K aterina Inglezaki
Licensed architect GR (ID: 148998)
A
rchitect/Urbanist MSc, Dipl. Arch.Eng.
Phone number: (+31) 627477723
Address: Goudsesingel 508, 3011KR, Rotterdam
Email: katerinaiglezaki@gmail.com
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/katerina-iglezaki
Issuu: www.issuu.com/in/katerina_iglezaki
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/terr.aforms/
Education
1st September 2020- 20th June 2022
MSc Architecture, Urbanism and Building Sciences (track Urbanism) Department of Urbanism, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology
1st September 2013- 12th July 2019
Master’s (integrated)/ Diploma Architectural Engineering (MArch, Dipl. Arch. Eng.)
Department of Architectural Engineering, Democritus University of Thrace, Greece
Work experience
12th April 2021- 31st July 2021
Atlas of Rotterdam Common Space joint research (internship)
Studio for New Realities, Rotterdam, NL
25th February 2020- 12th August 2020
Technical architect/ Interior architect
Enalia Group- Eleni Charmanta & Co, Thessaloniki, GR
2nd December 2019- 31st January 2020
Technical architect/ Documentation and restoration Artech Consulting engineers, Thessaloniki, GR
June 2018- June 2019
Product and graphic designer
Woodream.gr, Xanthi, GR
Publications/Exhibitions
Inglezaki K. (in press), Agroecologies for the Stateless, ATLANTIS | Magazine for Urbanism and Landscape
Architecture TU Delft
Inglezaki K., Micha A., 1st Interdisciplanry Meeting “Memory and Oblivion in Public Space”- Conference proceedings, Redevelopment of the D. Gounari street axis and design of places of cultural interest in Navarino Square, August 2019
SOS Waterfront Climate Change, Urban design workshop results exhibition in collaboration with the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and the Municipality of Kalamaria
Conferences/Workshops/Competitions
Inglezaki K., Micha A., Research thesis-Urban Rooms: Approaching the new urbanism, archetype.gr, April 2019, https://www.archetype.gr/blog/arthro/domatia-tis-polis-proseggizontas-ti-nea-astikotita Floating Districts Winter studio, Amsterdam 16-20/01/23, AMS Institute, 3XN Architects, TU Delft, Wageningen University, MIT.
SOS Waterfront Climate Change, Urban Design Workshop, Thessaloniki, 14-25/10/2019, School of Architecture AUTH, Gdansk University of Technology, Lusófona ECATI.
1st Interdisciplinary Meeting “Memory and Oblivion in Public Space”, Cities in Balance, Lefkas, 23-26 August 2019, Speaker - Diploma thesis presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nz10tYGBNAQ&t=1s
“Redesign of the Base of the Statue of T. Kolokotronis in Tripoli, Greece.” Participation in the Pan-Hellenic Open Student Architectural Idea Competition of the Municipality of Tripoli, 2017.
“Creating green spaces in cities” Participation in the Pan-Hellenic Open Student Architectural Idea Contest for viable green spaces of WWF Hellas, 2017.
Ecoweek Thessaloniki 2016, Placemaking in one planet, International Conference & Sustainable Design Workshops Thessaloniki 14-20/11 2016.
“Scanning the past”- 3rd International digital documentation workshop, Architectural School of Edirne, Turkey 8-13/06/2015.
“History of Construction Structures”- 2nd National Conference, Xanthi 5-7/12/2014.
Design and technical skills Languages
QGIS
ArcGIS
2D design
Autodesk AutoCAD
Graphic design/Image editing
Adobe Illustrator
Adobe Photoshop
Adobe InDesign
3D modelling
Sketchup
Rhinoceros 3D
Revit
3Ds Max
V-Ray
Lumion
Other
Policy/Literature review
Statistical analysis
Office
Microsoft Word
Microsoft Excel
Microsoft Powerpoint
Spatial modelling and Analysis
Urban/Landscape
Landuse/Landcover
Spatial/Landscape
Ecological Morphology
Density/Intensity
Network analysis
Mobility network
Surface hydrographic network
Hydrography/Hydrology
Flood risk exposure
IELTS Academic, Overall band score 8.0
Volunteering
60th Thessaloniki International Film Festival 2019
Open House Thessaloniki 2015
TEDx Thessaloniki 2015
B1 level
B1 level
Delftse Methode, TU Delft
One semester completed
Native language
Other activities
Board member of POLIS, student association for Urbanism & Landscape Architecture of the Faculty of Architecture TU Delft, 2021-2022
Member of the Diversity Office of the Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, 2021
Utrecht Barcode
Research pitch for a junior researcher position at TU Delft for the New European Bauhaus project
Institution
Department of Urbanism, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
Year 2022
Selection commitee
Prof. Dr Arjan van Timmeren
Dr Alexander Wandl
Dr Verena Balz
Location:
Utrecht, Netherlands
Individual work
1 3 2 4
In the New European Bauhaus(NEB) Project 16 partners will join forces to make the transition to climate-neutral cities inclusive, beautiful and sustainable - for and with all stakeholders. The project will demonstrate how Territorial Transformation Plans can be operationalised with NEB principles to accelerate the journey towards climate neutrality.
