PROPERTIES & SHAPES
description
Transcript of PROPERTIES & SHAPES
PROPERTIES & SHAPES
Nicole Garcia 10-10271Gustavo Cadenas 11-10138
CONTENTS
• Shapes:o Platonic Shapeso Non-Platonic Shapes• in Buildings and
Structures?
• Properties:• Rhythm• Silhouette • Symbol
• Conclusion
• Introduction:
o Form
LE CORBUSIER
“Architecture is the learned game, correct and magnificent, of forms assembled in the light.”
• refers to the shape or configuration of a building
• Opposite: space reciprocal relationship is essential (provide internal sheltered space for human occupation)
• one of the primary elements of architecture.
• the placement in relation to its immediate site and neighboring buildings
• exterior space can be defined
• considerations in order to analyze or design an architectural form: shape, mass / size, scale, proportion, rhythm, articulation, texture, color, and light.
What does form mean?
• configuration of surfaces and edges of a two- or three-dimensional object
• perceived by contour or silhouette, rather than by detail.
• Primary shapes, the circle, triangle, and square generate volumes known as "platonic solids.”
What is a shape?
Platonic solidsCircle Sphere & cylinder
Triangle
Square forms
Cube
Cone & Pyramid
Non-platonic forms
• Non-platonic forms Volumetric shapes contain both solids and voids, or exteriors and interiors.
• Additive and subtractive process
Can you find shapes in Buildings and Structures?
• Combinations establish the basis for most architectural shapes and forms.
Parthenon – Golden SectionJapanese Gallery House -Shigeru Fuse Architects
In Structure
Eastern Bridge, Columbia River, Oregon
Properties
Any architectural shape has 3 properties : rhythm, silhouette and symbol.
The rhythm property indicates the range of complexity
The silhouette property is that of the outer form
The symbol property concerns to the design of the openings
WINSTON CHURCHILL
“We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us”
- http://www.heldermann-verlag.de/jgg/jgg01_05/jgg0503.pdf
- http://www.math-kitecture.com/geometry.htm
- http://www.wbdg.org/resources/form.php - http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/unit
s/1983/1/83.01.07.x.html
- http://www.mississippiheritage.com/curriculum/MHT%20Curriculum%20_%2014%20Exercise%206.pdf
References