Vol. 13 No. 1 (2016): Vernacular Architecture
Articles

Urban regulations in 18th century Istanbul: Natural disasters and public dispute

Işıl Çokuğraş
Department of Interior Design, Faculty of Architecture and Design, Istanbul Bilgi University, Istanbul, Turkey
C. İrem Gençer
Department of Architecture, Faculty of Architecture, Yildiz Technical University, Istanbul, Turkey

Published 2016-03-24

Keywords

  • Construction systems,
  • Istanbul history,
  • Ottoman history,
  • Urban history,
  • Urban regulation

How to Cite

Çokuğraş, I., & İrem Gençer, C. (2016). Urban regulations in 18th century Istanbul: Natural disasters and public dispute. A|Z ITU JOURNAL OF THE FACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE, 13(1), 183–193. https://doi.org/10.5505/itujfa.2016.54154

Abstract

As a part of the Ottoman modernization process, new regulations and institutions for urban management started to be established in Istanbul. This paper handles the 18th century as an initial period for these urban reforms and studies how the built environment was regulated at the time. The regulations of 18th century which were based on the occasion of natural disasters and public dispute will be evaluated via official archive documents and narratives.18th century Istanbul's general urban fabric was formed with organic narrow streets and small timber houses. With the ethno-religious diversity embedded to this picture, the city had a complex and fragile character. Numerous fires causing massive destructions raised a need for precautions. Several orders related to construction systems, building height, size of building elements like eaves and projections were issued. On the other hand, the fact that urban constituents like ownership were not defined clearly in the modern sense made public dispute very common. Apart from the complexity of the built environment, most of the conflicts arose from the social structure of Istanbul which was comprised of various ethno-religious groups. There was a clear distinction of Muslims and non-Muslims in the urban realm as they had different building regulations, until the issuing of the Tanzimat Firman.The regulations of the 18th century was based on cases, rather than being comprehensive generalized rules for the urban fabric and thus had a more proscriptive nature rather than prescriptive.