The TU Team works closely together with the Municipality of Utrecht. The Dutch case aims to develop the Utrecht -Barcode, a widely appraised planning instrument, further by integrating qualitative and participatory aspects.
How much is Utrecht consuming?
How to use this handbook
This handbook is a reference guide for anyone with an interest in the future of development of the city of Utrecht. This publication outlines a future vision for Utrecht in 2040, setting ambitions and goals in place. The vision is elaborated in a framework indicating the thematic agendas of the vision and the methodology of the research. The framework is then supported by an action plan in which strategic locations in the city are selected where test projects can be further developed. Finally, the handbook ends with a municipal policy package that enables Utrecht’s citizens to actively contribute to the future of their city.
The complete set of projects will enable a future-proof Utrecht. Let’s start today!
Land:
Population:
Land:
Population:
Land:
Population:
Land:
Population:
Population: 474.000 (+ 115,000)
Urban area: ? km2
Mobility: ? km2
Water: ? km2
Green: ? km2
Energy: ? km2
Utrecht aspires to be a healthy city of the future. To do so, we must first understand the scale of the current pressing issues and evaluate Utrecht in 2040. What will it look like if the current growth model remains unchanged?
Population is expected to grow by 31.9% reaching 474.000 inhabitants, increasing the demands for energy, water and dietary consumption. It seems impossible to address all these crises with one plan or strategy. However if we look at the underlying patterns and behavior, we might discover system failures that underlie these crises and that can be repaired or bent.
D-CENT (Decentralized Citizen Engagement Technologies) brings together citizen-led organizations that have transformed democracy helping them in developing the next generation of open source, distributed, and privacy-aware tools for direct democracy and economic empowerment. Utrecht RSU 2040 proposes a design mechanism to instigate a new form of civil publicness. This initiative couples the physical and digital frameworks to ensure an active afterlife beyond the involvement of the spatial designer.
Agroecologies for the Stateless
Master’s thesis for the Master of Science (MSc) in Architecture, Urbanism and Building Sciences (track: Urbanism)
Institution
Department of Urbanism, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
Academic year
2021-2022
Supervisors
Nikos Katsikis
Tenure Tracker Assistant Professor Urban Design
Diego Andres Sepulveda Carmona
Assistant Professor Spatial Planning and Strategy
Location:
Murcia, Spain
Individual work
Institutional repository
Inglezaki A.C. (2022), Agroecologies for the Stateless: the case of Murcia, Spain, Master’s thesis, TU Delft educational repository:
https://repository.tudelft.nl/islandora/object/uuid:efcd2d59-499e-45a2-961d-a2a5ec132747?collection=education
Murcia, one of Spain’s autonomous communities, is located in south-eastern Spain. The region is a gigantic irrigation machine operated by farmers, cooperatives, and increasingly foreign-owned multinationals or large supermarkets that either cultivate their own land or lease from smaller plot owners. It comprises a sector that has managed to make south Spain the “orchard of Europe” with a profit margin of more than 900 million euros in the Segura river basin and over 100,000 direct jobs associated. The industry is dependent on the immense engineering works of the Tajo-Segura transfer, a major infrastructure that transports water from the North to the South.
Water is considered the most valuable resource in the region. There is a tremendous system of exploitation underneath the ground, formed by wells, pipes, and desalination plants, many of which are neither authorized nor monitored. This setting is damaging the Mar Menor lagoon, the largest saline lagoon in Europe, and its natural ecosystems; groundwater is overexploited and polluted with nitrates, despite the fact that European regulations mandate its protection.
