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Tectonic Thinking after the Industrial Revolution

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Title: Tectonic Thinking after the Industrial Revolution


1
Tectonic Thinkingafter theIndustrial Revolution
  • Robert Pirsig, Zen the Art of Motorcycle
    Maintenance
  • Kenneth Frampton, Studies in Tectonic Culture
  • Lars Spuybroek, The Architecture of Continuity
  • Richard Sennett, The Craftsman
  • Ed Ford, The Details of Modern Architecture, Vol.
    1
  • Geoffrey Scott, The Architecture of Humanism

2
  • ... Eduard Sekler defined the tectonic as a
    certain expressivity

3
  • Expression (ik-SPRESH'uhn) n. Definition --n.
  • 1. The act of expressing, conveying, or
    representing in words, art, music, or movement.
  • Express (ik-SPRES') tr.v. Definition --tr.v.
    -pressed, -pressing, -presses.
  • 4. To make a representation of depict.
  • 5. To represent by a sign or symbol symbolize.
  • American Heritage Dictionary Online

4
  • ... Eduard Sekler defined the tectonic as a
    certain expressivity arising from the statical
    resistance of constructional form in such a way
    that the resultant form could not be accounted
    for in terms of structure and construction alone.

5
Aesthetics
  • From Websters Online Dictionary
  • 1.a branch of philosophy dealing with the nature
    of beauty, art, and taste and with the creation
    and appreciation of beauty
  • 2.a particular theory or conception of beauty or
    art
  • Beauty
  • derived from the Greek Word for sensory
    perception
  • skin deep
  • in the eye of the beholder
  • classical beauty expresses order and clarity

6
Dualities
  • Art ltgt Nature
  • Art ltgt Science
  • Art ltgt Fine Arts
  • Art as expressing
  • Artist-centered, receivers attitude is irrelevant
  • Art as pleasing
  • Viewer-centered, receivers attitude is some form
    of sensory pleasure
  • Art as moving
  • In the lives of the receivers hearts and minds
  • Art as revealing
  • Discloses something about reality, enlightening

7
Reality
Pirsig, Robert M Zen And The Art Of Motorcycle
Maintenance
8
Quality
Pirsig, Robert M Zen And The Art Of Motorcycle
Maintenance
9
Zen 2 Peace of Mind
  • Assembly of Japanese bicycle require great
    peace of mind. Technology presumes there's just
    one right way to do things and there never is.
    And when you presume there's just one right way
    to do things, of course the instructions begin
    and end exclusively with the rotisserie. But if
    you have to choose among an infinite number of
    ways to put it together then the relation of the
    machine to you, and the relation of the machine
    and you to the rest of the world, has to be
    considered, because the selection from among many
    choices, the art of the work is just as dependent
    upon your own mind and spirit as it is upon the
    material of the machine. That's why you need the
    peace of mind.

10
Zen 3 Harmony
  • Sometime look at a novice workman or a bad
    workman and compare his expression with that of a
    craftsman whose work you know is excellent and
    you'll see the difference. The craftsman isn't
    ever following a single line of instruction. He's
    making decisions as he goes along. For that
    reason he'll be absorbed and attentive to what
    he's doing even though he doesn't deliberately
    contrive this. His motions and the machine are in
    a kind of harmony. He isn't following any set of
    written instructions because the nature of the
    material at hand determines his thoughts and
    motions, which simultaneously change the nature
    of the material at hand. The material and his
    thoughts are changing together in a progression
    of changes until his mind's at rest at the same
    time the material's right.

11
Zen 4 Transcendance
  • All that talk about technology and art is part
    of a pattern that seems to have emerged from my
    own life. It represents transcendence from
    something I think a lot of others may be trying
    to transcend. Well, it isn't just art and
    technology. It's a kind of non-coalescence
    between reason and feeling. What's wrong with
    technology, is that it's not connected in any
    real way with matters of the spirit and of the
    heart. And so it does blind, ugly things quite by
    accident and gets hated for that. .. the
    ugliness is being noticed more and more and
    people are asking if we must always suffer
    spiritually and esthetically in order to satisfy
    material needs... It can't be solved by rational
    means because the rationality itself is the
    source of the problem.

