Aural Architecture - Sound Design For Architecture
... explore our aural connection to the spaces built by man and nature. This book is the story of that marriage over the centuries in a variety of cultures and subcultures, and today’s artists and scientists are the children of the union. Individuals who use spaces for a particular purpose, and individu ...
... explore our aural connection to the spaces built by man and nature. This book is the story of that marriage over the centuries in a variety of cultures and subcultures, and today’s artists and scientists are the children of the union. Individuals who use spaces for a particular purpose, and individu ...
View/Open - Institutional Scholarship
... as they seem to conceive and describe themselves – that is, as being held together by mutual attraction and common focus. 13 Structure requires clear contrasts and related definitions. In a structured system, if an object is other than x, then it is automatically in a contrasting category not-x. It ...
... as they seem to conceive and describe themselves – that is, as being held together by mutual attraction and common focus. 13 Structure requires clear contrasts and related definitions. In a structured system, if an object is other than x, then it is automatically in a contrasting category not-x. It ...
HISTORY OF MODERN ARCHITECTURE
... Building at Yale University(1959-63) is an example of rough concrete forms whereas the Hi-tech Brutalism was displayed by James Stirling in the Engineering School of the University of Leicester, 1959-63. Form is symbolic of function in both buildings-design school and factory aesthetics. Wright and ...
... Building at Yale University(1959-63) is an example of rough concrete forms whereas the Hi-tech Brutalism was displayed by James Stirling in the Engineering School of the University of Leicester, 1959-63. Form is symbolic of function in both buildings-design school and factory aesthetics. Wright and ...
Architectural theory
Architectural theory is the act of thinking, discussing, and writing about architecture. Architectural theory is taught in most architecture schools and is practiced by the world's leading architects. Some forms that architecture theory takes are the lecture or dialogue, the treatise or book, and the paper project or competition entry. Architectural theory is often didactic, and theorists tend to stay close to or work from within schools. It has existed in some form since antiquity, and as publishing became more common, architectural theory gained an increased richness. Books, magazines, and journals published an unprecedented amount of works by architects and critics in the 20th century. As a result, styles and movements formed and dissolved much more quickly than the relatively enduring modes in earlier history. It is to be expected that the use of the internet will further the discourse on architecture in the 21st century.