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Plan drawing by Laura Quan.
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Student Work

A stack of three blue books with the title of the thesis "Unsettling Climate" its cover.
Physical version of MED Thesis Unsettling Climate with graphic design by Daedalus Li.
One of the thesis books opened up to a spread showcasing six environmental data analysis graphs.
Physical version of MED Thesis Unsettling Climate with graphic design by Daedalus Li.
The book opened up to a spread with two images in color on the left hand side and a long block of text on the right.
Physical version of MED Thesis Unsettling Climate with graphic design by Daedalus Li.
An example graph showcasing the Psychometric Chart connected to comfort levels of different buildings' floorplans.
Psychometric chart with different colonial houses’ types overlapping the different climatic conditions for each of them.
A climate analysis graphic showing the different solar gains of each rooms of a building, cut in section.
Axonometric diagram with environmental mechanisms for adaptation of Case Study I: Casa las Damas, in Cartagena, Colombia, built at the turn of the 17th century.
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Title

UNSETTLING CLIMATE The Consequences of Domestic Building Technologies Across the Spanish Empire

Authors
Alberto Martinez Garcia

Course
Independent M.E.D. Research

Project Description

Alberto Martinez Garcia | Master of Environmental Design (M.E.D.) 2024

Advisor: Professor Mae-Ling Jovenes Lokko, Ph.D.

Reader: David Sadighian, Ph.D.

Chair: Keller Easterling.

Upon their arrival in the Americas in the sixteenth century, Spanish colonizers encountered a tropical climate previously unknown to Europeans. In the four hundred years of their empire, the colonizers set themselves on a collision course of maladaptation, violence towards Indigenous people, and erasure of their knowledge. Unsettling Climate investigates the domestic constructions of Spanish colonization in the tropics during the colonization of the Americas and the Philippines. Using case studies from patio houses in Cartagena in Colombia and bahay na bato (houses of stone) in the Philippines, this project analyzes the relationship between the natural environment, domestic space, and social hierarchies in the colonial realm. Two transitional chapters accompany these case studies. In the first one, I describe the evolution of patio houses in the Iberian Peninsula and the spread across the Spanish Empire. In the second, I investigate the influence of early modern colonization in the construction of new climatic epistemologies. Historical chronicles, maps, ordinances with paleoclimate information, floor plans, building sections, and environmental simulations constitute some of the evidence assembled to reconstruct these histories and track environmental dynamics in relation to building technologies. The unsettling urban climate constructed by the Spaniards fixed the spatial imaginaries in the contemporary imaginaries but also highlights the potential to disrupt this colonial entanglement in the future.


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Courses

Independent M.E.D. Research

Student Work

UNSETTLING CLIMATE The Consequences of Domestic Building Technologies Across the Spanish Empire

A stack of three blue books with the title of the thesis "Unsettling Climate" its cover.
Students

Alberto Martinez Garcia

240523 alberto c 670 1