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Seied Majid Hashemi Toghr Oljerdi,
Volume 4, Issue 3 (12-2016)
Abstract

City and neighborhoods with cultural diversity and interests of citizens, apart from planning of master planning, were residents living and their growth space. Now in the Framework of imitating patterns of master plannings, life and health of citizens is encountered toi jeopardy.
Urbanization and the phenomenon of consumerism, complications resulting from the formation of crowded areas and the procedures of changing the use of gardens and farms are the problems leading the managers and urban planners to optimize land use in urban areas to preserve green space and to develop the control of building density so that it can provide the possibility to create environmental settlements in accordance with the cultural conditions. Architecture and urban planning system has a direct relationship with the culture of society, as far as architecture and urban planning of each country can be considered as the symbol and embodiment of the prevailing cultural conditions. Given the importance of issues such as legal and sustainable revenues, if the income of municipalities causes chaos in architecture and urban planning system, culture and social systems will experience serious problems.
Although imperative architecture does not necessarily result in good architecture but bad commands lead to anomalies in the system of architecture. Human societies are influenced by ethic and are governed by legal obligations. Therefore, law and legal criterion greatly influence the society›s governance and management of city. Architecture and urbanism decisions that are at odds with ethical principles make loose the most important social institution namely the family. With the approval of the establishment of Supreme Council for Planning and Architecture from the end of 1972 the Council became the most important institution that ratified the urbanism criteria and regulations and procedures. This article is formed with the most important question that what are the regulations and legislative acts of the Urbanism Supreme Council in coordination with the aims of Islamic Revolution for making Islamic the architecture and urbanism of Iran and what is the main approval of anti-Islamic urbanism and human. Due to the interdisciplinary nature of the research subject, it is faced with two groups of decisions through library method and semi-structured interview with researchers. The first group only by shape points to the need for Islamic architecture and urbanism. But, the second group has destroyed Iranian and Islamic urban culture and has led to the diversion of wealth from productive to non-productive tasks such as buying land and apartment as inflationary variables in terms of selling building density for more income on behalf of municipalities, regardless of the legal rules and ethical principles such as the rule of jurisprudence “Lazarar” and the principle of “ Justice”, by which harming the sovereignty of the people and the disproportionate distribution of wealth is prohibited. Other findings show that despite the preference of new legal norm on old, every new criterion approved for considering the Islamic principles, respect for privacy and preventing the aristocracy and social rights, is not implemented because of conflict with sale density. Finally, this paper suggests the need to determine the financial stability system for municipal government in form of approval of legal bill of government in Islamic Consultative Assembly and also change the current framework of the Supreme Council for Planning and Architecture in a way that with strengthening its juridical-legal aspect its political function and sectional decisions are reduced and the possibility of deviation from council formation targets is minimized. In other words, the most important aspect that provides the possibility of Islamic urbanism formation is to observe the principle of confidentiality, the right of neighbors and lack of aristocracy in urban decisions and coordination of building regulations of urban development plans with these principles.


Shirin Eslami, Hamidreza Arami,
Volume 12, Issue 4 (12-2024)
Abstract

This study examines the consequences of high-density urban development within Iran’s urban planning system, addressing a critical gap in domestic research on population density impacts. The research employs qualitative analysis and documentary studies, utilizing fishbone diagrams and inductive content analysis to investigate how capitalist-driven high-density growth has surpassed optimal thresholds, creating multifaceted challenges. Findings reveal 27 primary factors and 111 sub-factors of harm across seven key dimensions: economic-functional, spatial-physical, socio-cultural, political-institutional, perceptual-psychological, visual, and environmental.
The socio-cultural dimension emerges as the most significant, containing the highest concentration of identified issues, followed by spatial-physical and environmental concerns. These problems manifest as infrastructure deficiencies, lifestyle disruptions, and erosion of cultural values, particularly threatening the preservation of Islamic-Iranian urban identity. The analysis demonstrates how unregulated density intensifies systemic pressures, creating compound effects where physical overcrowding exacerbates social tensions and environmental degradation.
The study highlights the urgent need for localized density frameworks that respect Iran’s climatic diversity and cultural specificities. Current approaches, often imported without adaptation, fail to address the unique interaction between environmental capacities and socio-cultural norms in Iranian cities. The research proposes context-sensitive strategies for redefining density standards, emphasizing place-based solutions that balance development needs with cultural preservation.
Key recommendations include: (1) developing regional density thresholds based on environmental carrying capacity, (2) integrating cultural impact assessments into density planning, and (3) establishing multi-stakeholder governance frameworks involving policymakers, urban planners, and community representatives. The findings underscore the necessity for coordinated action across management levels to prevent further erosion of tangible and intangible urban values while accommodating population growth. This research contributes a systematic analysis of density-related harms specific to the Iranian context, providing a foundation for culturally-grounded urban planning strategies that could inform similar developing contexts facing rapid urbanization pressures.


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