Fundamental Concepts of Architecture : The Vocabulary of Spatial Situations
281 transport > meanings that may lie outside architecture, so that their transmission relies on convention or knowledge. The ...
282 Without discussing the overlap between terms (colloqui- ally, the term sign is often equated with the term symbol), the mode ...
283 and Poverty’ (1933). A form of residence that acts on this maxim takes place in reduced spaces within which we en- counter n ...
284 at the end of his Ethics that the simple, the transparent, is at the same time the most difficult thing of all: Sed omnia pr ...
285 mood, and conditioning the audibility of shouted interjec- tions. Relevant alongside the multiplicity of intervening ele- me ...
286 A large building may seem large despite – or even pre- cisely by virtue of – the narrowness of the setting, yet it re- quire ...
287 on the other hand, freedom of movement is actually greater (Arnheim 1977/2009). Because the impression of architectural size ...
288 then, follows its own logic, and even eludes the traditional texture of urban and contextual relationships. It becomes a cit ...
289 By virtue of its form, size, surfaces and materials, every built space has a specific ambient sound. This is influenced by r ...
290 ings, between above and below via ceilings and floors, as well as through the transmission of structure-borne sound through ...
291 It has been asserted that architectural space is a fiction (Feldtkeller 1989). Since space is not immediately accessible to ...
292 delimit, shape and link spaces together by means of openings. In China and Japan, this phenomenon is referred to as ma; acco ...
293 ship between space and occupant is not conceptualized as one between container and contents, but as one between > scene a ...
294 The space-body continuum can be illustrated in relation to the dual role of the surface (1), through the reversal of fig- ur ...
295 frame, because it is figure and frame simultaneously, (...) the material of the house, which neither contains nor is contain ...
296 tures, and interiors within them – are broken up. Passages or > arcades, for example, verandas, > galleries or courtya ...
297 space-containing wall contains chambers, niches or small an- cillary rooms, which not only appear as > porosity, but also ...
298 the space-containing wall provides an access or maintenance area, for example, or can be used for storage or retreat. Or it ...
299 more than the absence of light, but also the constitution of an independent spatial zone, space shadows too generate their o ...
300 through overhanging roofs, projections or niches; its outer edge may be framed by steps or low walls. The projection of the ...
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