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Thermal modernity and architecture

Version 2 2024-06-13, 09:09
Version 1 2015-06-24, 09:40
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 09:09 authored by J-H Chang, T Winter
This paper develops the concept of thermal modernity in order to offer a more detailed understanding of air conditioning and the historical role it has played in transforming urban and built space. An analysis oriented by the insights of Science and Technology Studies stresses how the international ascendancy of air conditioning has been contingent upon certain socio-political forces and cultural changes that occur at the local level. The productive example of Singapore - often referred to as the air-conditioned nation - is given to reveal the entanglements between indoor comfort provision, economic development and post-colonial nation-building. At a broader level, the paper points towards the importance of understanding air conditioning's impact on the spread of international modernism in analytically expansive ways, such that we can more fully appreciate how it has acted to remodel the built environment at different scales and reconfigure indoor and outdoor relationships.

History

Journal

Journal of architecture

Volume

20

Pagination

92-121

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1360-2365

eISSN

1466-4410

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, RIBA Enterprises

Issue

1

Publisher

Taylor & Francis