Residents usually try to establish congruence between their own needs and the affordances of the open space in order to satisfy their needs and achieve a better living environment. This congruency, being affected by some differences between the residents’ mental ideal images of open space and the actual open space, can be achieved by different strategies. The present study aims at investigating how congruence is established between residents and open spaces in tree dominant housing patterns of Yazd, as a traditional city in Iran. This study is a qualitative research, adopting an ethnographic approach. The results revealed that when the residents’ actual open space is more similar to their desired and ideal open space, they establish a two-way relationship with the space, adapt their behaviors to the space or change the space according to their needs. However, the more the open space is different from the residents’ ideal of open space, the more their relationship becomes one-way and the residents are obliged to change their needs and behavior according to the affordances of the environment or move from their houses to another one having their ideal open space. "> [PDF] Mental images and congruence strategies: An investigation of congruence between residents and private open spaces in three dominant housing patterns of Yazd | [PDF] Mental images and congruence strategies: An investigation of congruence between residents and private open spaces in three dominant housing patterns of Yazd Residents usually try to establish congruence between their own needs and the affordances of the open space in order to satisfy their needs and achieve a better living environment. This congruency, being affected by some differences between the residents’ mental ideal images of open space and the actual open space, can be achieved by different strategies. The present study aims at investigating how congruence is established between residents and open spaces in tree dominant housing patterns of Yazd, as a traditional city in Iran. This study is a qualitative research, adopting an ethnographic approach. The results revealed that when the residents’ actual open space is more similar to their desired and ideal open space, they establish a two-way relationship with the space, adapt their behaviors to the space or change the space according to their needs. However, the more the open space is different from the residents’ ideal of open space, the more their relationship becomes one-way and the residents are obliged to change their needs and behavior according to the affordances of the environment or move from their houses to another one having their ideal open space. ">

Mental images and congruence strategies: An investigation of congruence between residents and private open spaces in three dominant housing patterns of Yazd

Mental images and congruence strategies: An investigation of congruence between residents and private open spaces in three dominant housing patterns of Yazd

Residents usually try to establish congruence between their own needs and the affordances of the open space in order to satisfy their needs and achieve a better living environment. This congruency, being affected by some differences between the residents’ mental ideal images of open space and the actual open space, can be achieved by different strategies. The present study aims at investigating how congruence is established between residents and open spaces in tree dominant housing patterns of Yazd, as a traditional city in Iran. This study is a qualitative research, adopting an ethnographic approach. The results revealed that when the residents’ actual open space is more similar to their desired and ideal open space, they establish a two-way relationship with the space, adapt their behaviors to the space or change the space according to their needs. However, the more the open space is different from the residents’ ideal of open space, the more their relationship becomes one-way and the residents are obliged to change their needs and behavior according to the affordances of the environment or move from their houses to another one having their ideal open space.