This intensive system of production is also dependent on an increasing migrant workforce that seeks a better level of liveability in the European context. The distribution of immigrants in the territory is unequal and is conditioned by the structure of the labor market and the primary sources of demand for immigrant labor. The poor conditions of habitability, overcrowding, and lack of privacy have obvious negative repercussions for immigrant communities. Tensions in daily
Monitoring stations
Hydrographic network
Sub-catchments of river basin
Zones vulnerable to nitrates
Network of water retention ponds to improve connectivity and provide a range of ecosystem services
Enhancing dune dynamics in Dunas de la Llana
Preserving the salt marsh of San Pedro del Pinatar
Creating a vegetated foreshore connected to the urban fabric
Creating riparian zones for the stream of Rambla del Albujón
Restoring seagrass meadows Renaturalization of the Marina del Carmolí wetland
The Quaternary aquifer is highly polluted by fertilizer nitrates which is a great threat to water masses since it literally fertilizes phytoplankton in such huge quantities that it no longer allows sunlight to shine through water. As a result, the water turns green as happened in the Mar Menor in 2016 and the seagrass beds, unable to photosynthesize, die, a process known as eutrophication.
The hydrogeological functioning of the aquifers that make up the Campo de Cartagena aquifer is complex due to its geometry and high degree of anthropization. The sedimentary fill of the aquifer is mainly composed of detrital sediments (marl) with intercalations of highly conductive material (limestones, sandstones and conglomerates), which were deposited in the period between the Tortonian and the Quaternary. Years of drought led the CHS to authorize the extraction of brackish water, its desalination and use for irrigation in 1994.
Nitrogen excess*
Vegetables 45%
Citrus trees Non-Citrus fruit trees 28% 28%
*Data from Universitat Polytecnica de Valencia.
Since farming is a primary economic activity in the entirety of the region of Murcia and there is already a great investment interest in the land, the strategies presented here are working in line with this fact, attempting to restructure the kinds of cultivation and export as a means to moderate the existing intensive models and to pay respect to the natural systems they are based on.
The choice of strategic locations for new settlement insertions has been made based on existing urbanization patterns and their transportation connections. The logic of the strategy aims at creating semi-autonomous settlements in close connection to existing urban areas so as to accomplish the social integration of the migrant communities and reverse the current segregated status quo.
One of the fundamental goals of the project is to transform the landscape into a more resilient one, not only in ecological terms but also in productive terms. The territory will be altered according to the flood and drought resilience of the crops and a new labour balance has to be achieved. An equal balance can definitely not happen so some peaks will inevetably still happen in summer.
Territorial vision
Phasing and actors involved
are initiated.
keep satisfied
European Union agricultural initiatives
Valencia Polytechnic University
WWF Spain
Polytechnic University of Cartagena ANSE (Association of Naturalists of the Southeast)
migrant agricultural workers
empower
INTEREST
Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Environment
national government Segura Hydrological Confederation
Ministry of Labor and Social Economy
regional government fruit and vegetable wholesalers commercialization
city governments
biomass engineering tech companies
residents of agricultural areas/ farmers
decision makers
BiodivERsA (European Biodiversity Partnership)
seasonal tourists
engage/convince inform
Theories of SustainabilityPositions of care
Focus intensives weeks 1.5-1.6
Graduation Exploration
Institution
Department of Urbanism, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
Academic year
2021-2022
Tutors
Taneha Cuzniecow Bacchin Raquel Hädrich Silva
Location:
Lesvos, Greece
Individual work
Over a first attempt of critical mapping, one can clearly observe the size of the issue in the perimeter of the Mediterranean, with a growing number of deaths and missing people every year. The patterns of relocation are of special interest in order to get an understanding of the political situation. Greece and Italy function as the main gateways of human flows via Turkey or via the sea. Thousands of people are being guided by smugglers under terrible conditions to reach the land, while the process of admission in the European context is chaotic and dubious, with FRONTEX, the European Border and Coast Guard Agency, often being accused for its questionable actions. Filing for an asylum is an uphill struggle since in most cases there is no access to internet connection or legal aid and the waiting time leaves individuals in a state of limbo for months, even years. Hundreds of Non Profit Organizations are operating only on paper while draining EU grants. Focusing on the case of Greece as a more familiar setting for me, it is worthy mentioning the xenophobia rhetoric that has been steadily building over the last years. Politicians are taking advantage of the small host communities in the country’s periphery, whose economy and social tissue can hardly cope with such a crisis for their own benefit. The deepest concern on a national level is currently the protection of the borders and the closure of the refugee settlements. New plans for gated communities with hightech surveillance are on the way, erasing any sense of individuality and quality of life.
In this context of loss and separation, the protocol of care aims at restoring the values of human dignity and provision of one’s fundamental needs. Instead of multiplying models of multi-million euro closed facilities outside the urban fabric where there is no social input it is essential to envision a new model of care, one that respects and invests in human life.
Fig.18. Mapping the territories of power in Eastern Greece.
