Thursday, 30 December 2010
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
Monday, 15 November 2010
Sunday, 7 November 2010
Sunday, 24 October 2010
T9 1 minute presentation
Monday, 11 October 2010
T2 Manifesto #1
"The neatness of architecture is its seduction; it defines, excludes, limits, separates from the ‘rest‘- but it also consumes. It exploits and exhausts the potentials that can be generated finally only by urbanism, and that only the specific imagination of urbanism can invent and renew."
Rem Koolhaas "Whatever Happened to Urbanism" in SMLXL
I grew up in
This year I am interested in exploring:
“Uniformity is not simply an inherent by-product of machine production: it results from centralizing design control.”
Habraken, The Structure of the Ordinary, p 273
Strategies and processes that increase the number of actors directly involved in the creation of the built environment
The interface between ‘top-down’ and ‘bottom-up’ development
“A typological point of departure has always been the basic assumption in almost all building. As such it has invariably oscillated between the universality of civilization on the one hand, and the rootedness of culture on the other.”
Frampton. K, “Luogo, Forma Identita Cultrale”. Domus 673 (1986) p 20.
The potential of proscriptive (rather than prescriptive) rules and spatial ranges to create conditions of flexibility, responsiveness and innovation
Incremental development (on all scales) where stages of growth are not stages of completion. All instances, small and large, represent integral wholes
Harnessing the implicit knowledge of citizens to structure urban environment and establish the context and limits of design
Ways of finding common ground between disparate urban forms
T1 Glossary #1
Planning
The administrative system of the built environment
Spatial Planning
The manipulation of space in order to structure social interaction
Design
"Architecture concretizes existential space.” Norberg-Schulz
The creation of a (material) object – identifiable and separate
Urban Design
The creation of potential and possibilities in cities
"Cityness
Cities are our critical starting ground and ongoing territory. Cityness is hereby a form of being together and it is expressed in an interrelated matrix of cultural, social, spatial, environmental and time-based layers. By sharing space and spatial habit, cityness is more than the sum of its parts.
Tectonic
Is the understanding of physical forces that have given rise to cities, a constructed and material reality.
Tolerance
To be able to link, connect, and suture the parts together. The notion of tolerance is a measure of the articulation of physical details in architecture, as well as programmatically, and in terms of the degree of fit of the architectural proposition into an existing urban context. Tolerance is both a question of material; of technical precision and connected to political and social structures at a wider level.
Process
Refers to both, the practice of urban design and the inherent time-based processes of the build environment. The way of doing things has a relationship with what we do and produce. Cities, human environments and subsequently urban designs are subject to different temporal modes and change.
Participation
To have a share or to take part in a range of scales. It enables integrative social and spatial processes and addresses research, design, planning, decision making, building, inhabitation and management.”