The meaning of space and place in ancient Persian houses The Imaginary sanctums by: Parsa Pahlavan, ,MS, Architectural Engineering, Politecnico di Milano, Lecco 23900 Italy abstract: This article, tries to investigate the manipulation of power of imagine, as a “space creator” for both “architect” and “client” in ancient Persian Architecture. Persian houses, are treatable in two main aspects of “the body” and “the content”. The content, which contains concepts, relations, and other unphysical elements to make the space, is somehow in correspondence or combination with the body(physical part) of the building. The analysis of plans of the Persian houses, demonstrate a collective type of life for the family in a room- while in many cases there are empty rooms and spaces in the house- in a way that the interruption of functionality seems likely to happen, but it doesn’t. This is because of an imaginary sanctum that the client believes in; while the architect doesn’t block the power of imagine of client, and this way the user of the space feels himself in a cosy space, which is not that cosy in reality, but in fact is. These unreal, but factual layers, could make the space easily in sync with the human being inside, and could be related to some concepts like the presence of the God in the house (RUMI), feeling of belonging to the house, believing the everlasting beauty of the house, while it might not that beauty in real. This article decodes the circumstances and properties of this kind of immaterial layers.
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