Abstract
This article considers the Turkish State’s use of the built environment to mould behaviour and how local practices modify such architectonic command sequences. Specifically, the Turkish Sugar Corporation from its inception to the present day is analysed, through the prism of the architecture of factory compounds. Through the fourfold structure of ‘form’, ‘practice’, ‘building’ and ‘setting’, the changing relationship between Republican centralist ideology and local practice is monitored. Local forms of architecture are analysed to suggest not only their practical appropriateness, but also as alternatives to the common equation of body and house.
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