Notes: Lecture 3
“Bases for the Geometry of Building”
Reading: Nature and the Idea of a
Man-Made World, (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1995),
p. 46 – 69.
An alternative idea of wild nature as a
source of human existence is gaining a public hearing. This idea
questions the long-entrenched, civilized-primitive dichotomy, a
bifurcation grounded in an assumption that the human story lies in our
triumph over a hostile nature. The idea of nature as the source
of human existence, rather than a mere re-source to fuel the economy,
is the outcome of the second scientific revolution, initiated in the
nineteenth century by Charles Darwin and Rudolf Clausis.
—Max Oelschlaeger, The Idea of Wilderness
(Yale University Press, 1991), p. 1
The Geometry of Dwelling
- Most ancient dwellings and settlements were laid out on an
orthogonal matrix. Why is this? Nature doesn’t organize things
along orthogonal lines, and it would seem that nature must have been
ancient man’s primary paradigm (a natural default program). So
why foursquare geometry? (Nature..., p. 50)
We perceive space through the physiology of our
bodies. Because we have two sides and a back and front,
foursquare geometry becomes our reference to the world.
Nature..., p. 50, 125.
Images by Norman Crowe, courtesy of MIT Press
- The obvious answer has to do with how we perceive
space. We have a front, back, and two sides and we perceive the
world around us relative to that. Further, we stand upright and
so are aware of a vertical axis perpendicular to the normative surface
of the earth. Gravity.
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Four representations of the town or
city: Clockwise, from upper left, Early
Chinese ideogram for “village,” 1300-612 BC; Assyrian bas-relief
showing scenes of city life, c. 1600 BC; Egyptian hieroglyph for
“city,” 3110-2884 BC; Icelandic drawing of the “heavenly city of
Jerusalem,” 13th century AD.
Images by Norman Crowe courtesy of MIT Press
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- Many, if not most, early cities were laid out in a foursquare
pattern. The Roman castrum is an often cited example,
with its cardo and decumanus. (Nature..., p. 52)
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The bi-lateral symmetry of the human body
is responsible in large part for how we perceive the world around
us
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Left, a dolmen provides shelter that is
related to the body; a nomad’s canopy provides a dignified presence in
a featureless landscape; standing on the axis of a great temple lends
stature to the moment. Above right, a campfire’s light fills a
dome of space in the darkness. —Nature …, p. 53.
Images by Norman Crowe courtesy of MIT Press
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- Perception of our position in the landscape is innate. It
arises from a physiological awareness that evolved to ensure our
survival in nature. Thus, the way we build, how we configure
architecture, is in response to these natural, evolved
proclivities.
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Both the sheltering niche of a bay window and its
position midway between floors off a stair landing contribute a sense
of comfort and security.
—Nature …, p. 57
Image by Norman Crowe courtesy of MIT Press
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- We may choose a position within a complex architectural enclosure
that suits our spatial needs in relation to intentions. Here, a
young woman (from a TV advertisement for tissues) has a cold, feels
vulnerable, and has positioned herself where she is neither inside nor
out, but can observe both; and most importantly, has chosen a space
suited to her body-related perception, her own niche.
The Geometry of Building
- Materials of construction either come from nature directly, as in
the case of stone and wood, or indirectly, as in the case of brick or
steel which require heat and other industrial processes to
create. Stages of processing that take a material farther and
farther from its natural origin may be seen particularly well in timber
construction: a building may be built of sticks and logs, or of
refined, sawn lumber. The level of processing of materials, or
lack of it, affects our awareness of the origin of the materials in
nature.


Evolution of Masonry Construction
-Nature..., p. 61
Images by Norman Crowe courtesy of MIT Press
- Tectonics refers to the geometry of architectural structure—not
just the structure that holds up a building such as columns and beams,
but the order of a building’s elements as well (windows and other
openings, roof, walls, surfaces and so forth, as well as a poetic
expression of the structure latent within).
- Techniques of putting materials together to form walls, roofs, and
the like are most easily accomplished by means of a geometric
order. There are two primary systems of building, trabeation and
bearing wall construction. Trabeation arose from timber
construction and bearing wall construction from stone. In East
Asia trabeation evolved using timber to the fullest most refined
extent, while in the West, masonry construction evolved. The two
systems produce buildings of two very different characters, and
therefore participate in two very different dialectical relationships
with the civilizations with which each evolved.
- Behavioral patterns and deeply rooted customs of a culture are
attuned to the environment in which that culture evolved. For
instance, Japanese customs of ritualized privacy and more formalized
personal interactions between individuals contrasts with comparatively
casual counterparts in the West. One may be seen to have evolved
within buildings of essentially open and flowing space, while the other
in compartmentalized and easily privatized interiors, both visually and
audibly. (Nature …, p. 64–68)
- It is safe to say that new construction that does not respect
deeply embedded traditions will yield unpredictable results over the
long term with respect to interactions with normative social
patterns. Examples may be found among variations in population
densities and building interior configurations that do not respect
long-standing custom. For instance, a city newly overcrowded by
refugees, or newly standardized housing for the urban poor that is of a
form and type they are unaccustomed to such as “project housing” of
mid-rise slabs set back from the street, etc.
Discussion Session
1a. If indeed, “new construction that does not respect deeply
imbedded traditions may yield unpredictable results in terms of
interactions with normative social patterns,” do you know of some
examples of this from your own experience?
1b. Assuming the foregoing quotation to be true, how may
innovation in architecture and urbanism take place without risking
unpredictable results that negate the advantages gained from
innovation?
2. Ordering Principles: How may ordering principles help to put
us in touch with environmental priorities today?
(Answer either 1 or 2)
Citation: administrator. (2007, October 25). Lecture 3. Retrieved November 21, 2008, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/architecture/course.2006-05-05.1875719562/lecture-3.
Copyright 2008,
by the Contributing Authors.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons License.