___

  • Amani R, Etemadi O, Fatehi Zadeh M, Bahrami F. (2012). The Relationship of Attachment Styles and Social Adjustment. CPAP, 2 (6), 15-26
  • Aghalatifi, A. (2012). Man and house, explaining the pattern of interaction between man and the contemporary house in Iran. Phd Thesis, Tehran university
  • Ann Lodi, K., & Raedene Combs, E. (1989). Housing Adjustments of Rural Households: Decisions and Consequences. Housing and Society, 16(3), 13–22. https://doi.org/10.1080/08882 746.1989.11430041
  • Baum, S., & Hassan, R. (1999). Home owners, Home renovation and Residential Mobility. Journal of Sociology, 35(1), 109–117. https://doi. org/10.1177/144078339903500102
  • Brown, J. and E. Moore. (1970). The Intra-Urban Migration Process: A Perspective. Geografiska Annler 52, 1-13.
  • Colombo B. (2012). Mental Imagery. In: Seel N.M. (eds) Encyclopedia of the Sciences of Learning. Springer, Boston, MA.
  • Crull, S. R., Bode, M. E., & Morris, E. W. (1991). Two tests of the housing adjustment model of residential mobility. Housing and Society, 18(3), 53–64.
  • Daiepour, Zeinab. (2014). The relationship between the presence of nature and the increase in the sense of belonging in the Iranian traditional houses. Baghe- e- Nazar, 11 (30), Pp. 58- 39
  • Eichner, M. M. (1986). A model of household housing adjustment : confronting analytical issues. Iowa State University.
  • Edwards, J. R., & Shipp, A. J. (2007). Perspectives on organizational fit, 209–258.
  • Falamaki, M. (2006). Formation of architecture in the experiences of Iran and west, 2 nd edition, Faza publication.
  • Festinger, L. (1962). A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Fleury-bahi, G., & Felonneau, M.-L., & Marchand, D., 2008. Processes of Place. Environment and Behavior, 40(5), 669–682. https://doi. org/10.1177/0013916507307461
  • French, J. R. P., & Jr., Rodgers, W., & Cobb, S.(1974). Adjustment as person– environment fit. In G. V. Coelho, D. A. Hamburg,&J. E. Adams (Eds.), Coping and adaptation. New York: Basic Books
  • Ghanbari, A., & Zaheri, M. (2009). Evaluation of Housing Policies in Pre and Post-Revolutionary Plans, Journal of Housing and rural environment, No. 123, 77- 90
  • Gharibpour, A. (1392). Terminology of Architectural Function, Journal of fine arts, Vol. 8, Issue. 1, 57- 68
  • Ghazizade, N. (2011). The Effect of Outdoor Design of Residential Complex in Creating the sense of Place Attachment Case Study: Selected Residential Complexes in Tehran. Ph.D thesis, Tehran university
  • Galster, G. C., & Hesser, G. W. (1981). Residential Satisfaction. Environment and Behavior, 13(6), 735–758. https:// doi.org/10.1177/0013916581136006
  • Groat, L., & Wang, D. (2002). Architectural research methods. New York: Wiley
  • Jusan, M. (2010). Means End Chain, Person Environment Congruence And Mass Housing Design. Open House International, 35(3), 76–86.
  • Kahana, E. ,1982. A congruence model of person-environments interaction. In Aging and the environment: Theoretical approaches, 97–121.
  • Khaghanpour Shahrezaee, R. (2017). The Relationship between the Past and the Present in Some Contemporary Residential Architecture in Tehran. Journal of Fine Arts, vol. 22, No. 1, Pp. 89- 104.
  • Kosslyn, S.M., & Ganis, G., &Thompson, W.L., (2001). Neural foundations of imagery, Nature reviews neuroscience, 2 (9), PP. 635- 642.
  • Lang, J. (2007). Creating Architectural Theory, van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
  • Memarian, Gh., & Brown, F. (2006). The Shared Characteristic of Iranian and Arab Courtyard House .In Edwards B. (Ed.) “Courtyard Housing: Past, Present and Future”, Abingdon, Oxon; New York, Taylor & Francis.
  • Mohit, M. A., Ibrahim, M., & Rashid, Y. R. (2010). Assessment of residential satisfaction in newly designed public low-cost housing in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Habitat International, 34 (1), 18- 27. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint. 2009.04.002
  • Morris, E. W., & Winter, M. (1975). A Theory of Family Housing Adjustment, 37(1), 79–88.
  • Moore, K. D. (2005). Using Place Rules and Affect to Understand Environmental Fit: A Theoretical Exploration. Environment and Behavior, 37(3), 330–363. https://doi. org/10.1177/0013916504272657
  • Mridha, M. (2015). Living in an apartment. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 43, 42–54. https://doi. org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2015.05.002
  • Musiol, A., & Boehnke, K. (2013). Person-Environment Value Congruence and Satisfaction with Life. International Journal of Humanities and Social Science, 3(9), 57–65.
  • Nazif, Hassan. (2013). The sustainability of Iranian architectural elements throughout the Islamic era. Bagh- e- Nazar, No. 24, pp. 57- 68
  • Omar, E. O., Endut, E., & Saruwono, M. (2012). Personalisation of the Home. Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences, 49, 328–340. https://doi. org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2012.07.031
  • Pearson, D.G. (2007). Mental imagery and creative thought, Proceedings of the British Academy, 147 pp. 187-212.
  • Priemus, H. (1986). Housing As a Social Adaptation Process: A Conceptual Scheme. Environment and Behavior, 18(1), 31–52. https://doi. org/10.1177/0013916586181002
  • Rossi, P. (1955). Why Families Move: A Study in the Social Psychology of Urban Residential Mobility Glencoe, The Free Press.
  • Shin, J. (2016). Toward a theory of environmental satisfaction and human comfort: A process-oriented and contextually sensitive theoretical framework. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 45, 11–21. https://doi. org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2015.11.004
  • Sirgy, M. J., Grzeskowiak, S., & Su, C. (2005). Explaining housing preference and choice: The role of self-congruity and functional congruity. Journal of Housing and the Built Environment, 20(4), 329–347. https://doi. org/10.1007/s10901-005-9020-7
  • Spokane, A. R., Meir, E. I., & Catalano, M. (2000). Person–Environment Congruence and Holland’s Theory: A Review and Reconsideration. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 57(2), 137–187. https://doi.org/10.1006/jvbe.2000.1771
  • Steggell, C. D., Binder, S. K., Davidson, L. a, Vega, P. R., Hutton, E. D., & Rodecap, A. R., 2003. Exploring Theories of Human Behavior in Housing Research. Housing and Society, 30(1), 3–32. https://doi.org/1 0.1080/08882746.2003.11430480
  • Tinsley, H. E. A. (2000). The Congruence Myth: An Analysis of the Efficacy of the Person–Environment Fit Model. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 56(2), 147–179. https://doi.org/10.1006/ jvbe.1999.1727.
  • Tomas, N.J.T. (1999). Are theories of imagery theoris of imagination? An active perception approch to conscious mental content. Cognetive science 23: 207- 245
  • Location of Yazd in Iran: https://commons. wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Yazd_ in_Iran.svg, (Accessed, 10 June 2018)
A|Z ITU Mimarlık Fakültesi Dergisi-Cover
  • ISSN: 2564-7474
  • Yayın Aralığı: Yılda 3 Sayı
  • Başlangıç: 2005
  • Yayıncı: İTÜ Rektörlüğü
Sayıdaki Diğer Makaleler

