Lecture 3

Notes: Lecture 3: “Bases for the Geometry of Building”

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

 

L3 - City Symbols

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

 

 

L3 - Shelters

The bi-lateral symmetry of the human body is responsible in large part for how we perceive the world around us

L3 - Campfire

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

 

 

L3 - Woman in niche

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

 

The Geometry of Building

 

L3 - Masonry Evolution 1

L3 - Masonry Evolution 2

Evolution of Masonry Construction
-Nature..., p. 61

Images by Norman Crowe courtesy of MIT Press

 

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. Creative Commons License