Fundamental Concepts of Architecture : The Vocabulary of Spatial Situations
321 sion and connection; of body/mass and space through their figure-ground relationship; of load and support through the overco ...
322 an incisive symmetrical axis as standing – even when they are wider than they are tall, and actually manifest ‘recum- bent’ ...
323 lity arrives’ (Frey 1976), which is why symmetry is often an expression of immobility, solemnity, timeless meaning, and powe ...
324 or taste. The smoothness of floorings or the surfaces of furni- ture possesses not just a tactile quality, but also a dynami ...
325 encountered together in an Egyptian tomb chamber. Literature: Böhme 2001 > furnishing, gathering, plan > haptic qualit ...
326 an element’s > form character, allowing the way in which the parts of architectural structure carry loads, embody weight, ...
327 ference between authentic and false, one that was concretized, finally, in the distinction between real construction and cla ...
328 In relation to its basic function of > screening of an > interior in relation to the outside, architecture is continu- ...
329 presumes the freedom to enter, we experience this at the unau- thorized transgression of a personal boundary, and we experi- ...
330 according to Gert Selle, curtains already serve as ‘an inviola- ble symbolic boundary between one’s own space inside and the ...
331 pressed thematically in the architecture through the repetition of the procedure of covering (> incorporation). This prov ...
332 originally referred to the wooden beams that lie on the floor of a half-timbered structure, as well as to door sill as the l ...
333 overcome resistance at the wall level. When passing through a screen consisting of thick, hard, masonry, one has a greater ...
334 leads to a contradiction between the equalization of spatial transitions on the one hand and the growing and ever more diffe ...
335 transition, but only a continual passing through.’ (Stalder 2009, 25) Literature: Stalder 2009; Waldenfels 1990 Space can on ...
336 to changes in family size or living habits through flexible ar- chitecture and easily altered plans, for example by means of ...
337 and deterioration, or through the wear that leaves traces on footworn or smoothly polished areas, but in particular by the w ...
338 > sound > garden, landscape, place, roof, stairs, urban design > context, place It is a kind of impulsion towards t ...
339 building heights, the rewards of effortful ascent are sup- planted by the astonishing sensation of being carried upwards int ...
340 possibilities for localization are produced by the ambiguous superimposition and intersection of spatial volumes (3). In gen ...
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