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Journal : MODUL

IMPLEMENTING MIXED LAND USE ROOTING JANE JACOBS’ CONCEPT OF DIVERSITY IN URBAN SUSTAINABILITY bramiana, chely novia; Widiastuti, Ratih; Harsritanto, Bangun IR
MODUL Vol 17, No 1 (2017): MODUL vol 17 nomor 1 tahun 2017 (8 articles)
Publisher : architecture department, Engineering faculty, Universitas Diponegoro

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (150.076 KB) | DOI: 10.14710/mdl.17.1.2017.27-35

Abstract

nowadays, sustainability has become an important issue in any development project, including area development. Thishappen because the area development requires space, in this case land. As people developing land, it damages theenvironment. It means there will be less balance between built environment and natural environment. This calls forconcern in urban sustainability. One of the ways to restore the balance is to reduce as much land as possible to be builtby maximizing the space. This paper will explore the multiple space use in terms of mixed-use development in differentlevel and also assess mixed land use implementation, which include the concept of diversity in urban sustainability
NAVIGATING TRANSITIONS IN GREEN ARCHITECTURE: A MULTI-LEVEL PERSPECTIVE ON PHOTOBIOREACTOR-INTEGRATED FAÇADES IN INDONESIA Bramiana, Chely Novia; Setyawan, Budi; Ismail, Muhammad Azzam; Entrop, Alexis Gerardus; Sukawi, Sukawi
MODUL Vol 25, No 2 (2025): MODUL vol 25 nomor 2 tahun 2025 (5 articles)
Publisher : architecture department, Engineering faculty, Universitas Diponegoro

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.14710/mdl.25.2.2025.79-87

Abstract

In tropical countries like Indonesia, architectural design faces the pressing challenge of mitigating excessive heat, humidity, and solar exposure, yet many buildings continue to adopt imported, non-contextual design models. This study explores the implementation and transitional trajectory of a novel microalgae-based photobioreactor (PBR) window façade—an innovation that integrates biological systems into building envelopes for thermal shading, light modulation, and ecological performance. Using the Multi-Level Perspective (MLP) framework, this research examines the interplay between niche experimentation, regime-level constraints, and landscape drivers shaping the adoption of green building technologies in Indonesia. The PBR façade, developed through a university–industry collaboration and installed in Semarang, demonstrates how architectural innovation can evolve through iterative learning, cross-sector collaboration, and real-environment testing. However, its broader uptake is constrained by entrenched design norms, lack of regulatory standards, and limited institutional mechanisms for certification. Landscape pressures such as ESG imperatives and climate adaptation goals offer promising opportunities, but systemic change requires alignment across policy, professional practice, and cultural narratives. The study contributes a process-oriented roadmap for embedding biologically integrated façades into the sustainability transition of tropical urban architecture.