| dc.description.abstract | Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh and one of the  most crowded cities on earth, is almost three  times as dense as Manhattan. The city’s edge is  constantly evolving to respond to the never-ending needs. In this thesis, I am interested in ap plying lessons from the old part of Dhaka to new  developments amid urbanization by questioning  the unrestrained commitment to western urban  design principles in a city like Dhaka from South  Asia. In this contemporary global context of constant ly changing technological, socio-economical, and  political paradigms, traditional neighborhoods in  different cities in South Asia are constantly creat ing room for change. However, the lacking sense  of belonging and social integrity in contemporary  city design makes the new neighborhoods vul nerable and isolated and this creates an invisible  social void. Le Corbusier, one of the pioneers of  modern city design, completely ignored the diver sity that must be kept in mind while designing a  city in South Asia. When we follow Corbusian city  planning, we mostly forget about the coexistence  of diverse demographics in our traditional cities.  Without these cultural spaces, the people living in  the cities loses the sense of belonging. This the sis is about addressing those social and cultural  voids in a city like Dhaka and bringing back the  cultural dynamics in the urban design by building  critical references from different traditional and  new neighborhoods. In this thesis, I will consider Jane Jacobs’s theo ries in urban space and how her criticism of the  failings of modernist planning theories in her  book “The Death & Life of Great American Cities”.  Then, I will define the notion of “Social Void” and  why it is necessary to address it now. Through dif ferent case studies from the old Dhaka, I will first  try to find all the traces of diverse coexisting de mographics. The analysis of the findings in those traditional spaces will include the story  of its street, people, culture, sense of be longing, and socio-economic and political  contexts. Secondly, I will study different  neighborhoods of newly developed Dhaka  and try to find out, how some of them lost  their identity while following the western  city design pattern and how some of those  neighborhoods are constantly trying to  get back to their organic growing pattern  of the city. Last, I will investigate multiple  cultural and social spaces in a neighborhood in the new Dhaka and propose where  and how these cultural values should be  integrated into the design of a city. These  solutions can play a crucial role in designing a new kind of communal neighborhood  space where its inhabitants will have the  ability to grow and have strong social  integrity. This thesis will create room to question  Modern City Planning and how we as  architects or urban designers should look  at the development of a new city planning  and its neighborhood in the context of the  Global South. | en_US |