Saturday 19 December 2015

‘Metropolis: The city as text’ by Donald J


Friday 4 December 2015

 ‘Metropolis: The city as text’ in Bocock, Robert and Kenneth Thompson 1992 Social and cultural forms of modernity by Donald J

This book was introduced by me in the classroom. I was presenting the methodology case studies within the book.
The research of categories and images adequate to the metropolis is evident not only in government reports and social scientific analysis but also in literature and artistic conventions and in the perceptions and practices of everyday life.

The first chapter of the book starts with a description of Charles Dickens novel Bleak House (1853).
I choose to read a part the book to my colleagues as a way of interaction with them and gain their attention. It was a method that none of my colleagues used from previous presentations and I thought it would be interesting to try. I pick from the text the description of London which Dickens so cleverly as a story telling chooses to make the reader think of which city-metropolis might be describing according to the description. First, I wanted to test whether the technique of ‘story telling’ description advanced by Dickens worked for people who are not familiar with either the novels of Dickens or London and secondly it was worthy to hear the possible answers.

The result of this exercise was not unexpected as few find the correct answer although were a few that couldn’t follow my reading due to books language and reading speed. The person who found that the city that is been describing in the book was London was helped by the atmosphere that the author was giving as a clue and the weather of the day that is been describing. However, it worth it to try this method as everybody was very skeptical on what to answer.

The reason Donald chose to start with the Bleak House and refer to Asphalt Jungle is that ‘the city’ does not only refer to a set of buildings in a particular space. – the city designates the space which is produce by the interactions, social relations of production and reproduction, practices of government, forms and media of communication.

Through different sociologists, theorists, theologists, urban planners and architects the author of the book examined a range of the concept of metropolis. This is because a metropolis is not only consist with buildings and streets but rather influence from people and other factors.  Thus he gives examples of the transformation of various cities such as Manchester, Paris and Vienna and the reason for their transformations.  Some of this important people are Michel Foucault, Sir James Kay- Shuttleworth, Friedrich Engels, Michel de Certeau, Walter Benjamin, Baron Haussmann, Charles Baudelaire, Camillo Sitter, Otto Wagner and Le Corbusier. Each one of the above people gives their analysis regarding the metropolis on the book.

What does metropolis mean?
-         The capital or chief city of a country or origin
-         A very large and busy city
Origin of the word metropolis- Late Middle English (denoting the see of a metropolitan bishop): via late Latin from Greek mētropolis 'mother state', from mētēr, mētr- 'mother' + polis 'city'.
What are the constituents of a metropolitan civilization? The role of institutions and social interactions that bind the city together for example the law, the money, trade, new technologies? 

The concept of the city and the experience of the city
The concept of the city and the experience of the city
                             city is conceptulaized
                                                                         the way that the city is experienced

In the book are explained two perspectives of the French theorist Michel de Certeau
1st Perspective:
-         identifies the ‘concept city’ embodied in ‘utopia and urbanistic discourse’
-          the discourse must start to producing ‘its own space’ and ‘pure form’
-         He comment that rational organization must repress all the physical, mental and political pollutions that would compromise it

Utopia schemes to banish these ills can thus be seen as a form of repression

2nd Perspective: This emphasises that the fact of any city is always more diverse, more messy and more active than reformers find comfortable or comprehensible.
-         The concept of the city can never get its full measure: an accurate representation would require something more like the experiential at
-         The rules and combinations of power that have no readable identity proliferate without points where one can hold them without rational transparency. They are impossible to administer. This says something important: that discourses have limits and blind spots.
This can be explained by the fact that many of the thing people got up to simply would not fit the categories: they are too unpredictable, inventive and devious for that.

He suggests that, when we walk in the city streets, we are engaged in ‘illegible improvisations’. It is like using a language, as in both cases we operate within a constraining structure: the streets and buildings of the city from the grammar.
The urban text, Donald is interested in is the opaque one inscribed by the bustling journeys of people going about their business. 

