Understanding Architecture Through Drawing

(lily) #1

Drawing the architectural façade may highlight some
aspect of current or historical theory of design, or the
sketch may simply tell you about the social pattern of
living at a particular place or time. The main point is to get
beyond the surface of the drawing into an analysis of
social and technological factors or of design theory.
Whether you choose to sketch a city or country building, a
private house or public monument, a modern structure or
ancient one, the same general rules should apply. By
drawing the façade of a building, you are focusing your
attention upon the principal area for expression exploited
by architect and engineer alike. The method of expression
may be obvious – perhaps by the use of exposed columns



  • or more subtly – perhaps by the skilful adoption of
    proportional harmonies. Remember that, though the
    designer of a building may seek to link the exterior
    expression to the interior pattern of spaces and functions,
    he or she is mainly concerned with how the building looks
    from the outside. The yardstick by which to judge
    architectural quality is primarily that of the elevations.


CLUES TO INTERNAL FUNCTION
Many buildings employ a visual code based upon making
manifest the function of the building through elevational
expression. The clues are both direct and indirect. With
old industrial buildings, and some modern ones, cranes,
lifting hoists and large door openings announce the
presence of a warehouse. The office block may betray its
function through the use of repeating grids of windows,
strip lighting visible through large sheets of glass, and the
lack of curtains or blinds. Likewise a modern block of flats
will perhaps have expressed balconies, which provide
‘gardens in the air’, different window sizes and security
systems around the main entrance. Designers wishing to
exploit the functional clues may link the balconies into
bands 20 or so storeys high, or raise the block of flats on


stilts to provide space at the ground level for common
facilities such as laundries or shops. In the case of office
blocks, the architect may allow the entrance to project
forwards with a canopy for signage, or change the grid of
windows where conference facilities or staff refreshment
areas are located. In this way there are clues to both the
function of the building and to that of its various parts.
Many people interpret these visual codes when
deciding what the functions are within a particular
building. We are all familiar with the traditional use of
columns to mark an entrance to a public building, the use
of a rotunda to denote a space of importance inside or an
atrium marking a gathering space within the building. This
simple language of expression can be found in provincial
court houses as well as in many modern office buildings
in business parks. On a more mundane level, a single-
storey structure with high-level bands of windows
denotes accommodation for utility companies or perhaps
public toilets. These buildings do not necessarily require
signs: their appearance tells most people what goes on
inside.
A recent trend in architecture has been to enliven the
façades of dull buildings such as offices by exaggerating
on the outside the differences in internal function. Many

15.2
The designer of this small
cinema in Ukiah, California,
gives expression to the tower
and canopy in a fashion typical
of the 1930s. The tower acts as
a hinge around which the rest of
the design pivots. The bottle-cap
shape of the top of the tower
alludes perhaps to the café
found inside.

The façades of buildings 123
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