The case of Lesvos, Greece
Lesvos, the biggest island of the North Aegean Region has been the main gateway that refugees have been using to reach Europe from Turkey. Its capital, Mytilene, with a population of 38.000 people, has been meeting the burden of accomodating thousands of refugees since the latest humanitarian crisis of 2015 started.
Theories of Sustainability-Positions of Care
Health aid
Connectedness to the outside
Goals
Life rescue
Security/dignity
Integration and social cohesion
Phasing
Immediate
Medium-term
Long-term
Action
Adapt the former prison of Mytilene in the outskirts of the city into a permaculture farm that will function as a farm-to-table restaurant for vulnerable groups.
Maasvlakte
The Studio essentials course examines the phenomenon of urbanization (of sea/ land). This question requires a fundamental shift in perspective: urbanization can no longer be understood as a spatially bounded phenomenon; it must instead be examined as a comprehensive and extended process.
Second, the urban should no longer be regarded as a specific form or type of settlement space; it must instead be analysed as a process - a process that increasingly moulds more land and sea and repeatedly overwrites them.
And third, urbanization should not be taken as a one-dimensional phenomenon, but rather as a multiayered one that manifests itself on diverse levels. Urbanization includes the material structures and practices of the production of urban space as well as the various regulations of the use and transformation of the territtory and the modalities of everyday interactions.
We sought instead to find ways of mapping that are capable of portraying the multidimensional nature and plural determination of urban territories, using Maasvlakte as a case study of a massive man-made industrial territory.
Studio essentials intensive course
Graduation orientation Q5 phase
Institution
Department of Urbanism, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
Academic year
2021-2022
Tutors
Taneha Cuzniecow Bacchin
Luisa Calabrese
Nikos Katsikis
Diego Sepulveda Carmona
Location: Maasvlakte, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Individual work
Atlas of Rotterdam Common Space
Public Space as Common Space
A comparative research between Rotterdam and Milan
Internship for the course Design in Research, Research in Design of the Q4 Master of Science (MSc) in Architecture, Urbanism and Building Sciences
Office
Studio for New Realities, Rotterdam, NL
De Kroon: K24
Schiemond 20 3024 EE Rotterdam
Nederland
www.newrealities.eu studio@newrealities.eu
In collaboration with: Quinzii Terna Architecture, Milan
Year 2021
SFNR team
Jeroen Zuidgeest
Francesca Rizzetto
Hugo Lopez Silva
QTA team
Chiara Quinzii
Diego Terna
Francesca Robustelli
Fabio Samele
Quinzii Terna ArchitectureStudio for New Realities
Cities are perpetually dealing with their shortcomings in socioeconomic and demographic development, mobility, production and social cohesion. These urgencies are (finally) recognised as such at specific moments in time. This comparative research investigates the potential of the city’s public space to become a true “common space”: social places that maximise quality of life and strengthen a sense of belonging.
The document includes an analysis of the current state of public space in Rotterdam and Milan, and presents a collection of thoughts for possible nextstep interventions on various scales and layers. In doing so, it seeks to instigate a mind-shift towards a usage-driven reconsideration of these crucial shared spaces in our cities. The ultimate aim is to trigger the transformation of transit spaces towards usage spaces that accommodate the local community.
The research presented here builds on a study that QTA started in 2019 (as part of the Urban Factor call by Triennale di Milano and Comune di Milano), which investigated the city of Milan deeply, focusing specifically on the elements that compose its public places and reconstructing the essence of Milanese public space. This research is a “Spinoff”, where we observe the cases of Milan and Rotterdam to compare and learn, finding similarities and differences, as part of a general reflections on Public Space of cities around the world. The result is a comparative - not comprehensiveatlas of the common spaces in both cities - highlighting their qualities, their problems and potentials and their characters. It offers reflections on the usage quality of their public space at a unique moment in time.
*all images are courtesy of Studio for New Realities
Rotterdamse canals are not the same as those in Amsterdam. They cannot be navigated beside only one connection called ‘The Blauwe Verbinding’. It is a special water connection between the Zuiderpark in Rotterdam, the Buijtenland van Rhoon and the Zuidpolder in Barendrecht. It is a recreational navigable route that also provides clean water in the area but it also functions as a water storage facility, establishing an ecological connection between the various green areas. The connection runs from the Zuiderpark, the Zuidelijk Randpark, the Buijtenland to the Zuidpolder. The Zuidelijk Randpark has been renovated considerably. This offers opportunities for holidaymakers from Rotterdam South as well as Carnisselande and Portland.
