Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Summer Readings - In Praise of Shadows, Thermal Delight, and The Craftsman


In Praise of Shadows: Junichiro Tanizaki

In this essay Tanizaki goes into great detail regarding the differences between Western Architecture (and culture) and that of the Far East. The theme of the essay seemed to be comparing the modern movements search for clarity and light, with the Eastern philosophy he described as having a more tranquil effect. This is a difficult essay to digest, and the version I am reading appears to be a translated version, so some of the word usage may just be wonky translations. I find myself agreeing with much of what is described in the essay in theory, though maybe not in practice. And in all honesty, I think the major reason is just cultural differences. I love the use of wood and the ability of wood to give character to a space or object. I also sympathize with his struggles when doing projects in his own house (which I am assuming is in Japan). He faced many of the same issues that I faced recently in my own renovation. The essay to me was a little too focused on Japanese architecture, but I was able to peel some ideas from it. He describes the balancing act in much the same way I would have described my talks with the contractor doing the work on my house. There were some very elegant details which I wanted to include, similar to Tanizaki’s yearning for a wooden toilet (elegant? Maybe). In order to get the visual representation he would have wanted, he would need to spend a large amount of money on the high quality wood and  to make it work, or he would have to customize the standard toilet so much as to cheapen the original idea. In architecture this is always the balancing game that we play. How much of our personal ego/culture can we reasonably put into the work without it being pretentious? The title “In Praise of Shadows” seems to turn a cold shoulder to the modern trend of providing light and clarity at first glance. However, as I read into it more, I felt that the author was more or less struggling with the fact that the easily available methods and materials of today were so westernized that they did not mend well with his own culture. For example he needed to make so many compromises on materiality and aesthetics simply because it wasn’t available at “home depot”. His focus seems to me to try and celebrate some of the lesser perceived experiences and how sometimes lack of light (or maybe more so, abundance of shade) may actually create a better space than an arbitrary abundance of light provided just for the sake of light. Take for instance his explanation of how the restroom is experienced. It is always in a separate building, and is usually open to the sky and surrounded by greenery and wood grained walls. This is a stark contrast to how western restrooms are. Typically everything is shiny tile so that it is easy to clean. Everything is white and bright so that the room appears clean and dirtiness is immediately apparent. He compares this contrast in an interesting way. He explains how it would be indecent for a woman to show her bare buttocks or feet in the presence of others, yet we “expose the toilet to such execessive illumination” He goes on to explain that some things are better left hazy. In that light, he seems to have a point…


Thermal Delight In Architecture: Lisa Heschong


This article describes the conundrum that is the human need to alter the temperature of our dwellings to be almost opposite what the actual temperature outdoors is. Liking the cool weather myself, I have always been intrigued by this practice. We very closely try to make the summer time feel like winter, and the winter time feel like summer. It is absolutely fascinating and weird, and also extremely expensive and complex. The article starts off describing the sense of touch and how it is really different from the other senses as it pertains to the feeling of warmth or cooling. The example of two objects both at the same room temperature is relevant to our designs because take for instance a piece of wood and a piece of metal.  Both are the same temperature, but when you pick them both up at the same time the metal feels cooler because you are aware of the transfer of heat from your hand to the metal. This is an interesting concept, and helps explain why architects will describe wood as warmer than metal, even in a visual sense. I wonder if this is an underlying internal concept we have come to learn from our sensory perception of the world around us, and now as a result we express those materials in our designs differently.

