This website uses cookies

Royal Danish Academy – Architecture, Design, Conservation uses cookies to create a better user experience, to interact with social platforms and for anonymised statistics of traffic on our website.

Social media cookies enable us to interact with well-known social media platforms and content. This may be for statistical or marketing reasons.
Neccesary to display YouTube videos
Neccesary to display Vimeo videos
Preference cookies enable a website to remember information that changes the way the website behaves or looks, like your preferred language or the region that you are in.
Is used for UI states

IBridge

Author
Solmaz Sadeghi
Collaborators
PETER THULE KRISTENSEN, Royal danish academy - CENTER FOR INTERIOR STUDIES; CENTER FOR PRIVACY STUDIES (UCPH); CENTER FOR EARLY MODERN EXCHANGES (UCL LONDON); AND GTA (ETH ZURICH).
Funding
EUROPEAN UNION’S HORIZON 2020 RESEARCH AND INNOVATION PROGRAMME (MARIE SKLODOWSKA-CURIE FELLOWSHIP)

The bridge is paradoxical, connecting and separating parts of the city depending on power dynamics. While contemporary bridges have undergone substantial transformations from their predecessors, but remain viewed with inherent distrust, necessitating historical criticism.

The IBridge project examines early modern inhabitable bridges, walled-off paths, and gated communities to reveal public privacy beyond the privatization of public paths during the transitional age of alcoves. With the collaboration of partners, IBridge analyzes Old London Bridge and the Pont de Notre Dame in Paris, at the intersection of architecture and public policy, to understand how privacy performs in the public realm.

IBridge will analyze political agents and architectural data to unfold insights that may benefit future bridges and public comfort. The interdisciplinary approach involves an ongoing exchange with historical research on socio-political, spatial, and constructional aspects of bridges at collaborative centers.

1/2
The Alcove, Old London Bridge, 1762-1832 © Solmaz Sadeghi
The Alcove, Old London Bridge, 1762-1832 © Solmaz Sadeghi

About Solmaz Sadeghi
She is a Marie Curie fellow at the Royal Danish Academy and ETH Zurich, in the research field of architectural construction and the city. She holds M.Arch., Ph.D. from Politecnico di Milano, where her thesis was on the evolution of the civic wall in the Tectonic Culture since 1850. As an architect and urbanist, she has collaborated with studios in Milan, Tehran, and Porto, and her works have been presented at Utzon Center, Milan Triennale, and Oslo Triennale. 

Solmaz is a visiting scholar at the Center for Privacy Studies (UCPH) and the Center for Early Modern Exchanges (UCL), teaching at the master programs of Complex Construction at Politecnico di Milano since 2017 and currently at the Spatial Design at the Royal Danish Academy. Her research interests are architectural elements, drawing and construction, urban interiors, public and private territories, architectural politics and criticism.