Rationality and enchantment: Paris

Haussmann was responsible for the transformation of the city, with new boulevards, parks and ‘pleasure grounds’ which provided the illusion of social equality. The practical effect, however, was to raze working-class neighbourhoods and shift the eyesores and health hazards of poverty to the suburbs. 
Napoleon III and Haussmann wanted to create a clean, light and airy city protected by policemen and night patrols. They wanted to provide trees, schools, hospitals, cemeteries, bus shelters and public urinals. The city was redesigned to allow most efficient circulation of goods, people, money and troops.
Baudelaire coined the term modernity to identify a pervasive and disturbing experience of newness. His task as an artist was to capture ‘the ephemeral, contingent newness of the present’. What become apparent in Baudelaire’s commentary is a consciousness of an aesthetic based on the resourceful negotiations of the mythical and metaphorical city.
During the second empire of Napoleon III urban phantasmagoria of the original arcades spread throughout Paris
Examples: The Grand Palais, Trocadero, Eiffel Tower
By the turn of the twentieth century, the debate about urban planning and architectural inevitably entailed aesthetic and psychological considerations, social and political ones. This argument was exemplified by the debate about the modernisation of Vienna.

The metropolis and mental life

Georg Simmel was alert to the possibilities of self-creation and sensitive to the city’s parade of impressions. He stressed the psychological impact of social existence in his definition of modernity:
The essence of modernity as such is psychologism the experiencing and interpretation of the world in terms of the reaction of our inner life and indeed as an inner world, the dissolution of fixed contents in the fluid of the soul, from which all that is substantive is filtered and whose forms are merely forms of motion. Georg Simmel
He presents the metropolis as the location of the everyday experience of modernity, as a complex, interwoven web or labyrinth of social relations. Simmel was called the first sociologist of the emotions and the senses.
The city is an imagined environment shaped by the interactions of practices, events and relationships so complex that they cannot easily be visualised. That may be why it is an environment imagined in metaphors. 

The metaphor of the city as text: has the virtue of avoiding the functionalism inherent in organic and underlines mechanical images and the interpretive aspects of both urban experience and social analysis. It makes the point that we ‘read’ the city, and make sense of a host of complex sign and signals.
The city as text is comparatively weak when comes to identifying and understanding economic and political faces. Underplaying the multi-layers and often the contradictory texture of the city and over emphasising the interpretive role at the expense of the agency of the urban experience.     

Case study methodology:
Case study research involves an in-depth study of an individual or group of individuals. Case studies often lead to testable hypotheses and allow us to study rare phenomena.  Case studies should not be used to determine cause and effect, and they have limited use for making accurate predictions. 
There are two problems with case studies

1.      Expectancy effects. Expectancy effects include the experimenter’s underlying biases that might affect the actions taken while conducting research. 

2. These biases can lead to misrepresenting participants’ descriptions.   
     Atypical individuals. Describing atypical individuals may lead to poor generalisations and detract from external validity. 
     

This approach may help to inform practice by illustrating what has worked well, what has been achieved and what have been issues or dilemmas. It is a type of research inquiry that examines a real life contemporary phenomenon. (University of Nottingham, 2016)




Friday 18 December 2015

Making it by Cris Lefteri



Friday 4 December 2015

Making it by Cris Lefteri



                                                                             Fig.1

Chris Lefteri is one of the most instrumental material experts working in his fields. He explores ways which in a product can be manufactured looking there pros and cons, speed of production, relevant materials, cost involved and the suitable production volumes.

At the seminar my colleague (Tu) who present the book ask various questions regarding difficulties we faced in model making; if we take into consideration the possible manufactural techniques when we design a building/detail and how the manufactural techniques affect the design. 

It was fun when we asked to create a quick paper model. I tried to make a roof inspired by Felix Candela’s ‘hypars’.

The examples of techniques shown in the book focused on cut from solid, thin and hollow and sheet. The examples were clearly demonstrated to make the reader understand how the technic worked and which materials were the most appropriate to used.


                                                                      Fig. 2

The trickiest question the presenter asked was ‘When you don’t know how to build/manufacture your design, will you change your design to fit the techniques you know, or you keep your design and find appropriate technique?  I was not sure if there was a right or wrong answer for the question as it the question was subjective and each design for an architect has its challenges. It could be the location of site, the size of the site or the material, prehab’s could be the manufacture technique that must be used to meet the requirement of the design. Moreover, if we have a look around us we can see several examples that consider innovated in terms of new manufacturing technique. This shows that with the technological available most designs are possible. However, sometimes architects face challenges either at the beginning or during the construction of a building. To conclude, in such case I would have keep the design and make sure that I have research all the available information to support the technical part of the design.



