scholarly journals inhabiting blue

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Chiara Shim

<p>Architects by in large employ physical materials to generate and define space. Materials such as timber, stone, bricks, and mortar envelop and contain. Yet when described in a purely scientific sense, the visible world can be defined by light, or the absence of light and variations in between. Seminal author and investigator of the senses, Juhani Pallasmaa writes, ‘The experiences of matter, space and light are inseparable ... there is no true architectural experience without light’ (2016, p. 7). Extending this statement, the use of light generates space, creating an architectural experience.  The research proposition becomes: Using a reductivist approach, and employing only hue, saturation, and brightness to replace physical materials, this creative body of work explores how colour can be used to evoke a response in mixed realities.  The research methodology is Design-Led research, following similar beliefs to Peter Dowton, that by doing, knowing is enhancing knowledge. Literature reviews indicated that there are two main approaches to colour psychology and therapy. From this, the research aims to bridge the gap between popular culture claims and heavily scientific or psychology-based research, to explore the effects of colour through architectural design. Following this, colour theory was researched, followed by a feasibility study of design tests. In the sketch design phase, light at the wavelength frequency of blue was tapped into, and its effects researched. Unique blues were created from nature: flora and fauna were sourced and boiled into pigments. The final outcome is mixed media; Virtual Realities, physical works, and a unique experience. Throughout this project, tests were executed including reviews to gain an indication of whether a response was evoked.  The results of this architectural portfolio, which leans into the artistic vein of architecture, show that various saturations and brightness of hues in the blue range can indeed evoke responses.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Chiara Shim

<p>Architects by in large employ physical materials to generate and define space. Materials such as timber, stone, bricks, and mortar envelop and contain. Yet when described in a purely scientific sense, the visible world can be defined by light, or the absence of light and variations in between. Seminal author and investigator of the senses, Juhani Pallasmaa writes, ‘The experiences of matter, space and light are inseparable ... there is no true architectural experience without light’ (2016, p. 7). Extending this statement, the use of light generates space, creating an architectural experience.  The research proposition becomes: Using a reductivist approach, and employing only hue, saturation, and brightness to replace physical materials, this creative body of work explores how colour can be used to evoke a response in mixed realities.  The research methodology is Design-Led research, following similar beliefs to Peter Dowton, that by doing, knowing is enhancing knowledge. Literature reviews indicated that there are two main approaches to colour psychology and therapy. From this, the research aims to bridge the gap between popular culture claims and heavily scientific or psychology-based research, to explore the effects of colour through architectural design. Following this, colour theory was researched, followed by a feasibility study of design tests. In the sketch design phase, light at the wavelength frequency of blue was tapped into, and its effects researched. Unique blues were created from nature: flora and fauna were sourced and boiled into pigments. The final outcome is mixed media; Virtual Realities, physical works, and a unique experience. Throughout this project, tests were executed including reviews to gain an indication of whether a response was evoked.  The results of this architectural portfolio, which leans into the artistic vein of architecture, show that various saturations and brightness of hues in the blue range can indeed evoke responses.</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-73
Author(s):  
Yong Kuan ◽  
Yahaya Ahmad

Architecture influences people and the environment from the past, present and the future. Nevertheless architecture and design quality is viewed as subjective, and benchmarks to achieve consensus are necessary for design or evaluation of buildings. This paper establishes architectural design criteria for design quality of multi-storey housing buildings. A set of the criteria was established with literature review, an operational definition and survey on qualified persons or architects in the professional practice of architecture. The literature reviews identified seven concepts for architecture and design quality, and the operational definition translated this architectural design quality to measurable and observable cases and variables. The survey collected these variable data from a purposive sample of 95 respondents, and these data were examined by statistical analysis. The results of the descriptive statistics, inferential t-tests (p ≤ 0.05) and positive hypothesis testing verified that respondents in general agreed to these seven design concepts as architectural design criteria for design quality. These results established the first ever set of seven architectural design criteria which were ranked in descending order of significance as function, socio-culture, site context, cost, aesthetic of art, sustainability, and Feng Shui. These architectural design criteria can be applied to the design or evaluation of multi-storey housing buildings for the good of people and the environment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 887 ◽  
pp. 353-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sören Eikemeier ◽  
Ardeshir Mahdavi ◽  
Robert Wimmer

