, Spatial Planning and Landscape Architecture, Faculty of Architecture, University of Zagreb, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia

2. Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences, International University of Sarajevo, 71210 Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Abstract

Numerous examples of urban, architectural, and landscape projects indicate global and continuous interest in memorial design without a comparative study of their contextual similarities and differences. There is no clear terminological and conceptual framework of how memorials are designed nor if they are perceived as diverse types of public places. This research combines multiple results of extensive and on-going research on memorials as places for people to reconnect with past events, circumstances, or persons, with the aim of building a theoretical and conceptual framework within the domain of architectural and urban design. The main question is how the design of memorials achieves remembrance as well as healing of both places and communities through conciliation, mediation, forgetting, learning, and planning new concepts for future urban development. The term (de)linking with the past is proposed for describing the importance of achieving these various memorial functions. The resulting dualistic conceptual framework of memorials includes eleven design principles based on models and methods of spatial interventions which can enable communities to move forward from traumatic events and negative emotions towards building a basis for a better future by learning from the past.

Funder

University of Zagreb through institutional research funding of Urbanscape Emanation project

Croatian Scientific Foundation through Heritage Urbanism research project

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Marketing,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Strategy and Management,Drug Discovery,Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacology

Reference64 articles.

1. Fernández-Galiano, L. (2017). Memorials. Arquit. Viva, 195, Available online: https://arquitecturaviva.com/articles/memorials.

2. Obad Šćitaroci, M., Bojanić Obad Šćitaroci, B., Krajnik, D., Huić, I., Mrđa, A., and Rukavina, M. (2015, January 22–23). Memorials as Cultural Landscapes. Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference Cultural Heritage—Possibilities for Spatial and Economic Development, Zagreb, Croatia.

3. Stevens, Q., and Franck, K.A. (2016). Memorials as Spaces of Engagement: Design, Use and Meaning, Routledge.

4. Young, J.E. (2016). The Stages of Memory: Reflections on Memorial Art, Loss, and the Spaces, University of Massachusetts Press.

5. Doss, E. (2012). Memorial Mania: Public Feeling in America, The University of Chicago Press.

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