Reference: 
Lefteri, Chris. Making It. London: Laurence King Publishing, 2016. Print 



Figures:

Fig.1,https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/d3/b0/9a/d3b09a583afbc1c2a91a30fe92f7b652.jpg

Fig.2http://a5.files.freshnessmag.com/image/upload/c_fit,cs_srgb,dpr_1.0,q_80,w_620/MTM1OTg0Njk5NTU3NjIwMzU1.jpg


















Saturday 5 December 2015

Morpho Ecologies by Hensel, Menges and The Function of Form by Farshid Moussavi


Friday 27 November 2015

Hensel, Menges: Morpho Ecologies
The Function of Form by Farshid Moussavi

Michael Ulrich Hensel is a German architect, researcher, educator and writer
Achim Menges practice and research focuses on the development of integral design processes at the intersection of morphogenetic design computation, biomimetic engineering and computer aided manufacturing that enables a highly articulated, performative built environment. His work is based on an interdisciplinary approach in collaboration with structural engineers, computer scientists, material scientists and biologists ( Menges 2016).


‘In our view one of the central tasks of architecture is to provide opportunities for habitation through specific material and energetic interventions in the physical environment. Correlating morphogenesis and ecology we have developed a new framework for architectural design that is firmly rooted within a biological paradigm and thus concerned with issues of high-level functionality and performance capacity. We have name this approach Morpho-Ecology’
                                    Achim Menges and Michael Hensel

Morphogenesis- Concerns the processes that control the organized spatial distribution of the cells which arises during the embryionic development of an organism, producing the characteristic forms of tissues, organs, and overall body anatomy. 
Material Systems- Their approach is based on the deliberate differentiation of material system and assemblies beyond the established catalogue of types.

‘When something has acquired a form it metamorphoses immediately into a new one’
Achim Menges and Michael Hensel



The Function of Form by Farshid Moussavi

Fashid Moussavi is Professor in the Department of Architecture, Harvard University Graduate School of Design and principal of Fashid Moussavi Architecture (FMA)

Moussavi choose to start the book The function of Form by the phrase 'Form follows function'. The book can be consider as a manual on structural systems and their capacity to produce forms. Moussavi, critique the relationship between function and form to reveal the construction in modernism. 



                                                                             Fig. 1


The exercise the presenters told us to do was to draw our dream house. Accordingly, I have drawn a penthouse floating on the sea.




Fig 2

The purpose of it was to examine what people would think to draw of and to evaluate the extent to which architecture students thought more simply than non- architecture
Achim Menges 2006 explores an alternative morphogenetic approach to design that unfolds morphological complexity and performative capacity from material constituents without differentiating between formation and materialization processes. This requires an understanding of form, material, structure and environment not as separate aspects , but rather as complex interrelations that are embedded in and explored through integral computational processes.






Reference:

Hensel, Michael, and Achim Menges. Morpho-Ecologies. London: Architectural Association, 2006. Print.

Menges and Hensel website http://www.achimmenges.net/?cat=269

Moussavi, Farshid, and Daniel Lopez. The Function Of Form. Barcelona: Actar, 2009. Print


Figures

Fig.1  https://static.dezeen.com/uploads/2009/11/dznfunctionofform02.jpg
Fig.2 Drawing by Michael S







Tuesday 24 November 2015

Innovations in Structural Art by Stanford Anderson by Eladio Dieste



Friday 20 November 2015

Innovations in Structural Art by Stanford Anderson by Eladio Dieste

Note: the book includes essays by historians, practicing engineers and architects from more diverse points of view.

Dieste was well known for the innovation of Gaussian vault; a thin-shell structure for roofs in single thickness brick that derives its stiffness and strength from a double curvature catenary arch from that resists buckling failure (Anderson and Dieste 2014). Dieste embraced the technique of reinforced masonry that in his day was little know and less exploited, and through that technique he, invented structural types that he employed daringly.

He rediscovered brick not out of a sense of nostalgia for the past but rather in light of  its inherent virtues- its being resistant, elastic, inexpensive and having acceptable thermal features. In addition, as Dieste further notes its shape give prestige to the material in its structural function. He understood that art and architecture were integral to the making of the best buildings and cities of the past and had to be part of any desirable future.

‘Dance without effort or fatigue’ Eladio Dieste
Dieste used these words to describe the goals of his work.


