Asian cuisine architecture: a study investigating culinary micro space configuration and perceptional functional efficiency / Kristianne Kariz A. Galaura; Myrafe S. Ylagan, adviser

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2019Description: 130 leavesSubject(s): Dissertation note: Thesis (BS Architecture) University of the Philippines Mindanao, 2019 Summary: Each society is identified through various characteristics: their culture, their architecture, their food, or the combination of all three. These interconnecting elements have a certain effect on other significant cultural minorities existing within the same society, with their own respective characteristics. By identifying these effects, a cultural minority is able to fully take advantage of its consumer, develop a style that attracts its target market yet not stray from its cultural origins, and architecturally speaking, develop a set of design guidelines unique to the needs, preferences, and functionality of its spaces and end users. The study aimed to determine how one dominating culture, the Modern Filipino culture and cuisine, affect other cultural minorities existing within in – namely, Japanese, Halal, Indian, and Healthy/Vegan cuisine. Three restaurants of each cuisine were studied through ocular observation and key informant interviews. All the data gathered underwent statistical treatments and analysis via the space syntax method, and the fuzzy logic analysis to determine the ideal space configuration for each cuisine that maximizes functional efficiency, taking into account the significant differences each cuisine carried under the dominant modern Filipino culture. Design guidelines of culinary spaces for each cuisine then developed from the analysis and integrated into a possible project which is a Cultural food park. The Cultural food park showcases cultural and cuisine diversity, with a space design that took great consideration of the internal variety of cultures, cuisine, and architecture, and the external dominating modern Filipino culture.
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Thesis Thesis University Library General Reference Thesis LG993.5 2019 A7 G37 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 3UPML00025566
Thesis Thesis University Library Archives and Records Thesis LG993.5 2019 A7 G37 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 3UPML00043216
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LG993.5 2019 A7 D83 The effects of the vulnerability of cultural factors on the architectural characteristics of vernacular houses of indigenous tribes in South Cotabato / LG993.5 2019 A7 D87 A comparative visual and typological analysis of ancestral houses in Taal, Batangas and Balingasag, Misamis Oriental / LG993.5 2019 A7 E53 Proxemics study on active engagement of filipino junior high school students: establishing design guidelines for sociopetal and sociofugal spaces in an academic environment / LG993.5 2019 A7 G37 Asian cuisine architecture: a study investigating culinary micro space configuration and perceptional functional efficiency / LG993.5 2019 A7 G373 Use of informal learning spaces for self-directed learning in three state university and college campuses in Davao City / LG993.5 2019 A7 G53 Integrating defensible space in public high schools in Davao City: a study on passive crime control and perception of safety / LG993.5 2019 A7 G65 Developing climate change adaptation strategies in building designs: an assessment on the existing housing programs and morphology of vernacular and informal settlements in Cateel, Davao Oriental /

Thesis (BS Architecture) University of the Philippines Mindanao, 2019

Each society is identified through various characteristics: their
culture, their architecture, their food, or the combination of all three. These
interconnecting elements have a certain effect on other significant cultural
minorities existing within the same society, with their own respective
characteristics. By identifying these effects, a cultural minority is able to fully
take advantage of its consumer, develop a style that attracts its target market
yet not stray from its cultural origins, and architecturally speaking, develop a
set of design guidelines unique to the needs, preferences, and functionality of
its spaces and end users.
The study aimed to determine how one dominating culture, the Modern
Filipino culture and cuisine, affect other cultural minorities existing within in –
namely, Japanese, Halal, Indian, and Healthy/Vegan cuisine. Three restaurants
of each cuisine were studied through ocular observation and key informant
interviews. All the data gathered underwent statistical treatments and analysis
via the space syntax method, and the fuzzy logic analysis to determine the ideal
space configuration for each cuisine that maximizes functional efficiency, taking
into account the significant differences each cuisine carried under the dominant
modern Filipino culture.
Design guidelines of culinary spaces for each cuisine then developed
from the analysis and integrated into a possible project which is a Cultural food
park. The Cultural food park showcases cultural and cuisine diversity, with a
space design that took great consideration of the internal variety of cultures,
cuisine, and architecture, and the external dominating modern Filipino culture.

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