TY - CPAPER KW - Appropriate building materials KW - Building types KW - Buildings KW - Byproducts KW - Hammām KW - Heating system KW - Islamic city KW - Lessons of sustainability KW - Possible futures KW - Public bath KW - Small industries KW - Social interactions KW - Sustainable development KW - Thermal comfort KW - Urban dwellers KW - Urban fabrics KW - Water heating KW - Water management KW - Water recycling AU - M. Sibley AB - The public bath, or hammām, is a building type which has been integral to the urban fabric of Islamic cities. Whereas other building types have attracted much attention and research in the past, studies of hammām buildings have remained scarce and far apart. Based on surveys carried by the author on the historic public baths of Damascus and Fez, this paper highlights the characteristics of this building type as a sustainable urban facility which not only promotes cleanliness and health of the urban dwellers but also social interaction and a support for a rich intangible heritage. The paper also highlights the lessons that this building type provides in terms of thermal comfort, under-floor heating system, water heating and management and recycling of byproducts from local small industries. The paper then discusses possible future adaptive re-use of this building type in the light of Sustainable Development Agenda. C2 - PLEA - Int. Conf. Passive Low Energy Archit., Conf. Proc. N1 - Journal Abbreviation: PLEA - Int. Conf. Passive Low Energy Archit., Conf. Proc. N2 - The public bath, or hammām, is a building type which has been integral to the urban fabric of Islamic cities. Whereas other building types have attracted much attention and research in the past, studies of hammām buildings have remained scarce and far apart. Based on surveys carried by the author on the historic public baths of Damascus and Fez, this paper highlights the characteristics of this building type as a sustainable urban facility which not only promotes cleanliness and health of the urban dwellers but also social interaction and a support for a rich intangible heritage. The paper also highlights the lessons that this building type provides in terms of thermal comfort, under-floor heating system, water heating and management and recycling of byproducts from local small industries. The paper then discusses possible future adaptive re-use of this building type in the light of Sustainable Development Agenda. EP - I81—I86 TI - The historic Hammāms of Damascus and Fez: Lessons of sustainability and future developments UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84865790011&partnerID=40&md5=ff55dd1095f677930f43e5e64cc4842f ER -