Walking experience in mixed use developments in Lagos, Nigeria

Adedapo Adewunmi OLUWATAYO, Funmi AKANDE, Ohuntoluwase OLIYIDE, Ajibola AGBOLA, Bolaji ADEREMI LATEEF, Titilope SAMUEL

Informal settlements’ urban recognition process: A case study of the Essadikia Quarter in Laghouat, Algeria

Harzallah KORKAZ, Said MADANI

Critical success factors(CSFs) for e-Business technologies adoption in architectural practice in Nigeria

Eziyi O. IBEM, Egidario B. ADUWO, Emmanuel A. AYO-VAUGHAN, Adedeji O. AFOLABI

Housing arrangement transformation and the cultural revolution

Suheir M.S. AMMAR

Principles of flexibility in design process, with the approach to creativity in design

Pouya MOLAEI, Mehrdad JAVAHERIAN, Maryam AFZALIPOUR

Outside the house but not in the city: Promenades in Istanbul as negotiated public spaces for women in 19th-century Ottoman novels

Ela ÇİL, Ayşe Nur ŞENEL-FİDANGENÇ

Traditional concepts of Dayaks in the longhouse of Nek Bindang Village of West Kalimantan

Zairin ZAIN, Muhammad NURHAMSYAH, Emilya KALSUM

Mental images and congruence strategies: An investigation of congruence between residents and private open spaces in three dominant housing patterns of Yazd

Elham FALLAH, Isa HOJAT

Decision-making method for choosing best alternatives for internal walls based on cost and sound insulation performance

Bilge ŞAN ÖZBİLEN, Nurgün BAYAZIT

In Situ dynamic system identification of historic masonry monuments based on non-destructive testing

Yegan KAHYA, Feridun ÇILI, Ömer DABANLI