TOA Concepts&Philos
TOA Concepts&Philos
TOA Concepts&Philos
PHILOSOPHIES
Functional concepts
Environmental concepts
Structural concepts
Cultural concepts
Thematic concepts
Time-based concepts
CONCEPTS
Traditional
definition of
good
architecture:
Vitruviuss
Utilitas, Firmitas,
Venustas
FUNCTIONAL CONCEPTS
Existing State
Architecture is
a product of
programming
The Setting
Cultural, Social, Political,
Historical, Economic
Physical Conditions/ Site
Data
Geography, Climate,
Archaeology, Geology
Client/User Profile
Demography,
Organizations, Needs,
Behavior
Constraints
Legal, Financial,
Technical, Market
FUNCTIONAL CONCEPTS
Future State
Mission
Goals
Performance
Requirements
Concepts
Durand:
There are only two problems in
architecture :
1) in private buildings, how to
provide the optimum
accommodation for the smallest
sum of money
2) in public building, how to
provide the maximum
accommodation for a given sum.
FUNCTIONAL CONCEPTS
FUNCTIONAL CONCEPTS
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
Temperature,
ventilation,
sound, smell,
texture
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
Temperature,
ventilation,
sound, smell,
texture
ENVIRONMENTAL
CONCEPTS
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
Using and
modifying things
that are already
there
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
Stratification
and climate
responsiveness
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
Passive
Cooling
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
Le Corbusier
Architecture is the masterly,
correct and magnificent play of
masses brought together in
light. Our eyes are made to see
forms in light.
Thus, cubes, cones, spheres,
cylinders or pyramids are the
great primary forms which
light reveals to advantage;
they are not only beautiful
forms, but the most beautiful
forms.
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
STRUCTURAL
CONCEPTS
STRUCTURAL
CONCEPTS
ARCHES
STRUCTURAL
CONCEPTS
STRUCTURAL
CONCEPTS
STRUCTURAL
CONCEPTS
STRUCTURAL
CONCEPTS
Frames
STRUCTURAL CONCEPTS
Tube
Construction
STRUCTURAL CONCEPTS
Mushroom
Construction
STRUCTURAL CONCEPTS
Mushroom
Construction
STRUCTURAL CONCEPTS
SUSPENDED
SYSTEMS
STRUCTURAL
CONCEPTS
PREFABRICATION
STRUCTURAL
CONCEPTS
Stretched
Membrane
STRUCTURAL CONCEPTS
Stretched
Membrane
STRUCTURAL CONCEPTS
Stratification
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
EVOLUTIONARY ARCHITECTURE
Architecture can
create as nature
creates
tree
A building can be
seen as a living
organism with
functional processes
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
EVOLUTIONARY
ARCHITECTURE
The overriding objective is
to reach the ultimate
evolution of a design
so that it is a perfected
culmination of
function, form and
purpose within limits of
budget, materials, and so
forth
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
ETHNOCENTRISM
Habitual disposition to judge
foreign peoples or groups by
the standards and practices
of ones own culture or ethnic
groups.
CULTURAL CONCEPTS
CRITICAL
REGIONALISM
Factoring in cultural variations
and contextual realities.
CULTURAL CONCEPTS
CULTURAL CONCEPTS
THEMATIC CONCEPTS
THEMATIC CONCEPTS
TIME-BASED
CONCEPTS
ARCHITECTURAL PHILOSOPHIES
ARCHITECTURE-ENVIRONMENT
ENVIRONMENT
OVER MAN
ARCHITECTURE-ENVIRONMENT
ARCHITECTURE-ENVIRONMENT
ARCHITECTURAL FORM
ORNAMENTS
ORNAMENTS
Less is More
Mies Van der Rohe
Less is Bore
Robert Venturi
ORNAMENTS
Less is More
Mies Van der Rohe
Less is Bore
Robert Venturi
ORNAMENTS
An Architecture of complexity
and contradiction has a special
obligation toward the whole- its
truth must be in its totality or
implications of totality.
CONTRADICTIONS
DE STIJL
INTERNATIONAL STYLE
INTERNATIONAL STYLE
INTERNATIONAL STYLE
INTERNATIONAL STYLE
TECTONICS
REVOLUTIONARY
ARCHITECTURE (1800s)
Eclecticism or Indiferrentism- designing without
considering that any matter of principle was
involved
The new tendency to plan buildings
geometrically or symbolically without close
reference to functional requirements
HISTORIOGRAPHY
Historicism and Exoticism: Notion of evolution
and chronology
Passion for Archaeology
ROMANTICISM
ROMANTICISM
AWARENESS OF STYLE
Style :
REVIVALISM
REVIVALISM
ECLECTICISM (1830s)
A composite system of thought made up
of views selected from various other
systems.
Eclectics claim that no one should
accept blindly from the past the legacy
of a single philosophical system to the
exclusion of all others but each should
decide rationally and independently
what philosophical facts used in the past
were appropriate to the present and then
recognize and respect them in whatever
context they might appear.
REVIVALISM
ROMAN REVIVAL
Influences of the Roman monumental
compositional forms
The new tendency to fit public buildings into
antique temples
The tendency to incorporate the compositional
forms of Antique temples into public buildings
Importance of ruins and archaeological studies
REVIVALISM
GREEK REVIVAL
Acknowledgement of the idea of
the Parthenon as the most perfect
building ever constructed; its
qualities have been interpreted to
justify every change in
architectural fashion,
from the servile duplication of its
composition and details to the most
individualistic creations in
reinforced concrete and steel.
