Tom: This post resolves many of my concerns. Thanks for posting this quickly.
The programming diagram looks quite useful. I think you might need to diagram something at an intermediate scale to closer than the aerial, bigger than the image of the immediate building to get a better idea of context: existing/new building.
I'm glad that you are going to explore the relationship between architecture form vs natural landforms. I do think by doing diagrams(as you are doing it) you will surpirse that you will encounter different architectural language that you've never thought about it before. It is a part brain to process to absorbs the information given, translated into more personal.
This book might interest with your study! http://www.amazon.com/Studies-Tectonic-Culture-Construction-Architecture/dp/0262061732/ref=si3_rdr_bb_product
4 comments:
Tom: This post resolves many of my concerns. Thanks for posting this quickly.
The programming diagram looks quite useful. I think you might need to diagram something at an intermediate scale to closer than the aerial, bigger than the image of the immediate building to get a better idea of context: existing/new building.
This is useful. Thanks!
Tom,
I'm glad that you are going to explore the relationship between architecture form vs natural landforms.
I do think by doing diagrams(as you are doing it) you will surpirse that you will encounter different architectural language that you've never thought about it before.
It is a part brain to process to absorbs the information given, translated into more personal.
Tom,
This book might interest with your study!
http://www.amazon.com/Studies-Tectonic-Culture-Construction-Architecture/dp/0262061732/ref=si3_rdr_bb_product
sorry
go to amazon.com
search for this book:
Studies in Tectonic Culture: The Poetics of Construction in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Architecture (Hardcover)
Post a Comment