Sunday, January 27, 2013
A Building's Structure: La Casa Mila
A building's structure is how a building is built. They way it looks or what makes the actual building. There are two kinds of structure, Physical and Perceptual. A physical structure is when you can actually SEE the structure. A few examples of physical structures is: Strength, Stiffness, Span space. These carry the building's loads. Then each spam, has different materials and types: Beam, Arch, Truss, Suspension Bridges, and Inflatable Membranes. Each beam can be made from different materials, Wood, Steel, RI Concrete, PT Concrete. Wood beams can cover as much as 15', Steel 30', so can RI Concrete, while PT Concrete can cover as much as 60'. So each beam has different uses and types of reasons why it's used. While Perceptual Structures are structures that can not be seen but rather felt. You have to actually touch the building to feel its structure.
La Casa Mila is a residential for the family, rentable flats, business, and commercial uses. What's so special about this building, is it's unique, shape. Instead of it's walls being smooth and straight, the walls on the outside are curved and rough, giving it a texture. The railings are made of sculpted iron, having an artistic view. The front doors are see through, there are iron "tentacles", with windows, through the holes. What I loved about La Casa Mila, is it's like a piece of art. The way the architect combined his architectural capabilities with his artistic ways, really made it stand out.
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Stanford Visit
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Site Planning: Thermal Baths, Vals
Site planning, another concept of a building and its architecture. You got to check out the surroundings of the place. Where are the roads, any canals? Or trees, animals. Simple things like those could tick off the planning and construction of the plans. There are two things to look at: The Programming and Designing.Programming is when you search for problems or gaps in the site and compare then to your work. If it's going to work or not going to work. They search for things that could go wrong. It is pretty useful so the architect won't have to re-do the whole thing, but rathe work around it. When you Design the site plan, not only is it actually drawing the building and site, but solving the gaps and problems that were presented. Drawing, planning and building around them. Allowing the architect the final product, without flaws.
A great example are the Therme Vals in Switzerland. They're indoor pools and spas for a hotel in Vals, Switzerland. What is so captivating about this building is that it's coming out from the mountain's slope. It gives the illusion that the building was carved out of the mountain. Not only that but the stone they used looks like the granite from the mountain. There are several rooms, that are each a different type of pool or spa. The roof is actually an oversized puzzle, they're put in the form of a giant square covered with a grass roof. But what truly called me in was that they depend on natural lighting, even if they're inside a building, giving it that cave like feeling. I loved this building because it allows the building to truly harmonize with its surroundings. It balances its site with the building, it really worked around the topography of it, giving it its feel. Providing that feeling of being in the mountain itself.


A great example are the Therme Vals in Switzerland. They're indoor pools and spas for a hotel in Vals, Switzerland. What is so captivating about this building is that it's coming out from the mountain's slope. It gives the illusion that the building was carved out of the mountain. Not only that but the stone they used looks like the granite from the mountain. There are several rooms, that are each a different type of pool or spa. The roof is actually an oversized puzzle, they're put in the form of a giant square covered with a grass roof. But what truly called me in was that they depend on natural lighting, even if they're inside a building, giving it that cave like feeling. I loved this building because it allows the building to truly harmonize with its surroundings. It balances its site with the building, it really worked around the topography of it, giving it its feel. Providing that feeling of being in the mountain itself.
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Economy & Energy in Architecture: The House of Sugimoto
The House of Sugimoto is a great example, it contains all of the five things that are needed to have an energy efficient home. The House of Sugimoto isn't divided by solid walls, instead it's divided by screens. Giving the whole house a big room effect. The screens also provide a direct way for the sunlight to come in. The thing that fascinated me was that the beams aren't one solid one, they are like 3D puzzles. All of its empty spaces are gardens, providing a filter from the sun. The layout of the building is interesting, it's in a way mixed uses but not really. The buildings are separated but still in the same site. It was once described as,"The house is a series of empty connected spaces."
Function in Architecture: How it works/The Johnson Building
Sunday, January 13, 2013
Space vs. Form
Friday, January 11, 2013
The Beauty of a Building
How can you tell if a building is beautiful architect? You really can't can you? The "beauty" of the building consists of seven elements: Proportions, Scales, Rhythm, Symmetry, Texture, Light, and Color. Each element plays a big role on what the architect might want to be getting across. It's a way of architects to express their concepts and symbolism. Now beauty is a hard concept to grasp, each person has their own concept of beauty and their own opinions. So as, previously mentioned, the viewer is going to have different emotions associated with that building. While one might say the building is beautiful, the other might say it's hideous.
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Why Architecture Matters
In the book, Why Architecture Matters, by Paul G, Paul explains a lot on how Thomas Jefferson's buildings had a symbol behind them. They have a reason, and answer the questions, "Why?" and "How?" He tends to mix his materials and symbols together. For example, in the University of Virginia, he combined the element of the icy white of the brick and the warmth of the red brick together. They are very contradictory, yet the coolness of the white balances the boldness of the red. At times, he tends to make his works abstract but, in the same project he flat out displays his symbols
The thing is with architecture, because it has become it has become part of our daily lives, we tend to not pay much attention to it. For example, the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco or the George Pompidou Center in Paris, to tourist, it is a piece of work, nothing like it. But to it's commoners, it's just another bridge or center. We tend to look at it's uses rather than appearances after a while. Each person experiences architecture in different ways. Have different emotions associated with that building. When the building is in use, we examen each detail, yet when it's empty when skip that fact and just look at it for functions
The thing is with architecture, because it has become it has become part of our daily lives, we tend to not pay much attention to it. For example, the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco or the George Pompidou Center in Paris, to tourist, it is a piece of work, nothing like it. But to it's commoners, it's just another bridge or center. We tend to look at it's uses rather than appearances after a while. Each person experiences architecture in different ways. Have different emotions associated with that building. When the building is in use, we examen each detail, yet when it's empty when skip that fact and just look at it for functions
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