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mood, and conditioning the audibility of shouted interjec-
tions.
Relevant alongside the multiplicity of intervening ele-
ments and factors when architecture is described as a situ-
ation is their performative character, which incorporates the
processual and eventful qualities of the respective situation.
As a rule, situations are not experienced in purely static terms,
but instead through movement and active participation. De-
scriptions of situations do justice to this factor only when it
grasps architectural elements in relation to use, to our mul-
tifaceted intercourse with them, when the relationships and
positions we adopt in relation to them are taken into account,
along with the gestures they evoke. Decisive in the case of a
row of supports is less its form, and rather the way in which
they contain us, allow us to pass through, or guide us, while
for a > staircase the experiential possibilities of ascending and
descending are essential. When architecture is registered as a
holistic and integrated situation against a diffuse background
of sensory stimuli, we may perceive it as an architectural
> image. Because we ourselves are components of this situa-
tion, however, we experience it simultaneously as a > scene
within which we appear before ourselves, so to speak.
In architecture, size is addressed both to the understanding as
well as to feeling. The understanding grasps size as quantity
and > measure. Of course, it cannot grasp spatial dimensions
directly; these become palpable only by being measured against
a familiar unit, which must be perceptible as a fixed reference
point. In the realm of feeling, comparisons are not based on
the quantitative; instead, the size of a building is perceived in
relationship to one’s own body, to objects in the vicinity, and
in the framework of a total situation (> scale). The appropri-
ate size of a room is dependent upon the requirements for
proximity and distance between individuals, and is appraised
variously according to its articulation into places of activity.
Size