During this research we worked with a multi-layered strategy leading to suggested interventions at the micro, meso and macro levels: relating to the street, the neighbourhood, and the city as a whole. The series of action scale interventions proposed in the following pages can be considered a collection of thoughts, and they are built around four key components: gathering space, mobility space, green space and blue space. For each of these categories a series of interventions is drawn, from extra small to extra large – together, they give new shape and meaning to the public space of the city.
The research was carried out mainly using open data from the Municipalities of Milan and Rotterdam (and their related agencies and departments). The maps were created using GIS, as the main tool used. The extracted information was further developed in image editing softwares. Some of the maps are calculated using ‘Open Route Service’ to obtain usergenerated free geographic data directly from ‘Open Street Map’. It then builds, also with the use of ‘Travel Time API’, isochronous to determine which area objects can be reached in given times or distances.
The conclusions of this research were presented during an international event in Milan, held in the Palazzo dell’Arte, Triennale Milano.
Heathscapes Meating in the middle
The future poses a major problem of feeding 9 billion people by 2050, while the current system of agriculture in itself is unsustainable and demands resources which exceed the planetary boundaries. Further continuing this trend of exploitation and destruction of ecology will only worsen the planetary stresses the Anthropocene has established. Hence emerges the urgent necessity to reorganize and reinvent our current food system towards a sustainable and circular one to sustain life on our planet.
The primary goal of this project is to achieve sustainability in the food sector, thereby achieving circularity and food security. The Netherlands has an extraordinary position in the global market and is globally leading in agricultural research, technology and innovation. Therefore it could prove to be fruitful to develop a regional sustainable agricultural model that could become a role model for sustainable agriculture globally. The vision is to reduce the spatial impact of our food system while discontinuing the destruction of new habitats. To achieve this, a healthy diet must be embraced, which not only proves to significantly improve our health but also facilitate a transition towards a healthier planet.
Research & Design studio
Spatial Strategies for the Global Metropolis
Institution
Department of Urbanism, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
Academic year
2020-2021
Supervisors
Remon Rooij
Nikos Katsikis
Daniele Cannatella
Group work
Collaborators:
Oviya Elango
Boris Bakker
Lilly Petter
Yoran Erami
Location:
Province South Holland
Production typologies
High yield per hectare of food that is important for the diet
Current management threatens biodiversity
By evaluating the spatial, environmental and health impacts of the current model, the negative externalities at each stage of the food sector are investigated. The diversification of the crops to be grown within South Holland is crucial in order to facilitate the transition from a food exporter to a self-sufficient region with respect to the food sector. To encourage more sustainable food production and enhance the relationship between people and their food production, it is invaluable to invest more power in the producers.
Produces popular foods Highly productive in producing valuable products
Makes NL biggest flower exporter in the world
High production rate and has shorter consumption routes
Has a large footprint of land use and carbon & nitrogen emissions per product
Big energy demand and produces green house and nitrogen emissions
Causes soil pollution while not contributing to nutrition
Has a big energy demand and is connected to high initial investments
Our current diet already reaches beyond the planetary boundaries and will continue to do so in the years to come if we are not willing to change our ways of consuming.
At the moment we, as South Holland, need approximately three times the size of our province to maintain our diet. When implementing the Lancet diet, we will only need the space of one South Holland and even less than the vegetar-
ian diet, while also staying within the planetary boundaries. Considering the positive effects despite the relatively small change in consumption behaviour, the Lancet diet proves to be a very realistic and feasible solution.
Peeling off the surface Sustainable urban design in the TU Delft campus area
Research & Design studio
Spatial Strategies for the Global Metropolis Institution
Department of Urbanism, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
Academic year
2020-2021
Supervisors
Victor Muñoz Sanz
Iren Koomen
1st phase-Group work
Collaborators:
Celeste Richard
Miriam van Eck
2nd phase-Individual work
Location:
Delft TU campus South
The area that our group chose to work on is the one called “Back to Back”, due to its two strong defining borders, the Mekelpark and the Schie river. The interesting aspect of it, is the fact that it is not only consisting of educational facilities, but also some student housing complexes and a lot of industrial territories. This variety of functions is spread without a certain planning system, and the most discouraging fact is that the view to the river is almost completely lost when walking from the main campus. Bike routes seem to end up nowhere, industrial buildings are mostly closed and seem to have no character whatsoever and all of the natural elements of a waterfront are left to luck.
The selected area for the detailed public design is the one near De Nieuwe Haven port, an area described in the strategy phase as a mixture of commercial and housing development.
