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Adaptive Reuse: A critical Review

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-04-04, 17:00 authored by Francesca Lanz, John Pendlebury

Buildings have always been reused for both pragmatic and symbolic reasons. However, out of the turbulence of the mid-twentieth century, stimulated by reactions against modern ‘clean-sweep’ planning, the burgeoning conservation movement, and emergent architectural praxis, a new field of policy and practice emerged in the 1970s, which came to be termed adaptive reuse. The last decade or so has seen a flourishing of interest in adaptive reuse both on the ground and in scholarship. Today, the practice is witnessed across the architectural spectrum, from ‘starchitects’ to the most modest community-generated projects. Adaptive reuse is ideologically supported through heritage and carbon reduction campaigning and is evident in policy and education.In this paper, we critically review the rise of adaptive reuse scholarship and the emergent epistemology it represents, with a focus on the past 20 years and more recent monographs in the field. What we discern in these texts is a recent shift in the debate toward a more theoretical approach to the subject. While the debate on adaptive reuse continuously developed from the 1970s, it did so mostly in continuity, with a focus on mapping and depicting an architectural phenomenon and identifying tools and strategies to instruct practitioners and designers. However, more recent works on adaptive reuse are increasingly seeking to go beyond a pragmatic and practice-focused approach and to investigate adaptive reuse in a more conceptual way. In doing so, they might open up the debate to new disciplinary contributions beyond the domain of architecture and design. This paper aims to outline and contribute to this shift.

History

School affiliated with

  • University of Lincoln (Historic Research Outputs)

Publication Title

The Journal of Architecture

Volume

27

Issue

2-3

Pages/Article Number

441-462

Publisher

Routledge

ISSN

1360-2365

eISSN

1466-4410

Date Submitted

2022-07-04

Date Accepted

2022-04-08

Date of First Publication

2022-01-01

Date of Final Publication

2022-09-20

Open Access Status

  • Open Access

Date Document First Uploaded

2022-07-04

ePrints ID

50029

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    University of Lincoln (Research Outputs)

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