The Craftsmen – Arousing Tools: Richard Sennett

I read the chapter on Arousing Tools. In this chapter Sennet describes tools in two ways; difficult tools that are not good enough (ie the lens) and tools that work well, but which people have a problem inferring the best use (ie the scalpel). The lens was a huge jump in science and as we perfected our techniques and invented the micro and tele-scopes we learned how inadequate the lenses of the times were. As you were able to magnify the image, it became harder to discern the difference between a distant star and a pit in the glass lens. So the tool that we transformed the use for (from eyeglass lenses to telescope lenses) now was inadequate to perform the new task. The concept of the tool was not changing, but the tool itself was not right. So the methods of creating the lens got better and we learned to make them for the correct task.  The other example given was of the scalpel. This is a tool that works well, but needs expertise to use. A layperson off the street would have a difficult time performing the same quality of surgery that a doctor with years of precision training would do. The surgeons training would teach him to use the tool, and rather than using the arm and shoulder muscles to apply force, more attention was focused on the fingers. This is a long way of introducing his over arching idea in the book regarding the hand. This debate is interesting and has manifested it in our class last semester with the restriction of the use of Revit for designing. His concept in the book is that our minds have evolved for such a long time based on the use of our digits and our hands. There is something different about using your hand and fingers to create in the same way that our bodies have been doing for eons. The act of grasping an object, feeling its weight and applying pressure in very precise and specific amounts to achieve a certain line weight or type on a drawing arouses certain areas of the brain that aren’t aroused in the same way if you were drawing the same lines but using a mouse.  This concept was clearly explained to all of us during design principles. The idea of getting in the Right-Brained mode took time to kick in. When you first begin drawing, you are not in the mode. It takes time for the mind to catch up to the task at hand and once you begin to focus, your brain switches into the creative mode and you generally experience the “in the zone” concept where you can lose complete track of time, surroundings, and other tasks. While I do agree that this concept is valid, I would also like to submit a counter point for discussion. I have noticed a shift in that type of mentality in my writing. As a younger student I used to love creative writing, and always hand wrote stories. With the introduction of the computer into my life, my writing style changed. As I began to use the computer every day and typing being the main thing it was used for, my writing ability shifted from being able to hand write out stories to needing the computer to get my creativity flowing. Anyone else feel similarly that writing using the computer seems to flow much better than when trying to hand write out thoughts or concepts? 

Monday, August 27, 2012

The Eyes of the Skin - Pallasmaa

"Sight isolates, whereas sound incorporates; vision is directional, wheras sound is omni-directional."(p.49)  That makes me wonder how your architecture would sound.  Pallasmaa expresses how a building must also be understood as a speaker to its people.  How does your building sound?  Like a "drip of water in a cavern.." or like "a siren in the city".  How does your building sound?  I would like to think that different spaces would voice differently.  Lobbies would be drenched in reverb and echoing materials.  Libraries would need to be soft, padded tones that limit noise.  Theatres would be a middle ground of warm tones with hints of reverb.  But my question should go deeper than what your building actually sounds like, rather, how does your building make you feel through sound?  What if you switched your idea of having a loud lobby to a vacuum and the sound was absorbed so much you could barely even hear your footsteps?  That would cause a very different reaction.

Pallasmaa also expresses that a visual connection is an act of your eye "reaching" (p.49) where your ear "receives" sound.  I feel like sound does and can consume you.  How does your building sound?

Sun, Wind and Light - Brown

Talk about a book that would have been great to read 5 years ago.  It is broken into three parts: analysis techniques ,design strategies and strategies for supplementing passive systems.  (i rented it, so good luck checking it out.)  I am focusing on what brown refers to as the ".balance point.  This is defined as the outdoor temperature at which the heat generated inside the building balances the buildings heat loss, to maintain a desired inside temperature." (p.52)  In other words, once a building has a desired temperature, the amount of energy used to heat and cool the building can be measured.  This would be essential technique in the amount of energy your building consumes.

Summer Readings - Arlen


The Architecture of the Well-tempered Environment – Reyner Banham

Chapter 1 – Unwarranted apology: I only read a few chapters of this book, but the highlights that interested me were the chronicled moments of history where human responsibility transformed due to technology and its effect on architecture. For example; the chimney, which is described as the body of the home was one of the most important elements of a house in the 1700’s due to its heating capabilities. Even though this was extremely necessary during crude winters, the design of a house did not usually reflect on the mechanics or operations of this system. The chimney’s design reflected the “grand room” tailoring towards impressing people with large spaces with extremely well crafted trim work.

It surprises me that the mentality of our society (and profession) hasn’t really changed much. We still tend to ignore the back of the house spaces. For example; in design presentations, the mechanical equipment space is often ignored. Most clients are not interested in this and “leave it up to the professionals”. The mechanical space is often shoved into a small corner. As architects we have an opportunity to exemplify the MEP systems and highlight their natural beauty.

I am intrigued by projects that question the aesthetics and function of MEP. This summer I was able to visit the Pompidou Centre in Paris, which is a project that exemplifies and glorifies the MEP work as the exterior skin. This was my second time visiting the museum, and I was much more impressed the second time having worked with this type of equipment in the office.

In Praise of Shadows – Junichiro Tanizaki

This essay, although short was very enjoyable to read. The focus on identifying architecture, drama, food, and many other aspects of Japanese culture was very descriptive and allowed my imagination to visualize the reading. His comparison of westernized culture to eastern culture inspires me to travel to Japan to see and fully understand it.

I feel that Japanese architecture considers space on a completely different level when compared to westernized architecture. Space is much more valuable in Japan, and therefore must be more flexible.
“Smaller rooms are more are the fashion now, and even if one were to use candles in them, one would not get the color of darkness; but in an old palace and an old house where the ceilings were high the darkness is pressed in like fog.” People have forgotten what the darkness feels like; this was the darkness where ghosts and monsters lived. Smaller rooms reflect on the light, the darkness is non-existent.