The concept of dividing the Back to back area in stripes is explored further into the detailed public space design. The area is covered in a fluid porous concrete floor which is produced by recycled demolition waste and glass bottles and is further divided into a grid of marble stripes that are 80cm wide. The grid is dictated by the desired movements between the buildings so as to signal zones of staying or moving. The denser the repetition of the grid, the faster rhythm it gives to the passersby. The emerged in-between surfaces are explored in various ways that can be peeled off or twisted so as to reveal new elements, such as vegetations or street furniture.
Key values
Communal green roofs serve as a way of treating the UHI effect while at the same time enhancing the relationships of the residents serving as places of interaction.
Inner courtyard of the retail-housing complex. The floor is slightly sunken in some zones with steps surrounding them, in an attempt to create a feeling of enclosure for passersby. This courtyard also functions as a watersquare, concetrating rainwater and pouring it through stainless steel gutters into the bassins.
The stalls of the market consist of light semi-permanent wooden constructions that can be retrieved after the functioning hours of the market so that the space after the steady metal roof is appropriated by the nearby residents in other ways, e.g. for exercise during the evenings.
The zones in front of the shops offer places to sit and rest after hours of walking around.
The reused containers function as cafes, bars or restaurants for healthy fast food and offer both a seating area viewing the river and a take-away side for students or other residents or employees during their lunch time.
Redevelopment of the D. Gounari street axis and design of places of cultural interest in Navarino Square
Bachelor’s thesis for the Master’s (integrated)/ Diploma Architectural Engineering (MArch, Dipl. Arch. Eng.)
Institution
Department of Architectural Engineering, Democritus University of Thrace, Greece (DUTH)
Academic year
2018-2019
Supervisors
G.Papagiannopoulos gpapagno@arch.duth.gr
E.Amerikanou eamerik@arch.duth.gr
P.Exarhopoulos pexarcho@arch.duth.gr
Groupwork with Angeliki Micha Location: Navarino square, Thessaloniki, Greece
The diploma thesis investigates the coexistence of the archaeological site of the so called “Galerian Complex”, the most important monumental group in Thessaloniki, with today’s urban scenery. The choice of the area was made based on the thought that archaeological sites can be integrated in a system of open public spaces.
The Galerian Complex, was built at the turning-point of two worlds, the Roman and Byzantine. Its erection began when the Caesar Galerius Valerianus Maximianus (293-311 AD) chose Thessaloniki as the seat of the eastern part of the Roman Empire.
Christian times, important emperors occasionally stayed in Thessaloniki due to its significance and geographic location, situated between Rome and the New Rome-Constantinople.
The proposal had as initial intention the investigation of the relationship of the pedestrian street and the square with the wider area. With our main goal being the upgrade of the D. Gounari axis and Navarino Square’s designation, we designed a small-scale museum, dedicated to this historic region of the city, from the 2nd century BC until Late Ancient times, a café and a public reading hall that will host young students. with the closed spaces as well.
S.O.S Climate Waterfront Workshop
Located on the western edge of Thessaloniki, the Dendropotamos area faces many challenges today. The western part of the city is characterized by a lack of urban and programmatic planning. The Dendropotamos river is covered by road network and functions as a barrier between residential areas. The surrounding areas faces the risk of stormwater inundation and chemical sewage overflow alongside coastal flooding due to the long-term threat of sea level rise.
The proposed masterplan depicts our vision to create a harmonized transition between nature and the surrounding heavy industrial zones. Our aim is to achieve good connectivity and sustainable accessibility for our focus area, by introducing a new network of paths addressing both locals and visitors. Changing land-use for the creation of natural public spaces as well as for economic development is also a critical element of the vision. For this reason we aim to put a lid on the uncontrollably growing industries so as to promote ecological sustainability. Our proposal combines educational activities, urban agriculture as well as leisure activities.
Urban Design Workshop part of the HORIZON 2020 | MARIE CURIE RISE
School of Architecture AUTH, Gdansk University of Technology, Lusófona ECATI
Academic year 2019
Studio tutors
Nikos Kalogirou, Alkmini Paka, Evie Athanasiou, Charis Christodoulou, Konstantinos Sakantamis, Athina Vitopoulou, Maria Rita Pais, Jelle-Jochem Duits
Groupwork with Theodora Lymperi, Maria-Nefeli Gerotolioy, Eva Raekidoy
Project contribution:
Initial design process/Strategic design/Masterplan design/ Diagrams/ 3d renderings/ Presentation
Location:
Thessaloniki West delta, Greece.
Urban green rooms
The selected area was chosen due to its need of redevelopment, so as to approach the competition’s goals about sustainability and creating green spaces. Focusing on the quality that is provided through inhabiting open outdoor spaces as a cultural commodity in the modern times, the Refugee Buildings of Alexandra’s Avenue in Athens (built in 1933) seemed to be an option worth exploring.