Creative work in architecture or engineering is the product of harmoniously considering the essence of functionality or utilitarian aims, a resistant function and a structural type and economy and its constructive process as well as the aesthetic qualities of the construction’s shape’s and dimensions (Anderson and Dieste 2014).Example of such architecture is the Gaussian shell (bus terminal)



                                                                        Fig.1 

Two major innovations in structural types in reinforce brick masonry. First type was the no continuous side wall support or buttresses, no tympanum or arch under the vault at its ends. Dieste termed this structural type also as ‘self-carrying vaults’. The second type was vaults rest on columns –or even a single column.



                                                                          Fig. 2 


Another example of his work is the Church at Atlantida, Uruguay 

                                                                            
                                                                          Fig.3




                                                                           Fig 4



Felix Candela’s work can be compared to that of Eladio Dieste. This is because, both are well known internationally for their elegant designs of vaulted structures built in the 20th century. Candela built a number of renowned structures with reinforced concrete in Mexico. The choice of the materials was partly based on the social context and the economical solutions.

Reference:
Anderson, Stanford, and Eladio Dieste. Eladio Dieste. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2004.

Figures

Fig.1 http://kubuildingtech.org/sarcweb/Assemblages00/dieste/htmlfiles/images/images/bus/bus1.gif

Fig.2 https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/236x/57/9c/75/579c75b7cdcb8bc3240d9e7569f8affb.jpg

Fig. 3https://betterarchitecture.files.wordpress.com/2014/03/eladio-dieste-brick.jpg?w=500

Fig.4 http://www.bravepraxis.com/images/3505.jpg


Sunday 1 November 2015

Structure as Space by Conzett, Jürg, and Mohsen Mostafavi




30 October 2015

Structure as Space by Conzett, Jürg, and Mohsen Mostafavi

Mohsen Mostafavi is an architect and educator. His work focuses on models and processes of urbanism and on the interface between technology and aesthetics.

The book is analyse the work of Jurg Conzett's a Swiss engineer who has redefining the relationship between structural engineering and architecture. The work and theories of other engineers and architects are also present in the book, among them is Brunel, Peter Behrens, Calatrava, Le Corbusier and Antoine Picon.  




                                                                           Fig.1


The work of Conzett precedent stylistically more interpretative than singular. His work focuses and addresses n an interpretative model as a process of weakening it approximates Vattimo's thinking. It is engages structural principles with a much wider set of pragmatic and pragmatic concerns which it responds to new and extraordinary ways (Mostafavi 2006). 

An example of his work is the Traversina Bridge, in Switzerland


                                                                                  Fig.2

Conzett's bridges had a particular quality, the way in which they fit, both physically and experientially. His bridges become important elements in the formation of a specifically Swiss landscape, part of a geographical bound and constructed national identity.


Project: Intervening in the City

Regarding the landscape near my site is very limited. Thus as my Macro- Museum is the Natural History Museum I will incorporate in the scheme the Wildlife Garden. The introducing of such garden next to an office building might be challenge but I believe it will fit in the surrounding urban context as the area has not public space.  

Reference:

Conzett, Jürg, and Mohsen Mostafavi. Structure As Space. London: Architectural Association, 2006. Print.

Figures

Fig 1 http://www.gsd.harvard.edu/images/content/5/2/v3/526849.jpg
Fig.2 https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/564x/c0/ff/8d/c0ff8d660ed25254677d02baab29624b.jpg




Sunday 25 October 2015

Building, Dwelling, thinking from Poetry, Language, Thought by M. Heidegger & Heidegger for architects by Sharr, Adam



Friday 23 October 2015

Building, Dwelling, thinking from Poetry, Language, Thought by M. Heidegger
Heidegger for architects by Sharr, Adam

The author Martin Heidegger (1889-1976) was a German philosopher and exponent of existentialism. He focuses and interested in ontology (the philosophical study of being or existence) and metaphysics. The author of the book Heidegger for architects, is a Professor of Architecture at Newcastle University.

Two major questions at the beginning of the seminar are
1.         What is it to dwell?                                               
2.         How does building belong to dwelling?

According to Heidegger we attain to dwelling so it seems only by means of buildings. The latter, building has the former, dwelling as its goals. Still not every building is a dwelling. For example bridges and hangers, stadiums, power stations are buildings but not dwelling. Railway stations and highways, dams and markets halls are built and are also not dwelling places. Heidegger explained in one of the chapters the origins and meaning of the words neighbor, to built and dwell. Bauen (old English & high German word of building, means to dwell) this signifies: to remain, to stay in a place.

