perception of space (architecture interior) plz help?
does any1 know any diagrams or any websites with well explained diagrams with quotations about perception of space in architecture interior more specific about space's elements, the point, the line, the surface and volume, the light, color, intervalles, newton theory, effect proxemic,vertical and horizontal, when vertical domines (when we build a house), how the building looks like its in the ground or on it.. and finally human scale and sensitive scale
Public Comments
- The arrangement, perception, function, and proper utilization of interior space is the primary focus of the entire profession of architecture. You are essentially asking to encapsulate the entire field of artitecture into a paragraph which is obviously not possible. The Wikipedia article below is good place to start to get some of the ideas, terminolgy, etc. If you are asking how to show a client what a building might look like when it is still in the conceptual planning stages, I would strongly suggest downloading Sketchup3D from the Google website. If you watch the video tutorials and get good at this FREE program, you will have an amazing tool at your fingertips to do rough architectural sketches.
- welcome to my world. your question requieres 4 years of continuous architecture school study and even then you still can't have a definite answer for it, but i can send you towards a project that conceptualy answers your question in a simple form. the seatle public library by rem koolhas was designed and built according to diagramatic surfaces and volume arranged in a way to maintain boundary and identity of each function seperatly. furthermore, it's interior design and interior colors indicate my preview statement while being used, so a person notices the nature of space while circulating in it. to make a long story short the seatle public was designed according to its program diagram that was simplefied in order to answer the demands required by the building to answer. http://www.arcspace.com/architects/koolhaas/Seattle/ http://mitpress.mit.edu/journals/pdf/jaed_57_1_5_0.pdf
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