Browsing by Author "Buldan, Ece"
Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Book Part A Just Co-City(TU Delft, 2025) Eylem Keskin; Suheda Kose; Zeynep Özge Yalçın; Aysu Gürman; Ece Buldan; Keskin, Eylem; Köse, Süheda; Yalçın, Zeynep Özge; Buldan, Ece; Gürman, Aysu[No abstract available]Article Mekânsallığın Gelecek Gelişmelerinin Simülasyonu Olarak Karantina(2022) ECE BULDAN; Buldan, EceBilgi çağında mekânın üretimi fiziksel ve dijital olarak iç içe geçmiş iki katmandan oluşmaktadır. Bu iki katmandan birinin diğerini sosyabilite tarihsellik ve mekânsallık olarak baskılaması değişkenlik gösterse de genel yönelim dijital mekânlara doğru olmuştur. Bu çalışma COVID-19 pandemisi sürecinde mekânsallaşmanın dönüşümünü iki adım olarak ele almıştır. Bunlardan birincisi dış mekândan iç mekâna geçiş diğeri ise gerçek hayattan sanal hayata geçiştir. Bu amaç doğrultusunda karantina sürecinde evden çalışanların sosyal medya hesapları gözlemlenerek genel bir bilgi oluşturulmuştur. Ardından arşiv taraması yöntemiyle insanların en çok kullandıkları etiketler araştırılmış ve bu veriler Google Trends grafikleriyle desteklenmiştir. Google’da araştırılma oranı artış gösteren etiketlere ve gözlemlere bağlı olarak süreçler takip edilmiştir. Elde edilen veriler Manuel Castells’in akımların mekânı ve yerlerin mekânı ile Paul Virilio’nun medyadaki hız teorileriyle değişim gösteren mekânın üretimi çerçevesinde değerlendirilmiştir. Sonuçlar toplumun dış mekândan iç mekâna geçişinin birkaç adaptasyon evresine sahip olduğunu ve sonrasında da akımlar mekânına en dâhil olunan zamanda bile yerlerin mekânına ihtiyaç duyulduğunu göstermektedir.Article Citation - Scopus: 1Otherness Belonging and Production of Space: The Case of Amenity Migration in Fethiye Türkiye(Chulalongkorn University - Faculty of Architecture, 2024) Ece Buldan; Buldan, EceThe article delves into the intricate dynamics of amenity migration and rural gentrification investigating the challenges that arise when residents and newcomers encounter. Amenity migration which occurs when individuals relocate to an area in search of desirable features often leads to rural gentrification. This process involves economic and social changes brought about by the arrival of wealthier residents. While amenity migration can bring economic advantages it also presents difficulties such as displacement and cultural transformations within the community. The study recognizes the concept of "otherness" is introduced to shed light on potential cultural and social conflicts between amenity migrants and the existing community. With a specific focus on British immigrants in Fethiye Türkiye the research aims to unravel how these immigrants establish connections with the place. It explores whether they identify themselves as locals or tourists and examines their sense of belonging within the spatial context. In order to comprehend the relational generation of distinctiveness based on person and place attributes in connection with relevant entities the decision-tree method is employed. Moreover an ANOVA matrix is used to recognize the most effective decision mechanisms among spatial and demographic attributes. © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Review The Rural Dimension of Gentrification: Tourism- Agriculture- and Industry(KARE PUBL, 2025) Ece Buldan; Tonguc Akis; Buldan, Ece; Akis, TongucRural gentrification characterized by land privatization and displacement intensified in the 1990s with state-driven interventions further integrating into the system. Despite historical references gentrification is generalized affecting rural spaces beyond city centers. This particular development is articulated by focusing on the works concentrating on urban and rural bases. In the contemporary discourse rural spaces are portrayed as hybrids between industrial urban and natural rural settings with leisure and tourism increasingly shaping their consumption without excluding the effects of capital flow. In the Global South countries industrialization alongside tourism facilities contributes to rural gentrification. These processes predominantly manifest in the service and production sectors blurring the distinction between urban and rural spaces and presenting challenges for research and conceptualization. Addressing this gap this study aims to contextualize the blurred urban-rural situation through a review of contemporary spatial issues with a theoretical contribution. By examining transformation processes in tourism industry and agriculture it seeks to offer discussions on the production of rural space. Employing a literature review and qualitative research on significant examples this study will explore rural gentrification via new demographic data within the frameworks of urban and rural studies providing insights into its implications and practices. Accordingly the effects of new capital flow through the rural space will be explored.Article Citation - WoS: 1The taste for Dériving in Memory Hunt: The potentials of situatedness in game-based learning in the case of İzmir Kültürpark(INTELLECT LTD, 2025) Ahenk Yilmaz; Ece Buldan; Buldan, Ece; Yılmaz, AhenkThis article focuses on the role of situatedness through the concept of d & eacute,rive game-based learning to increase one's awareness regarding the memory embedded in built environment. A newly designed game Memory Hunt based on the system and rules of Treasure Hunt is utilized with the aim of increasing the architecture students' awareness regarding the sites of memory in the case of & Idot,zmir K & uuml,lt & uuml,rpark. During the game students detach from their existing pattern and begin to experience the space from a different perspective. The use of the d & eacute,rive theory of Situationist International provides a valuable framework for the study in analysing survey results of the students' changing memory of the selected site before after the game. The results of the research indicate that the game not only enriches participants' perspectives on the chosen locations and increases their awareness regarding the collective memory of urban space but also makes them create their unique psychogeographical maps.