The Eyes of the Skin: Architecture of the Senses – Juhani Pallasmaa

Junhani Pallasmaa is one of my favorite writers of architectural theory. In Part 2, Silence, Time and Solitude, Juhani describes the auditory experience and its connection to memory, form, light and space. People remember spaces more with sounds than the actual visual response. Sound triggers parts of our brain that can sooth our soul (music). Yes, John, you should read this stuff.
“Architecture connects us with the dead; through buildings we are able to imagine the bustle of the mediaeval street, and picture a solemn procession approaching a cathedral. The time of architecture is detained time; in the greatest of buildings time stands firmly still. Time and space are eternally locked into each other in the silent spaces between these immense columns; matter, space and time fuse into one singular elemental experience, the sense of being.”

This makes me believe that design is static, it is this ever evolving process that will never end (our degree projects will always be static)!


Thinking Architecture - Peter Zumthor

Thinking Architecture - Peter Zumthor

Chapter 7

Zumthor discussed the things that evoked emotion out of him.  He used music to describe how a melody can be expressed through the instruments being played together and thus, evokes some kind of emotion.  This is what we perceive as 'beautiful'. 

I think that, yes, there is something beautiful when different instruments come together to create a piece of music that can move someone's emotion to different states.  He then portrays this 'beauty' in the physical world around us.  Just like a piece of music, our surroundings move us.  Whether outside on busy square or in the woods on a cranberry bog.

He goes on to what I believe as the main function of being an architect.  "..there is an intimate relationship between our emotions and the things around us.  That thought is related to me as an architect."  He means that, as an architect, it is his duty to bridge the gap between the people perceiving what is beautiful, and what is beautiful.  In other words, just as a composer evokes an emotional sense of beauty, the architect must evokes beauty from his design.

In Praise of Shadows - Tanizaki

I enjoy the very idea of considering materials that we generally consider modest and rustic to form an elegant shape and space.  The idea that rough fibers can be pressed into a beautifully translucent plane says something about what is and what can be.  At least I like to think so.

We do not always need to praise the obvious.  We do not always need to exploit the resources common suggested to us.  And most importantly, we do not need to remain in our comfort zone simply because it hard shell already remains.

After all, high praise should be earned.  Resources should be valued and conserved.  And norms should be studied, questioned, and when well called for should be broken and rebuilt.  This exercise provides us with great promise - or do you envision something else?

Thinking Architecture - Zumthor

"My task as a designer is difficult - by definition.  Its is related to artistry and achievement, intuition, and craftsmanship. But also to commitment, authenticity, and a deep interest in subject matter."

This interest me. 

Zumthor list these rather abstract concepts such as "craftsmanship" and pairs it with other abstract ideas claiming some sort of fundamental relationship to design.  Or perhaps the designer himself?  In any case I have deep interest in the reason why this nexus of ideas and concepts present such a tough task.  Why is it difficult?

Does the subjectivity of art weigh to heavy on our minds?  Does the weight of decisions to be made block our intuition?  Or should we direct out attention to the craftsmanship?  After all, considering the execution of most designs is separate from the hands of the designer?

My take - the difficulty does not lie in any one challenge or rather the burden of managing yet another abstract agent.  Instead, the difficulty is having good sea legs as one sails through the design process directly in the heart of an incredible storm made up of the very ideas Zumthor names.  And keeping one's head above water is not enough - rather one must achieve some for of success through the journey of design.

Summer Readings - mik


Here is an overview for two books that I have read over the summer:

- In Praise of Shaddows”  by Edwin McCellan

The first book that I have read and enjoyed is called  “ In Praise of Shaddows”  by Edwin McCellan.
This book had compared the relationship between the design as a product of social conditions that is seen and valued in context. he had exposed the Japanese tradition and cultural values which shaped the material form. He had also explained how forcing it out of context may change it’s essence allowing it to loose it’s originality and intent. His examples of comparing the cultural value of the Japanese and the European influences that slowly dissolved the cultural significant and the value of traditional form.

- The Thinking Hand: Existential and Embodied Wisdom in Architecture” by Juhani Pallasmaa

The second book is called “The Thinking Hand: Existential and Embodied Wisdom in Architecture” by Juhani Pallasmaa. It described somewhat similar concept of the ‘before and after’ focusing on the architects ability to record and express meaning through built form further emphasizing the fact that the current means of teaching and making form is separating the architects  mind from ability and craftsmanship. 