To reduce the energy and resource consumption in the building sector this study is focusing on a design optimisation of life cycle oriented buildings. In order to optimise the performance of the buildings and in consequence also to achieve improved results for the mandatory Austrian energy certificate a simulation-based rapid design approach is used for the early stage design phase of the buildings, in particular for the architectural design of the buildings.Methods like the Window to Wall Ratio, at the very beginning of the design process, a parametric simulation with EnergyPlus or a more detailed optimisation approach with GenOpt are integrated in this study applied to example buildings. The results are showing that the method can be used in a circular approach for improving the heating demand of the Austrian energy certificate for this case study by more than 25 % compared to the preliminary design


2014 ◽  
Vol 1030-1032 ◽  
pp. 2411-2414
Author(s):  
Jiang Nan Han ◽  
Qi Chen ◽  
Ying Chen ◽  
Yan Wang ◽  
Xiao Long Liu

With increasingly serious energy crisis, the construction industry is one of the three major energy consumption industries. How to realize the sustainable development of energy, promote energy-saving building, realize ecological urban development, have become the focus of construction industry. This paper analyzes and discusses the energy saving measures should be taken into consideration when the different architectural design phase and the two kinds of optimization problem under arbitrary axisymmetric load.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Finn Sansom

<p>Corporate branding can be an important part of a company’s communication strategy. The corporate identity shapes how a company is known and perceived by the public. Logo’s, jingles, products and advertising are only part of the shaping of this image. It has been identified that architecture can play a significant role too (Melewar & Jenkins, 2002).  The wine industry in New Zealand is very competitive and has a very involved relationship with the public. This thesis explores how a wine company can display corporate values through architecture.  Using Pernod Ricard as the company, and a new winery production facility as the case study, the thesis will use architectural design elements to produce a functional winery with a unique experience driven by Pernod Ricard’s values. Being an international cooperation, place specific values as well as sub-brand values compete with core values of the company. These factors present an interesting architectural investigation.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 855 (1) ◽  
pp. 012003
Author(s):  
M A Thomassen ◽  
P Munch-Petersen

Abstract This article unfolds as a dialogue between architectural and economics concerns on how a sustainable circular practice can be introduced and upscaled in construction. It will point towards absolute sustainable targets and will be analyze in juxtaposition to the (weak) economic drivers that can get us there (Brejnrod et al., 2017; Eberhardt et al., 2020). First, it is established that sustainable innovation is design strategies that simplify construction in order to avoid environmental impacts tied to building material overuse. These strategies are defined as tectonics of avoidance and consist of two, direct and indirect, approaches to architectural design. Common for both is that as innovation they must be understood more at applied complex knowledge more than a specific product. In the second part of the article, we discuss how this kind of information (knowledge) can be applied in the economic circumstances that frame construction and architecture today. How it challenges the path-dependency of design methods today and how information and complex knowledge can be ‘sold’ in an ‘open source’ or ‘closed’ approach to the existing marked for construction.


2011 ◽  
Vol 374-377 ◽  
pp. 2342-2345
Author(s):  
Yong Xu ◽  
Ji Chao Zhang

According to the target of a science center building, some energy-saving technologies and relevant principles phases in architectural planning and design phase, architectural design and construction phase, and so on. With the requirements of energy-saving technologies and an environmental protection technology, some successful experience of Guangdong science center which named as the largest science center building of current China discussed. As a result, the energy-saving science center building design methods came into being, which includes natural ventilation techniques of central yard, optimization technology of enclosed structure, photoelectric curtain wall technology and solar power and so on.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Finn Sansom

<p>Corporate branding can be an important part of a company’s communication strategy. The corporate identity shapes how a company is known and perceived by the public. Logo’s, jingles, products and advertising are only part of the shaping of this image. It has been identified that architecture can play a significant role too (Melewar & Jenkins, 2002).  The wine industry in New Zealand is very competitive and has a very involved relationship with the public. This thesis explores how a wine company can display corporate values through architecture.  Using Pernod Ricard as the company, and a new winery production facility as the case study, the thesis will use architectural design elements to produce a functional winery with a unique experience driven by Pernod Ricard’s values. Being an international cooperation, place specific values as well as sub-brand values compete with core values of the company. These factors present an interesting architectural investigation.</p>


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