Subtropical Cities 2013, Braving A New World: Design Interventions for Changing Climates: Paper Proceedings

Bioclimatic Design in Casablanca: Decision Support through Building Performance Simulation

Fall Conference Proceedings

Author(s): Geoffrey van Moeseke & Shady Attia

In this paper, bioclimatic design strategies in vernacular Moroccan architecture have been analyzed for the city of Casablanca. The design strategies were extracted from existing vernacular architecture in the Western Coast of Morroco. All of the vernacular buildings in this region include strategies that are technically, environmentally, socially, and economically valid. However, for the last 50 years, modern buildings were depending on highly subsidized energy prices, which eventually produced obviously an architecture that is energetically and environmentally degrading. Therefore, the aim of this study is to enable architects to re-understand the lessons of tradition, because the way towards bioclimatic architecture should start by understanding vernacular architecture. The paper presents a set of bioclimatic principles addressing (1) urban morphologies, (2) building architecture and (3) vernacular architectural components. They are not intended as a set recipe that must be followed, but have been selected to show the range of bioclimatic and vernacular design strategies that exist to overcome individual problem in buildings. Finally, the study developed a comparative matrix that can support architects with the principles and strategies for bioclimatic design.

Volume Editors
Anthony Abbate, Francis Lyn & Rosemary Kennedy

ISBN
978-0-935502-90-9