Faculty of Architecture
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Item type:Publication, Riverfront land use and its further redevelopment(Mother Teresa University in Skopje, Republic of North Macedonia, 2023) ;Adelina Fejza - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Riverfront land use and its further redevelopment(Mother Teresa University in Skopje, Republic of North Macedonia, 2023) ;Adelina Fejza - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Riverfront land use and its further redevelopment(Mother Teresa University in Skopje, Republic of North Macedonia, 2023) ;Adelina FejzaSanja Avramoska - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Enhancing Riverfront Social Connectivity in Brownfield Redevelopment Projects in Germany(Mother Teresa University in Skopje, Republic of North Macedonia, 2023) ;Sanja AvramoskaAdelina Fejza - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Graphic statics in the digital age: A critical review of current methods and trends(Centre for Evaluation in Education and Science (CEON/CEES), 2025-09) ;Mihajlovska, Teodora ;Trombeva-Gavriloska, Ana; Dimevska-Sofronievska, Liljana<jats:p>Graphic statics is a method for analyzing and designing structures based on the geometric representation of equilibrium conditions, where both forces and structural forms are depicted through reciprocal diagrams. This paper presents a comprehensive review of the development, application, and current state of graphic statics, with particular emphasis on its computational and three-dimensional extensions. Although the fundamentals of graphic statics date back to the 18th century, there has been a resurgence in interest in the field throughout the last three decades, primarily due to improvements in digital modeling and visualization tools. The review is structured into three main sections: the historical evolution of graphic statics and its entry into computational domains; an overview of form-finding methods and their integration into design workflows; and the role of graphic statics as a form-finding method in generating spatial, three-dimensional funicular forms. The paper concludes by identifying key research gaps and arguing for further development of graphic statics as a powerful tool for both architectural exploration and structural optimization.</jats:p> - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, The Influence of the Thermal Conduction and Detail Development Process in Architecture(Horizon Research Publishing, 2023)Kire Stavrov, Strahinja Trpevski, Andrijana Tasheva - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Public space transformation in the case of “Skopje 2014"(Urbana: Urban Affairs and Public Policy, 2021)The politics of the post-socialist era, during the transitional period in the Republic of North Macedonia left dark marks in the city morphology and deeply influenced urban planning. This paper explores the most notable example of this particular trend - the project named “Skopje 2014”. The paper analyses the project’s underlying feature, which can be described as an attempt to recast a national profile, affecting public space and built heritage, without any awareness of the gap between nationalistic theory and the desperate economic realities. In hindsight, the paper argues that, unfortunately, this project was brought to life without any public participation or by taking into consideration the expert-based evaluation. Therefore, many new buildings were built and much more covered in new architectural styles, which led to uncontrolled city growth and a vague makeover of the city. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, A Theory towards a Built-in-Variety in Museum Design: The "Capriccio Museum"(University of Zagreb, Faculty of Architecture, 2023-06-29)<jats:p>The paper presents an excerpt from the extensive research on various museal spaces throughout human history. By re-evaluating the imaginative procedures involved in conceiving those spaces, the research in its broadest scope asks: how do we map, rethink and revive the historically valuable assets of architectural thought without “museumising” them? The excerpt is initially dedicated to the neoclassical museum space based upon the notion of the frame that was already adopted by the painting genre capriccio to induce the spectator’s mind into an architectural fantasy of juxtaposed real and fictitious buildings, archaeological ruins, urban and natural landscapes. In the neoclassical museum space, the capriccio “became alive” as an actual-size architectural fantasy that could be stepped into. Based upon multiple conceptual frames, the interconnected yet distinct architectural fragments illustrated the neoclassical worldview founded on inclusivity, synchronicity and bodily experience. This historical episode is further theorised into the capriccio museum, a new theoretical model that critically perceives multiple experience probabilities as distilled from the past and starts a process of conversion of that historical knowledge into transhistorical knowledge relevant for today.</jats:p> - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Overview of the 70’s construction systems applied in the residential settlement “Aerodrom” - Skopje(TTEM, 2022) ;Dimkov, Gjorgji; The intensive housing construction in the Republic of North Macedonia, which began in the 1960s, especially after the catastrophic earthquake in Skopje in 1963, was based primarily on the huge development of the construction operation, whose power and opportunities could not be expressed only in Macedonia, but with great success was carried out with the largest construction operations in the former: SFR Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, USSR; as well as in Germany, the Arab countries: Algeria, Iran, Iraq, Egypt and others. According to the approved new urban plan of the city of Skopje, the most intensive building construction in Macedonia started in the seventies. New residential settlements emerged (Karpoš, Železara, Kisela Voda, etc.), which on a large scale began to give the physiognomy of the city. Also, the construction of the central city area with social, administrative and residential buildings started even more intensively (according to the project of the Japanese architect Kenzo Tange), designated as “city wall” and “city gates”. The growth and expansion of the city on a daily basis pressured the management structures, among others smaller ones, to start building the largest residential complex “Aerodrom”. The buildings were built with inflexible technologies (with large surface and tunnel plates), where the possibility of changing the organization of the apartments is excluded, which was not the case with the buildings built with classical skeletal systems. This paper aims to give an overview of the applied construction systems and technologies of construction and the correlation between the structure and the construction of the apartment and the structure of the family in the residential buildings from the settlement “Aerodrom” in Skopje, built in 1977. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Rehabilitation of Mass Housing as a Contribution to Social Equality: Insights from the East-West European Academic Dialogue(MDPI, 2022-07-02) ;Milovanovic, Aleksandra ;Dragutinovic, Anica ;Nikezic, Ana ;Pottgiesser, UtaStojanovski, MihajloMass housing neighbourhoods (MHN) represent the leading pattern of urban transformation and expansion in the second half of the 20th century, and accordingly evaluation, regeneration and redesign of the MHN represent a necessary and challenging task in the contemporary research context. In the practical scope of MHN rehabilitation, various holistic approaches and design strategies are identified that affirm both ecological transition and social transformation of these urban settings. However, the level of application of such approaches across Europe varies greatly, and requires research initiatives of a comparative nature that open a cross-geographical debate at the European level. Although there is a series of evidence-based studies that define the conceptual framework of MHN, i.e., large-scale housing settlements, through historical-interpretative and chronological analyses, the academic debate on practical and feasible MHN rehabilitation and their sustainable integration into the urban development of cities at European level is underdeveloped. The specific objective of this paper is to establish preliminary insights into the current level of MHN rehabilitation and to identify challenges for further actions through (1) a comparative analysis of MHN role models from the second half of 20th century, and through (2) insights from an implemented expert questionnaire. The research engages a comparative case study analysis as the primary method and analyses MHN in Germany (as a representative of Western Europe) and in the two ex-Yugoslav countries, North Macedonia and Serbia (as representatives of Eastern Europe). This research has highlighted the main obstacles and challenges for MHN rehabilitation and demonstrated the importance of a multiscale approach to MHN analysis, having in mind that through the distribution of design values at the analysed spatial levels (neighbourhood level, building level, and apartment level) the application of affirmative indicators within different design values group is recognised.