Towards, the answer of the second question Heidegger clarified to us what building understood by what way of the nature of dwelling really is. We limit our selves to building in the sense of constructing things (example in the book with the bridge).

Things which, as location, allow a site we know in anticipation call buildings. They are so called because they are made by a process of building construction. The relationship between location and space lies in the nature of these things qua location, but so does the relation of the location to the man who lives at the location. According to this world Heidegger analyse the below questions
•           What is the relation between location and space?
•           What is the relation between man and space?


Regarding the first point Buildings produces locations, the joining of the spaces of these locations necessarily brings with it space, as spatium and as extensio , into the thingly structure of buildings. But building never shapes pure ‘space’ as a single entity. Neither directly nor indirectly. The answer to the second point is that, man’s relation to locations and through location to spaces inheres in this dwelling. The relationship between man and space is none other than dwelling, strictly through and spoken.Heidegger believed that building accomplishes its nature in the raising of locations by the joining of their spaces. Only if we are capable of dwelling, only then can we build (example with the Black Forest Building, dwelling, thinking. M Heidegger pg 156-158 ).A building does belong to dwelling when memories are been created. When you fell nostalgia perhaps where your routs are, which also identify and influence you as person.

This two questions raise in the classroom for conversation:
•           What is the difference between a house and a home?
•           What do you think makes a house a home?
Home can be wherever you feel comfortable as Heidegger notes. Homes can be a positive place or a negative space. For example when your house is not well ventilated, or when there is abuse or luck of privacy.

Heidegger’s Fourfold
1.         Earth: an elusive element
2.         Sky : spiritual component related to eternity
3.         Mortals
4.         Divinities
Fourfold term: earth and sky are the first conditions that make your character. People should well know their self’s in order to connect with a place.  

The two colleagues (Urvi and Japheth) that present the two books choose to make a game with the five senses. Everybody took one piece of paper with one sense on it and from that you should draw something that comes to your mind. The sense that I pick was smell and I choose to draw a cap of hot coffee as near my house in my home town is a coffee factory. The sense of smell is connect to my memory as from a young age I remember myself walking out of the house to go to school and the first thing I smell in the air is coffee. Resulting of this exercise is to make us realise that the five senses are well connected with our memories.






Research methods
Secondary research: grounded theory
•           Research approach that tests concepts and propositions against new data (iterative) to produce new theories.
•           Grounded theory can be applied to quantitative and qualitative data
•           Grounded theory extracts themes from phenomenological data and undergoes continuous refinement narrowing down to a central theme.
Phenomenology is the interpretive study of human experience. The aim is to examine and to clarify human situations, events, meanings, and experiences as they are known in everyday life but typically unnoticed beneath the level of conscious awareness (Seamon 2000).

During my study I found very interesting an article written by Elisa Garcia on Jul 12 15 in Fresh Trends with the title ‘The best ways to apply Environmental Psychology’
What public spaces consider successful?
Architects must evaluate how successful a place is and the reason for its success.
Environmental Psychology is a holistic perspective developed in the 1960s around a key statement: People experiment and have an effect on the environment, while the environment influences people through the different senses.
Environmental Psychology Encourage Social Life and Community Identity: The effectiveness of a public place is closely connected with its ability to satisfy its social function. William H. Whyte, who studies human behavior in the urban environment, determined the main factors that influence the social success of places (book ‘The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces, 1980’)  he indicated that some of the aspects that make a place more attractive are: the amount of seating, flexible management, connection to the street, user’s ability to make decisions,  encouragement of people’s appropriation of the space, location of urban elements in groups of three (triangular), presence of natural elements, food to ear and chances for meeting people as if they were not strangers (Garcia, E).





Reference:
Encyclopedia Britannica, 2015 Martin Heidegger | German philosopher [online] Google Available at: http://www.britannica.com/biography/Martin-Heidegger-German-philosopher [Accessed 21.10.15]
Heidegger, Martin (1971) Building, dwelling, thinking from Poetry, Language, Thought, translated by Albert Hofstadter
Landscape Architects Network, 2015 How to Use Environmental Psychology[online] Google Available at: http://landarchs.com/the-best-ways-to-apply-environmental-psychology/  [Accessed 31.1.2016]
Sharr, Adam, Heidegger For Architects, ed. Routledge, 2007