Buildings: Difference between revisions
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<font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><span style="font-size: 13.3333px;">These typologies were essential to our models because different types exhibit distinct relationships among measured height, floor height, and the expected number of floors.</span></font></span> | <font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><span style="font-size: 13.3333px;">These typologies were essential to our models because different types exhibit distinct relationships among measured height, floor height, and the expected number of floors.</span></font></span> | ||
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<strong>Example of Architectural Classification</strong> – Buildings on the island of FANT color-coded by architectural type, illustrating variation in structural form, construction period, and intended use within a compact urban block. | |||
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Revision as of 14:47, 9 December 2025
Buildings
The built environment of Venice reflects centuries of architectural evolution, adaptation, and shifting patterns of residential and economic activity. This page provides an overview of how Venetian buildings are classified, how they are used today, and what recent analyses reveal about their structure, height, residential capacity, and vacancy. It incorporates extensive measurements, geospatial analysis, and modeling to improve building-scale understanding across the historic center.
Building Types & Classification
Overview of Venetian Classification Systems
Venice classifies its buildings through a structured system that identifies architectural typology, construction period, and predominant functional characteristics. This classification helps describe when, how, and for what purpose each building was constructed, enabling a clearer understanding of the city’s urban fabric and its evolution.
Architectural Typology (Tipologia Edilizia)
Architectural typology identifies building form, organization of interior space, and structural hierarchy. Typology categories include long-standing Venetian forms such as monocellular, bicellular, tricellular, polycellular, unitary, modular, and shed structures.
These typologies were essential to our models because different types exhibit distinct relationships among measured height, floor height, and the expected number of floors.