Reference: Architectural Theories of Design (George Salvan) Theory of Architecture and Tropical Design
Reference: Architectural Theories of Design (George Salvan) Theory of Architecture and Tropical Design
Reference: Architectural Theories of Design (George Salvan) Theory of Architecture and Tropical Design
Alzate
Architectural Comprehensive
BS-Architecture 5
Reference: Architectural Theories of Design (George Salvan)
Theory of Architecture and Tropical Design
PROTECTIVE ELEMENTS 1. The roof protects the interior from the elements of
climate like typhoon, heat of the sun, etc
WARMER CLIMATE 2. The roofs are usually rather flat and colourful. As in the rich
red and brown tile roof of Italy.
COLDER CLIMATES 3. The roofs become steeper an d less colourful. The necessity
of shedding the rai n and snow makes the greater pitch to the roofs more practical.
WINDOWS 4. Permit the entrance of light and circulation of air Doors, stairs,
corridor-circulation of human traffic and materials
TOPOGRAPHY 5. In its broadest sense, may mean the general terrain or contour of
the surface of the entire country.
MASS 6. Also known as volume or evidence of the 3 dimension
direction -vertical or horizontal axis of the mass
shape - geometric qualities
AREA 7. Surface with two dimensions as in a facade of a building
TEXTURE 8. Surface treatment identified with materials whether rough or smooth
TONE 9. Light and shade caused by openings, projections
COLOR 10. Inherent or applied color caused by spectrum hues
FORM 11. In an architectural discussion the accepted definition of form deals with
shape and when the
figure is three dimensional, it becomes mass.
VOLUME 12. A plane extended in a direction other than its intrinsic direction
becomes a volume. Conceptually, a volume has three dimensions: length, width and
depth.
COLOR 13. The hue, intensity, and total value of a form's surface; color is the
attribute that most clearly distinguishes a form from its environment. It also affects
the visual weight of a form.
TEXTURE 14. The surface characteristic of a form; texture affects both tactile and
light-reflective qualities of a form's surfaces.
COMPETITION 21. When elements compete with each other for the place of
importance. There is competition. This causes ' DUALITY' or the presence of two
strong conflicting personalities or masses resulting in redundancy. The towers
appear attenuated and unstable. The shared element is too weak to counteract the
overturning force acting on the towers.
EVAPORATIVE COOLING 23. n hot arid regions. a method of cooling simpler than
that of the compressive evaporate refrigeration cycle can be very effective.
Employing one electric motor instead of three, if saves a great deal of energy,
though it use a little of water.
SHADE TREES 25. Deciduous trees provide shad~ in the summer and admit light in
the winter. Evergreens provide shade in the summer and reduce window heat loss
to the right sky in winter.
A South-facing window shaded by a deciduous tree receives less solar heat than an
unshaded north -facing window (The-north Window received diffused radiation from
clouds)
CORBEL OR CANTILEVER 27. a projection from the face of a wall .fixed in position
to support a weight