Abstract
This research project studies the evolution of small, medium and large post-war construction sites in an
international comparative perspective. By doing so, the project aims to shift away from the traditional architectural
historical research and critique, which focuses on the architectural design and the built result, monofunctional
studies on materials or experts in the field. By focusing on the building process, an integrated social and cultural
approach is the point of departure. This cultural approach aims to demonstrate how different actors in the field
collaborated (or not) and how besides designs, also words, hands and tools constructed our built environment. By
doing so, the project not only answers the recurrent contemporary need to understand the evolution of our
architectural practice, but also fills a gap in the current international debate within the field of construction history.
Moreover, the construction site as a locus for theoretical reflection focuses the developing discourse on
architecture as material culture through the lens of its practices.
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