Abstract
In the last year and a half, the several months spent in lockdown have questioned the consolidated habitat models and spaces in which we live. The pandemic has accelerated all critical issues by highlighting the limits of cities, infrastructures, architectures, domestic spaces and lifestyles determined by obsolete archetypes and paradigms. However, this has meant that the cultural debate has focused on the importance of design, investment in research and the activation of open innovation dynamics, highlighting the social, economic and environmental impact of innovative and sustainable anthropocentric and ecocentric measures. Until the recent events, the house had undergone a process of expansion beyond its physical borders, gradually emptying itself, and expanding domesticity into the public space of the city (Lepore, 2004)
Highlights
Nell’ultimo anno e mezzo, i diversi mesi passati in lockdown hanno messo in discussione i modelli – oramai consolidati – di habitat e degli spazi in cui viviamo
The pandemic has accelerated all critical issues by highlighting the limits of cities, infrastructures, architectures, domestic spaces and lifestyles determined by obsolete archetypes and paradigms
The process has been strengthened by the recent digital revolution; new technologies make the symbolic boundaries that delimit the area within which the idea of interior / exterior of the domestic space takes shape much more permeable and porous than in the past
Summary
Nell’ultimo anno e mezzo, i diversi mesi passati in lockdown hanno messo in discussione i modelli – oramai consolidati – di habitat e degli spazi in cui viviamo. The new domestic landscape after the pandemic Covid-19 In the last year and a half, the several months spent in lockdown have questioned the consolidated habitat models and spaces in which we live.
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