Affiliation:
1. School of Design and Architecture, Zhejiang University of Technology, 288 Liuhe Road, Hangzhou 310023, China
Abstract
Ancient temple heritage space is a subcategory of integrated spaces with profound religious architecture, culture, and landscape. The temporal and spatial characteristics, spatial layouts, and functionalities of ancient temples are gradually transformed during different periods in their development. However, quantitative topological estimation tools, e.g., space syntax and detailed digital spatial models, have seldom been adopted in related studies on ancient temples. Daming Temple is a typical representative of the revitalization of Buddhism monastic building heritage in China. This research studies the spaces of Daming Temple, Yangzhou City, in three different periods and explores its spatio–temporal characteristics based on two space syntax models, i.e., the angle segment analysis (ASA) model and the visibility map analysis (VGA) model. By multi-step quantitative estimation, changes in the mean depth (MD), mean connectivity, and intelligibility of the temple have been observed. The global spatial structure is thoroughly revealed, which indicates the changes in the ‘temple-residence-garden’ inter-relationship. It is indicated that dynamic spatio–temporal characteristics of the temple have been undergoing changes chronically. Some phenomena are found to be effective in offering reasonable explanations for these changes, i.e., the changes in relationships among spaces, visitors’ pathfinding difficulties, and spatial design techniques. It also found that there are certain correlations between temporal–spatial changes and spatial conservation strategies for building heritages. The case study can provide some valuable references for the conservation, reactivation, and redesign of related historical and cultural building heritage in East Asia.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Ministry of Education Humanities and Social Sciences Research Planning Fund
Subject
Building and Construction,Civil and Structural Engineering,Architecture
Reference42 articles.
1. Turner, T. (2010). Asian Gardens: History, Beliefs and Design, Routledge.
2. The Cognitive Mechanisms and Characteristics of Isomorphic Synesthesia of Chinese Classical Garden;Wang;Chin. Landsc. Archit.,1999
3. Li, X., Xia, B., Lusk, A., Liu, X., and Lu, N. (2019). The Humanmade Paradise: Exploring the perceived dimensions and their associations with aesthetic pleasure for Liu Yuan, a Chinese classical garden. Sustainability, 11.
4. Zheng, Y., Wei, W., Zhang, L., and Ying, T. (2022). Tourist Gaze at Chinese Classical Gardens: The Embodiment of Aesthetics (Yijing) in Tourism. J. Hosp. Tour. Res.
5. Zhang, T., and Lian, Z. (2021). Research on the Distribution and Scale Evolution of Suzhou Gardens under the Urbanization Process from the Tang to the Qing Dynasty. Land, 10.
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献