The buildings are of special historical significance, since they have been in the centre of the “Dekemvriana” events, a series of clashes fought during World War II in Athens from 3 December 1944 to 11 January 1945, with the marks of the blasts still visible on the exterior walls.
During the recent years they have come to a bad state, with numerous complaints by residents about constituting a public health hazard.
The proposal studies the concept of the in-between space, as a spatial structure of outdoor action, codependent from the block’s building layout. It handles and interprets this spatial relationship as a part of a modernist architectural vocabulary, in need of improvement, renewal, activation and co-ordination with this era’s climatic changes.
Student competition
Pan-Hellenic Open Student Architectural Idea Contest of WWF Hellas “Creating green spaces in cities”
Institution
Department of Architectural Engineering, Democritus University of Thrace, Greece (DUTH)
Academic year 2018
Supervisors
V.Ghikapeppas a-g@otenet.gr
Groupwork with Angeliki Micha, Christina Sgouraki
Project contribution:
Masterplan/ Diagrams/ 2d designs/ 3d renderings/ Presentation proposal
Redesign of the Base of the Statue of T. Kolokotronis in Tripoli,Greece.
The key aim of the proposal is the best placement possible of the base of the statue of Theodoros Kolokotronis, the historic figure of the Greek Revolution of 1821, a pivotal chapter in Greek history, and his ossuary, as well as the redesign of its field of impact, emphasizing on the city’s history and the needs of the wider region while aiming at the creation of a landmark in the square. Kolokotronis’s mention in his memoirs is worth mentioning: “When I reached Tripoli, they showed me the sycamore tree in the flea market where they hanged the Greeks. I sighed and I said: “Aye, how many of my family and my nation were hanged there” and I ordered to get it cut”.
Based on this phrase we envisioned the basic structure of the floor plan, which simulates the shape of a tree’s branches as a ideogram. However, wanting to overturn this negative feeling, we choose to deal the concept of the tree as a symbol of life with an ulterior motive the reconciliation of the place with past wounds.
Student competition
Pan-Hellenic Open Student Architectural Idea Contest of the Municipality of Tripoli
Academic year
2018
Groupwork with Angeliki Micha, Christina Sgouraki
Project contribution:
Initial design process/ Diagrams/ 2d designs/ 3d renderings/ Presentation proposal
Tobacco museum in Xanthi
The class’s subject is the study of a public cultural building, in an existing plot in Xanthi. A crucial element in the design process is the existence of a preexisting preserved building of a tobacco warehouse, which is suggested to be reclaimed and in harmony with the new building.
The main goal is dual: To designate the historic and economic importance of the tobacco cultivation for the city and the inhabitants of Xanthi and to deliver the expectation of a modern cultural space, while revocating stereotypes concerning “morphological rules” in cases of intervention on existing historic environments.
The proposal is developed in three building volumes, each with a distinctive use, that are connected through a closed bridge. The museum path starts at the ground floor, which is enclosed in the warehouse’s walls and continues on to the next level, where one can find the bridge’s route, with which they can move to the rest of the volumes and tour the rest of the exhibition.
The construction consists of a metal structural system with galvanized steel columns and a composite metal deck with a steel sheeting, and is formed on a pilotis to its biggest part so as to free up the plot’s ground floor space, to create an open public space for the city.
Architectural Synthesis VIII
Course for the Master’s (integrated)/ Diploma Architectural Engineering (MArch, Dipl. Arch. Eng.)
Institution
Department of Architectural Engineering, Democritus University of Thrace, Greece (DUTH)
Academic year
2018
Supervisors
G.Papagiannopoulos gpapagno@arch.duth.gr
E.Amerikanou eamerik@arch.duth.gr
P.Exarhopoulos pexarcho@arch.duth.gr
Groupwork with Angeliki Micha, Christina Sgouraki
Project contribution: Floorplans and sections / Presentation proposal
POLIS TU Delft Platform for Urbanism and Landscape Architecture ATLANTIS
Magazine for Urbanism and Landscape Architecture
Board member and Editor-in-chief
POLIS student association for Urbanism & Landscape Architecture of the Faculty of Architecture TU Delft
Institution
Department of Urbanism, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
ATLANTIS Board 2021-2022
Rosalie Moesker President
Jolt Wiersma Secretary
Xulingjun Ji Treasurer
Oviya Elango Atlantis
Ayesha Hussain Education Landscape Architecture
Zahra Agbaria Education Urbanism
Patrisia Tziourrou
Year 2021-2022
Type Editorial work and social media strategy
ATLANTIS team
Oviya Elango
Issue repository
https://issuu.com/atlantismagazine
Urban rooms: Approaching the new urbanism
Publications
Urban Rooms: Approaching the new urbanism, Inglezaki K., Micha A., archetype.gr, April 2019 https://www.archetype.gr/blog/arthro/domatia-tispolis-proseggizontas-ti-nea-astikotita
Bachelor’s research thesis for the Master’s (integrated)/ Diploma Architectural Engineering (MArch, Dipl. Arch. Eng.)
