Where
  • Angola, Uíge
  • Bangladesh, Dhaka
  • Bangladesh, Sylhet
  • Bangladesh, Tanguar Haor
  • Brazil, São Paulo
  • Chile, Iquique
  • Egypt, Luxor
  • Ethiopia, Addis Ababa
  • Ghana, Accra
  • Ghana, Tema
  • Ghana, Tema Manhean
  • Guinee, Fria
  • India, Ahmedabad
  • India, Chandigarh
  • India, Delhi
  • India, Indore
  • India, Kerala
  • India, Mumbai
  • India, Nalasopara
  • India, Navi Mumbai
  • Iran, multiple
  • Iran, Shushtar
  • Iran, Tehran
  • Italy, Venice
  • Kenya, Nairobi
  • Nigeria, Lagos
  • Peru, Lima
  • Portugal, Evora
  • Rwanda, Kigali
  • Senegal, Dakar
  • Spain, Madrid
  • Tanzania, Dar es Salaam
  • The Netherlands, Delft
  • United Kingdom, London
  • United States, New York
  • United States, Willingboro
When
  • 2020-2029
  • 2010-2019
  • 2000-2009
  • 1990-1999
  • 1980-1989
  • 1970-1979
  • 1960-1969
  • 1950-1959
  • 1940-1949
  • 1930-1939
  • 1920-1929
  • 1910-1919
  • 1900-1909
What
  • high-rise
  • incremental
  • low-rise
  • low income housing
  • mid-rise
  • new town
  • participatory design
  • sites & services
  • slum rehab
Who
  • Marion Achach
  • Tanushree Aggarwal
  • Rafaela Ahsan
  • Jasper Ambagts
  • Trupti Amritwar Vaitla (MESN)
  • Purbi Architects
  • Deepanshu Arneja
  • Tom Avermaete
  • W,F,R. Ballard
  • Ron Barten
  • Michele Bassi
  • A. Bertoud
  • Romy Bijl
  • Lotte Bijwaard
  • Bombay Improvement Trust
  • Fabio Buondonno
  • Ludovica Cassina
  • Daniele Ceragno
  • Jia Fang Chang
  • Henry S. Churchill
  • Bari Cobbina
  • Gioele Colombo
  • Rocio Conesa Sánchez
  • Charles Correa
  • Freya Crijns
  • Ype Cuperus
  • Javier de Alvear Criado
  • Coco de Bok
  • Jose de la Torre
  • Junta Nacional de la Vivienda
  • Margot de Man
  • Jeffrey Deng
  • Kim de Raedt
  • H.A. Derbishire
  • Pepij Determann
  • Anand Dhokay
  • Kamran Diba
  • Jean Dimitrijevic
  • Olivia Dolan
  • Youri Doorn
  • Constantinus A. Doxiadis
  • Jane Drew
  • Jin-Ah Duijghuizen
  • Michel Écochard
  • Marja Elsinga
  • Carmen Espegel
  • Hassan Fathy
  • Federica Fogazzi
  • Arianna Fornasiero
  • Manon Fougerouse
  • Frederick G. Frost
  • Maxwell Fry
  • Lida Chrysi Ganotaki
  • Yasmine Garti
  • Mascha Gerrits
  • Mattia Graaf
  • Greater London Council (GLC)
  • Anna Grenestedt
  • Vanessa Grossman
  • Marcus Grosveld
  • Gruzen & Partners
  • Helen Elizabeth Gyger
  • Shirin Hadi
  • Marietta Haffner
  • Anna Halleran
  • Francisca Hamilton
  • Klaske Havik
  • Katrina Hemingway
  • Dirk van den Heuvel
  • Jeff Hill
  • Bas Hoevenaars
  • S. Holst
  • Maartje Holtslag
  • Housing Development Project Office
  • Genora Jankee
  • Henk Jonkers
  • Michel Kalt
  • Anthéa Karakoullis
  • Hyosik Kim
  • Stanisław Klajs
  • Stephany Knize
  • Bartosz Kobylakiewicz
  • Tessa Koenig Gimeno
  • Mara Kopp
  • Beatrijs Kostelijk
  • Annenies Kraaij
  • Aga Kus
  • Sue Vern Lai
  • Yiyi Lai
  • Isabel Lee
  • Monica Lelieveld
  • Jaime Lerner
  • Levitt & Sons
  • Lieke Lohmeijer
  • Femke Lokhorst
  • Fleur A. Luca
  • Qiaoyun Lu
  • Danai Makri
  • Isabella Månsson
  • Mira Meegens
  • Rahul Mehrotra
  • Andrea Migotto
  • Harald Mooij
  • Julie Moraca
  • Nelson Mota
  • Dennis Musalim
  • Timothy Nelson Stins
  • Gabriel Ogbonna
  • Federico Ortiz Velásquez
  • Mees Paanakker
  • Sameep Padora
  • Santiago Palacio Villa
  • Antonio Paoletti
  • Caspar Pasveer
  • Casper Pasveer
  • V. Phatak
  • Andreea Pirvan
  • PK Das & Associates
  • Daniel Pouradier-Duteil
  • Michelle Provoost
  • Pierijn van der Putt
  • Wido Quist
  • Frank Reitsma
  • Raj Rewal
  • Robert Rigg
  • Robin Ringel
  • Charlotte Robinson
  • Roberto Rocco
  • Laura Sacchetti
  • Francisco Javier Sáenz de Oiza
  • Ramona Scheffer
  • Frank Schnater
  • Sanette Schreurs
  • Tim Schuurman
  • Dr. ir. Mohamad Ali Sedighi
  • Sara Seifert
  • Self-built
  • Zhuo-ming Shia
  • Geneviève Shymanski
  • Manuel Sierra Nava
  • Carlos Silvestre Baquero
  • Mo Smit
  • Christina Soediono
  • Joelle Steendam
  • Marina Tabassum
  • Brook Teklehaimanot Haileselassie
  • Kaspar ter Glane
  • Anteneh Tesfaye Tola
  • Carla Tietzsch
  • Chiara Tobia
  • Fabio Tossutti
  • Paolo Turconi
  • Burnett Turner
  • Unknown
  • Frederique van Andel
  • Ties van Benten
  • Hubert van der Meel
  • Anne van der Meulen
  • Anja van der Watt
  • Marissa van der Weg
  • Jan van de Voort
  • Cassandre van Duinen
  • Dick van Gameren
  • Annemijn van Gurp
  • Mark van Kats
  • Bas van Lenteren
  • Rens van Poppel
  • Rens van Vliet
  • Rohan Varma
  • Stefan Verkuijlen
  • Pierre Vignal
  • Gavin Wallace
  • W.E. Wallis
  • Michel Weill
  • Julian Wijnen
  • Afua Wilcox
  • Ella Wildenberg
  • V. Wilkins
  • Alexander Witkamp
  • Krystian Woźniak
  • Hatice Yilmaz
  • Haobo Zhang
  • Gonzalo Zylberman
E Education
  • Honours Programme
  • Master thesis
  • MSc level
  • student analysis
  • student design
R Research
  • book (chapter)
  • conference paper
  • dissertation
  • exhibition
  • interview
  • journal article
  • lecture
P Practice
  • built
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Addis Ababa's Sefer, Iddir, and Gebbi

