Hybrid traditional dwellings: Sustainable systems in the customary house in Ngada regency

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Abstract

Traditional dwellings have undergone constant change in recent decades as a result of modernization. Though the change is physically visible, a theoretically indiscernible tradition is maintained as a way of sustaining social and cultural systems. A hypothetical assumption asserts that a symbolic cultural value, a 'traditional core,' exists as a sustainable system that functions within a modernized structure. This study begins by identifying the traditional core in question and proceeds to investigate its power over contemporary, modernized forms of dwelling. The study's approach takes on the basic theory of physical change and the key ideas of structuralism. The main findings concern these two interrelated aspects, which are the result of a sustainable system, namely the hybrid dwelling, and the authoritative power that social and cultural systems have over house form.

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APA

Panjaitan, T. H. (2017). Hybrid traditional dwellings: Sustainable systems in the customary house in Ngada regency. International Journal of Technology, 8(5), 841–850. https://doi.org/10.14716/ijtech.v8i5.866

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