Palazzolo, Joseph Robert2024-05-162024-05-162024-05-15vt_gsexam:40723https://hdl.handle.net/10919/118993War is a perpetual shadow cast over human history. It brings forth unparalleled destruction, leaving behind a wake of devastation that scars both the land and its people. Its relentless march leaves cities in ruins, families torn, landscapes transformed and the built environment obliterated. War affects an individual, a community and a country's identity. Destruction both leaves a memory and shapes it. The process of rebuilding raises complex questions: How do we rebuild after that has which been destroyed? What should be rebuilt? Is rebuilding necessary? There are no easy answers and the choices made will reverberate through generations, influencing what endures in collective memory and what is forgotten. This thesis aims to explore the relationship between memory, destruction and architecture.ETDenIn CopyrightArchitectureWarMemoryRebuildDestructionMemorialArchitecture At War: Rebuilding After DestructionThesis