Tuesday, 17 May 2016

EXP3 Week1- Mash up



        Theory
Connection, Repetition,  Urban Context
Architecture is the physical language of city and community building. Architecture Connected expands what is possible with people, architecture and technology. The spaces we design encourage social interaction and collaboration, inviting people to interact with each other in innovative and meaningful ways. Architecture projects need to be perceived as part of implementing an urban design project which entails gathering insights into urban fabric and how people use urban spaces. Connected architecture engage students in the classroom and around the world. Body gestures and voice commands enhance communication and presentation tools, increasing efficiency, collaboration and interaction.  The role of a Designer is to work on many scales, thoughtfully designing public places and spaces, to build on the unique local character and the best qualities of the forms inherent in that geographic region. The orderly repetition or regular alternation of optical similarities or equalities dictates the rhythm of the plastic organization.It was found that the structural resemblance dominates these differences. Repetition in any form of rhythm—as much in music as in architecture—is an extremely simple principle of composition which tends to give a sense of coherence.“Symmetry, or the use of repeated and balanced forms, is essential. Where glass appears on the one side, there must be a glass on the other, of the same dimensions and in a frame of the same shape.”




ARCHITECTURE AND CONTEXT, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo College of Architecture & Environmental Design Prof. Sharad Atre’, FIFTH YEAR . ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN & THESIS (assess on 15th May, 2016)
http://www.calpoly.edu/~arch/program/fifthyr/atre.pdf


Architecture connected, RATIO Architects and Ideum, 2014 
http://architectureconnected.com/


Repetition-Compulsion: World-Historical Rhythms in Architecture, Ross Wolfe, April 2014, Vol.54

http://www.e-flux.com/journal/repetition-compulsion-world-historical-rhythms-in-architecture/

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