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Summer Readings - Maya



THE CRAFTSMAN - RICHARD SENNET

Reading some of Sennet's ideas about focussing on the work of the craft rather than on ourself, made me think of how of a selfish society we have become, where the main goal is no longer 'How can my work benefit society', to 'How much can I benefit from society, with the least amount of work'. We are slowly losing the appreciation of making, we are becoming more and more detached from the things that surround us, but somehow society still makes us want more. We are developing a wrong and probably unhealthy relationship with physical things, where they become only of media to represent our social 'worth'. 
We have to change our relationship with our work, and what it produces. Our work will represent ourself inevitably, and so we don't have to be so mindful of trying to figure out how to represent ourself through our work. Nowadays, it has become where the product is no longer about the use or need or purpose of it, but more of an iconic representation of what we believe we are, or wish we were, or a set of values which we associate ourself with, a great example of this is our overly recognized and adored starcitects.
True craftsmanship should be more modest, and more anonymous. not that we shouldn't get recognition for our work, but the recognition should come from a work well done, for the sake of itself. we as architects should not be known for the ability to reproduce a concept over and over again, but, the opposite, for the ability to reevaluate the problem in hand, and find the write solution for it. 
I agree with Declan, that I love that Sennet is talking about the importance of the process of doing, and rethinking new ways of doing, it is through theses explorations that humans evolve and develop. 


IN PRAISE OF SHADOWS - JUNICHIRO TANIZAK 

I started reading this one, since I really liked the visual descriptiveness of spaces in the reading, and the emphasis of the connection between nature, views, light, materials and details to design, and the experience of design. 
Although as I got more into it I found the author to be very imbedded in a particular cultural mind set, almost ethnocentric where only true traditional Japanese design is good enough to evaluate and describe, he was dismissing any western design thought, and so I found it to be really  subjective. 


THE ARCHITECTURAL DETAIL - EDWARD R. FORD

I find myself quickly disinterested since the book is mostly about looking at the definition of the word and the concept of detail through out history. Ford is defining detail by placing the word in historical / cultural context, showing viewpoints of people through history, particularly mostly looking at modernists and the anti-detail movement.
He was trying to express how does it exist in society, and how it evolved as an idea, but mostly it felt like a history book to me, which I find hard to keep awake for...
I do however think that detail is an extremely important and fundamental part of architecture, and deserves the attention and analysis theory has giving it. 

The Craftsman

The Craftsman by Richard Sennette embodied a lot of what I am passionate about in my professional work, and managed to also shed light on some new ideas for my degree project.


Though the book takes many tangents to reveal one fascinating story after another, ultimately Sennette was using examples from all over the world, at all different times in history to explain the nature behind the Craftsman. Sennette believes that the work of the hand can inform the work of the mind, and that one who utilizes this unique human traite of doing and thinking to produce some product, is a Craftsman. The concept of the craftsman spans all fields of study and craft. Sennette discribes being a craftsman as a way of living and an active/ physical lens in which one can see and interact with the world. For a craftsman there is a an inherant objective to be and make things better for the sake of doing it the best one can. It is in this mind set that innovation is born. Sennette takes it one step farther and argue that there should be a re-imagining of the Enlightenment, from the perpective of how craftsman made innovation and piece by piece changed the who outlook on the developing world.

He writes on a few occasions about the structures of various workshops, including that of Antonio Stradivari's violin workshop, and that even if one tries to reproduce the exact conditions and make of his violins they  never sounds as good as the orginaly by the craftsman. There are things learned in the hand and mind that can be expressed in the making of an object that we may not have the language (either verbal or visual) to express. And so in the apprentise based model a true craftsman may try to teach other by immersing them into the a whole way of life. In this experience a craftsman will learn to find the balance between autonomy and authority.

A craftsman will also learn to find challenges and resistance and turn those into areas of opportunity. Others less passionate will stop in the face of a challenge, but a craftsman will think and create a solution resulting in solution never explored before by others. Sennette uses an example of engineers drilling the first tunnels beneath the Thames, to explain that an obstacle can lead to innovation, and dos not have to stop forward progress. However, it is also the case that the solution must be smart instead of heavy handed. As chefs chop vegetables, they use minimum force, and the right tool to do the job right.

An interesting point that Sennette makes about craftsman, which I didn't expect to come up in this book is about the importance of play. He says that in play a craftsman can find the  true and ernest interaction with their medium, whether it be coding for linux or sculpting with clay.

He goes on explaining what a craftsman is and what traits one has, and how this way of working is something we all ought to strive for.

I do strive for this in my Design Build business, and I hope to create a design for my Innovation center/ Library of Conversation/ Workshop that would help to facilitate the development of craftsman, and then have them collaborate. Sounds pretty sweet to me.