Sunday, 3 May 2015

THREE MARKERS - "Electroliquid Aggregation"

By combining two of the individual markers, a combination or "Electroliquid Aggregation" of concepts is produced.

"The space shaped by this movement of architecture will transform its surroundings"

"Doing more with less to create openness as well as privacy"

"The simple intersection between the rational and poetic reveal a complex architecture"


PARALLEL PROJECTIONS

Exploring the markers through parallel projections, and the connections between pairs of axonometrics




My three final chosen markers





AXONOMETRICS

My first set of axonometrics weren't really up to par, I wasn't super inspired by this experiment..



This last one on the left is my favourite, as I began to take inspiration from Kundig's work.
 After talking with James I looked more closely at Kundig's work and ideas to create more interesting markers, with ideas coming from the class concepts.




Thursday, 23 April 2015

ARCHITECTURAL CONCEPTS

Buckminster Fuller & Olson Kundig
CONCEPTS

Buckminster Fuller;
[1] There is nothing in a caterpillar that tells you its going to be a butterfly
[2] Love is a metaphysical gravity
[3] Doing more and more with less and less until you can do everything with nothing
[4] Simplicity is the true measure of complexity
[5] Reorganising the environment for prosperity
[6] Nature is trying very hard to make us succeed, but nature does not depend on us

Olson Kundig;
[1] Architecture is the intersection between the poetic and the rational
[2] Contradictory objectives - open to environment yet closed for privacy
[3] A space is not constrained by area inside a building, a space is shaped by it
[4] Architecture is a movement and it transforms its surroundings
[5] Homes are primitive places
[6] Architecture must be as intimate as a family member

Wednesday, 22 April 2015

WEEK 1





Concept: Simplicity is the true measure of complexity (Buckminster Fuller)

Thursday, 2 April 2015

DETAILS, when they are successful, are not mere decoration. They do not distract or entertain. They lead to an understanding of the whole of which they are an inherent point.
      - Peter Zumthor, Thinking Architecture