Nuanced reading of complex urban forms

Images
Doctoral Thesis cover
Image: © Anteneh Tesfaye Tola, Addis Ababa's Sefer, Iddir, and Gebbi (2023)
Text

This research is motivated by the scholarly calls for new concepts and analytic tools for documenting, analysing, and theorizing complex urban territories such as those of cities in Africa. With implicit comparative intent, it takes the case of Addis Ababa city and its old and typifying places—the sefer, to develop and test a new architectural transdisciplinary research methodology referred to as the trinocular. By way of this methodology, it unearths and introduces sefer, iddir, and gebbi of Addis Ababa as not only socio-spatial phenomena but concepts and vocabulary for a located and nuanced reading of the city itself. Sefer are introduced as flexible boundary conditions that are primarily cognized by their dwellers—results of indigenous and autochthonous foundation and continued processes of self-actualization by communities that construct them. Iddir is unearthed as a form of social capital embedded in sefer that appears in the structures of relations among residents. And the gebbi as an urban spatial typology that constitutes the sefer’s morphology—the last frontier of communality just prior domestic spaces which, in many cases, can be a single multi-functional room.
These concepts and vocabulary, it is argued, in both practical and metaphoric sense, should be the starting point of new urban imaginaries for Addis Ababa. Urban planning and housing projections thus, should draw inspiration from these notions, elements, and phenomena. Furthermore, lessons learnt from the trinocular and the findings are presented as new avenues for architectural research in similar, less-known, and complex urban conditions as the sefer of Addis Ababa.

Files
Doctoral Thesis cover
Image: © Anteneh Tesfaye Tola, Addis Ababa's Sefer, Iddir, and Gebbi (2023)
An illustration of the trinocular methodology
Image: © Anteneh Tesfaye Tola, Addis Ababa's Sefer, Iddir, and Gebbi (2023)
Main features of qualitative research with similar conceptual intents
Image: © Anteneh Tesfaye Tola, Addis Ababa's Sefer, Iddir, and Gebbi (2023)
Map showing sefer in the larger Arada area as preliminary finding
Image: © Anteneh Tesfaye Tola, Addis Ababa's Sefer, Iddir, and Gebbi (2023)
Gebbi (shared compounds) within Dejach Wube, Serategna, and Geja sefer selected for detailed documentation
Image: © Anteneh Tesfaye Tola, Addis Ababa's Sefer, Iddir, and Gebbi (2023)
Illustration of typological features of three selected gebbi from Dejach Wube sefer
Image: © Anteneh Tesfaye Tola, Addis Ababa's Sefer, Iddir, and Gebbi (2023)
Illustration of claimed and privatized spaces in twelve aebbi studied: four examples from each case sefer
Image: © Anteneh Tesfaye Tola, Addis Ababa's Sefer, Iddir, and Gebbi (2023)
A cul-de-sac type social space in Megdela gebbi of Dejach Wube sefer
Image: © Anteneh Tesfaye Tola, Addis Ababa's Sefer, Iddir, and Gebbi (2023)