RHYTHM ANKARA: A VISION FOR FUTURE URBAN LIFE
Contemporary cities are defined not solely by physical density but also by the complexity shaped through social transitions, everyday movements, and layered cultural traces. Rhythm Ankara emerges as an architectural proposal that seeks to engage with and respond to this complexity. Rather than reproducing conventional clusters of buildings, the project interprets them as part of a broader urban interface between the built environment and urban life. The changing notion of public space, shaped by global dynamics such as pandemics, migration, and digitalization, informs the conceptual framework of the project in the context of Ankara. In response to modes of urban interaction increasingly confined to commercial venues, displaced into virtual platforms, or rendered socially fragile, Rhythm Ankara offers a design approach that reconsiders and reshapes the relationship between architecture and the city.
The spatial strategy is organized around a highline pedestrian spine that links diverse functions situated at different elevations. This elevated axis facilitates circulation and simultaneously generates a continuous public terrain. While buildings are arranged along this spine, architectural focus shifts toward the intermediate spaces that allow for collective engagement. The integration of residential, commercial, office, hotel, and serviced apartment uses within a unified system aims to move beyond the traditional block-parcel logic, proposing a sectional interpretation of the urban fabric. The experience of public space is not limited to designated plazas but extends through ramps, overhangs, transitional areas, and level shifts. This spatial vision is realized through four urban plazas: Arcade Square, Sunken Plaza, City Square, and Office Plaza. Varying in scale and function, these spaces together form a layered, porous, and contemporary public landscape. Designed to bring together a wide range of users including city residents, office employees, visitors, and participants in cultural activities, these plazas offer spatial responses that reflect the shared dynamics of urban daily life. Arcade Square supports circulation through its semi-open layout, allows vehicular access, and connects the Ankara-Konya Highway to Tekstilciler Street. Sunken Plaza organizes pedestrian flows across different levels and serves as both a visual anchor and spatial connector. City Square accommodates a performing arts center and amphitheater, reinforcing public memory through cultural presence. Office Plaza, smaller in scale, is embedded in the daily flow of office users and provides a setting for informal interaction and pause. These plazas function not merely as spatial boundaries but as architectural elements that enable various forms of civic interaction.
Rhythm Ankara explores the relationship between the built environment and urban experience not only through architectural objects but also through the connective spaces between them. At a time when public space becomes increasingly fragmented and private life turns inward, the project proposes accessible, open, and integrated environments. It accommodates both inward-facing user needs and outward-oriented social interaction, supporting the spatial conditions necessary for shared urban life. In this context, Rhythm Ankara employs architecture as a tool that generates rhythm for the city, pace for its inhabitants, and a spatial narrative for its visitors, defined not solely by form but by interaction and transformation.