REVIVALISM
GREEK REVIVAL
Traditional use of plumb lines, squares and
levels
Regard for public buildings as objects in
space rather than objects enclosing space.
Making pediments correspond to the
structural reality of the pitched roof
REVIVALISM
RENAISSANCE REVIVAL
the renaissance revival allowed an
architect to select and even to invent
for himself such compositional and
decorative forms as might be
considered suitable for the occasion.
REVIVALISM
RENAISSANCE REVIVAL
Picturesque and lacked order and symmetry of
classical architecture.
REVIVALISM
RENAISSANCE REVIVAL
Skill of architects not to be found in
archaeological accuracy of facades but in the
orderly sequences of accommodation on
awkward sites, skillful combination of different
and new materials
REVIVALISM
GOTHIC NATIONALISM
Buildings with pseudo-mediaeval details
Ideals with which to justify Gothic revival were
immensely varied and often diametrically
opposed.
REVIVALISM
GOTHIC NATIONALISM
Neglect of practical comforts and
functional planning; spaces were
planned more with an eye to their
scenic effect than to their workability
REVIVALISM
POLYCHROMY
Introduction of variegations into the exterior
design of facades.
Exteriors should display colors of various hues.
Structural Coloration: architectural form was
necessarily structural form, and hence, effects of
color should result from the structural materials
by which an edifice was actually built.
REVIVALISM
SYMBOLS OF
FUNCTION
BIOLOGICAL ANALOGY
MECHANICAL ANALOGY
GASTRONOMIC ANALOGY
LINGUISTIC ANALOGY
FUNCTIONALISM
BIOLOGICAL ANALOGY
FUNCTIONALISM
MECHANICAL ANALOGY
Scientific evolution and artistic evolution
follow the same laws
Movement and function
Collaboration in the progressive accumulation
of technical knowledge
Precise destination and expression of
potentialities
FUNCTIONALISM
GASTRONOMIC ANALOGY
Demands the combination of materials of
strength, ideal sequence or plan, analysis and
testing of efficacies
Goes beyond scientific analysis; requires
intuition, imagination, enthusiasm, immense
amount of organizational skill
FUNCTIONALISM
GASTRONOMIC ANALOGY
Demands the combination of materials of
strength, ideal sequence or plan, analysis and
testing of efficacies
Goes beyond scientific analysis; requires
intuition, imagination, enthusiasm, immense
amount of organizational skill
FUNCTIONALISM
LINGUISTIC ANALOGY
Eloquence and expression
Emotions and experiencing emotions
Vocabulary and composition
FUNCTIONALISM
LINGUISTIC ANALOGY
Eloquence and expression
Emotions and experiencing emotions
Vocabulary and composition
FUNCTIONALISM
INFLUENCE OF ENGINEERS
Importance of mathematical studies in
constructional design
Straightforward, unadorned building unless
needs of decorum demanded ornament
Classical proportions were modified in
accordance with new materials
Architecture of iron
FUNCTIONALISM
FUNCTIONALISM
INFLUENCE OF
THE ALLIED
ARTS
Decorations and
ornaments
Abstract patterns on
space layout
Furniture design on
Architectural
composition
FUNCTIONALISM
EKISTICS
Doxiadis:
A human settlement is made
up of five ekistic elements,
which are interactive and
interdependent with each
other. These are man, nature,
shells, networks and society.
MODERNISM
ISSUES:
relativity
evolutionary
diversity
MODERNISM
COMMON NOTIONS
soulless container
absence of
relationship with
the environment
arrogant
unarticulated
monstrous
speculative
mass-produced
MODERNISM
ASSOCIATED TERMS:
Functional
Industrial
Innovative/ Novel
Technology
Revolutionary and Opposing
MODERNISM
MODERNISM
Van Doesburg:
Every machine is a spiritualization of an
organism the machine is par
excellence, a phenomenon of spiritual
disciplines The new spiritual artistic
sensibility of the 20th century has not only
felt the beauty of the machine but also
taken cognizance of the unlimited
expressive possibilities for the arts.
MODERNISM
Les Corbusier:
The frame of a building or buildings is
like the laws that govern society. Without
these laws there is anarchy and without
the frame there is visual anarchy.
MODERNISM
MODERNISM
POST-MODERNISM
POST-MODERNISM
POST-MODERNISM
Venturi:
An Architecture of complexity and
contradiction has a special obligation
toward the whole- its truth must be in its
totality or implications of totality. It must
embody the difficult unity of inclusion
rather than the easy unity of inclusion
POST-MODERNISM
POST-MODERNISM
DECONSTRUCTION
DECONSTRUCTION
DECONSTRUCTION
Structuralism- study of
relationships between say, words in
a language, etc.
Post-structuralism- was
concerned with questions of
meaning and how individuals order
the world. In architecture, PS
focused on meaning rather than
process.
ELEMENTS
OF CLIMATE
NEEDED IN
DESIGN
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCEPTS
ENVIRONMENTAL
CONCEPTS
CHARACTERISTICS OF
TROPICAL CLIMATE
Warm Humid: High Temperature; High RH;
Heavy rains esp. during monsoon
Hot Dry: Very high DBT; low humidity; low
precipitation; little or no cloud; sparse/bare
ground
ENVIRONMENTAL
CONCEPTS