Institution
Department of Architectural Engineering, Democritus University of Thrace, Greece (DUTH)
Academic year
2018-2019
Supervisors
V.Ghikapeppas a-g@otenet.gr
G.Papagiannopoulos gpapagno@arch.duth.gr
exchange of opinions is being conducted in the cyber space of social media, and so, people no longer feel the need to resort to the exterior space of the city square to express themselves and coexist with others. Moreover, the bond with a site and the attribution of meanings to it, is hard to achieve in a globalised urban environment that’s lost its identity.
With this in mind, contemporary urban interventions have to respond to multiple tasks and deal with multiple challenges and questions. The answer to these issues is searched out through the link of architectural design to the present time, highlighting the depth of the pre-existing, but also through a participatory future, pursuing the activation of the citizens in public spaces, retrieving the city’s qualities as an experiential spatial experience.
The square, the most significant urban public space, from its birth as a primary city void, constitutes a space extremely charged with multiple meanings; social, political, cultural, economic, all charged emotionally.
Level of enclosure and square scale
don’t even end on the square’s surface, but look like they fold under 90 degrees and continue along the terrain and elevate again towards the other side, like a cube’s net- the square is an undivided container. The horizontal level is the field of human action whereas the primary dimension of vision is the perpendicular.
The impression of a solid is influenced by the height of the buildings that shape it. But height depends on the width and the width also contributes to a great extent to the square’s character. Architecture needs space to breathe. If the square is too narrow, the buildings that stand opposing will look as if they step on their opposite’s foot, compressing unpleasantly the in-between space. But the square shouldn’t be too wide either. When the square’s width extends beyond the visual fields that are created from the building, a “sense of void” is created, meaning a site lacking structure. Unless the central zone of the square gets highlighted with adjuvant shapes, like flower beds or trees, so that this lack is counterbalanced, the visitor will experience a sense of abandonment, he will be not be given a clear guidance towards the direction that he needs to follow, nor will he be able to measure correctly his distance from the buildings. What upsets us in a overly wide square is that even though visual limits exist, a person cannot benefit from the help that appears appealingly just
outside the boundaries that he can reach. This makes him feel not only alone, but also abandoned.
Urban rooms
“What we call interior space is not defined by the negative relationship or the logical inversion of “exterior space”, but by its genetic “innerness”, its origin and its characterization of the space itself.” Moving from an interior to an exterior space implies in fact the transition from one interior space to another, from a room of a space to an “urban room”, or in other words, an urban void.
Sculpting the void should be a concern for the architects so as to shape spaces surrounding the built forms, to try to understand the form of the void. Urban space is considered rather often as an absence of space. Spaces between buildings get filled randomly with questionable pieces of art and urban furniture. Public space ought to be considered as an entity and most importantly, as a chance for presence. Architecture can become the background, a place when different groups can be the foreground and create their own ideas.
This research thesis is focused on the space of a city square as a space of relations, as an important active city void and not as simply the remains of the built environment. The square signals the city, reflecting its particularity, ready to welcome people at any moment. It constitutes a “life container” with an anthropocentric character, as a place of presence, contemplation and engagement.
The contemporary urban space is changing according to modern societies (globalization of the economy, image domination, new means of communication, new technologies) and therefore there’s been a change in people’s perception of public space. Nowadays the need for communication and
The issue of scale is one of decisive importance for the tension of the spatial characteristics of a structure regarding its dimensions. For example, when certain dimensions grow over a certain degree in plan and in section, then the “structure” might collapse. Squares that are massive in space, with massive buildings, with massive –in size and in tension, meaning in visual tension- billboards and increased vehicle traffic are no longer squares. Such a square state is not a square by definition, it isn’t a related condition to the relevant structure of space.
Regarding the issue of scale, Rudolf Arnheim’s reasoning is worth a mention. The street is visually often more than a path on the ground, which shapes a three dimensional tube, whose edges fold and continue to the other direction This thought can be implemented not only for the street, but also for other urban spaces. In this way, the square can be seen as a three dimensional void, a solid that is shaped from the buildings and the ground. In a way, a building’s elevations
© K aterina Inglezaki