Open Access
Transformation of the city of Split industrial heritage into a science center
Author(s) -
Sandro Žuljević
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
st open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2718-3734
DOI - 10.48188/so.2.10
Subject(s) - architectural engineering , center (category theory) , situated , function (biology) , architecture , dialogical self , narrative , civil engineering , computer science , sociology , geography , engineering , archaeology , epistemology , artificial intelligence , philosophy , chemistry , linguistics , evolutionary biology , biology , crystallography
Background: Split is a city in the Mediterranean, situated on Croatia’s coastline. Split’s northern coast has a long-stand-ing industrial function and harbors the city’s first electri-cal substation, designed by modernist architect Josip Maria Kodl. Objective: The goal of this work was to envision a science center in Split’s industrial zone in Dujmovača (the northern coast of the Split peninsula), comprising a science museum with a research and congress center. The programmatic and spatial analyses of the science center’s amenities and the proposal as a whole demonstrate the potential of this forgotten space in Split and breathe new life into Kodl’s ar-chitectural heritage. Methods: The proposed solution uses a dialogical narrative between a conservation, contextual, programmatic, and theoretical approach within a strict orthogonal structure, fostering the development of alternative associations and elaboration of architectural details.Results: The proposed solution constitutes a complex of multiple interconnected and flexible elements. This al-lows different parts of the Science Center to function inde-pendently of each other. This paper provides an analysis of design steps and methods, the proposal’s advantages and limitations, and the way the repurposing of industrial heri-tage was approached. Conclusion: The position of the Science Center in Dujmovača would provide one of the first impressions when entering Split on the future metro line. By reconcil-ing landscape and industrial architecture, the proposed building complex offers a framework for presenting various kinds of modifiable content, for both the pres-ent and the future.