12
Zen 5 Technology
  • The ugliness the Sutherlands were fleeing is
    not inherent in technology. It only seemed that
    way to them because it's so hard to isolate what
    it is with technology that's so ugly. But
    technology is simply the making of things and the
    making of things can't by its own nature be ugly
    or there would be no possibility for beauty in
    the arts, which also include the making of
    things. Actually a root word of technology,
    technikos, originally meant "art." The ancient
    Greeks never separated art from manufacture in
    their minds, and so never developed separate
    words for them. Neither is the ugliness inherent
    in the materials of modern technology - a
    statement you sometimes hear. Mass-produced
    plastics and synthetics aren't in themselves bad.
    They've just acquired bad associations.

13
Zen 6 Technology
  • But, the real ugliness of modern technology
    isn't found in any material or shape or act or
    product. These are just the objects in which the
    low Quality appears to reside. It's our habit of
    assigning Quality to subjects or objects that
    gives this impression. The real ugliness is not
    the result of any objects of technology. Nor is
    it, if one follows Phaedrus' metaphysics, the
    result of any subjects of technology, the people
    who produce it or the people who use it. Quality,
    or its absence, doesn't reside in either the
    subject or the object. The real ugliness lies in
    the relationship between the people who produce
    the technology and the things they produce, which
    results in a similar relationship between the
    people who use the technology and the things they
    use.

14
Zen 7 Fusion
  • It is this identity that is the basis of
    craftsmanship in all the technical arts. And it
    is this identity that modern, dualistically
    conceived technology lacks.
  • The creator of it feels no particular sense of
    identity with it.
  • The owner of it feels no particular sense of
    identity with it.
  • The user of it feels no particular sense of
    identity with it.
  • The way to solve the conflict between human
    values and technological needs is not to run away
    from technology. That's impossible. The way to
    resolve the conflict is to break down the
    barriers of dualistic thought that prevent a real
    understanding of what technology is--not an
    exploitation of nature, but a fusion of nature
    and the human spirit into a new kind of creation
    that transcends both.

15
Historical Tectonic Attitudes
  • Vitruvius Firmness, Commodity Delight
  • Pugin no features of a building which are not
    there for convenience, construction or
    proprietyall ornament should consist in the
    essential construction
  • Ruskins Architectural Deceits 1) suggestion of
    a mode of structure other than the true one, 2)
    painting of surfaces to represent some other
    material and 3) use of cast or machine made
    ornaments of any kind.
  • Nervi ... marvelous possibilities cannot be
    fully developed if the three fundamental factors
    of any construction the architectural concept,
    the structural analysis and the correct solution
    to the problems of execution.
  • Konstantinidis Good architecture starts always
    with efficient construction.
  • Pjer Feld The use of a given material should
    never happen by choice or calculation but only
    through intuition and desire.
  • Billington Efficiency, Economy Elegance

16
A4229 Studies in Tectonic Culture,Kenneth
Frampton
  • The tectonic suggests itself today as a
    critical strategy largely because of the current
    tendency to commodify architectural form. It has
    to be conceded that this concern largely arises
    out of a reaction to Robert Venturi's concept of
    the "decorated shed." In this regard, it may be
    seen as a response to the fashion for reducing
    architecture to a spectacular expendable mise en
    scene. This amortizable scenographic approach has
    accompanied the general dissolution of references
    in the late modern world. With the possible
    exception of applied science, the precepts
    governing many discourses today have become
    rather both incommunicative and unstable.

17
Cecil Balmond, 2002
  • To my mind the answers lie deep in
    configuration. As we are made of patterns, both
    random and regular, both physical and emotional,
    probing the archetypes of pattern is important -
    in its recognition and resonance we may find an
    element of beauty. In the past , beauty was
    conditioned by aspects of purity, fixed
    symmetries and pared minimal structure being
    accepted as norms. . Now that the world is being
    accepted as not simple, the complex and oblique
    and the intertwining of logic gain favor. Reason
    itself is finally being understood as nascent
    structure, non-linear and dependent on feedback
    procedures. Beauty may lie in the actual
    processes of engagement and be more abstract that
    the aesthetic of objecthood. Ultimately it may
    really be a constructive process.

18
Richard Sennett, 2008
  • The architect Renzo Piano explains his own
    working procedure thus You start by sketching,
    then you do a drawing, then you make a model, and
    then you go to reality-you go to the site-and
    then you go back to drawing. You build up a kind
    of circularity between drawing and making and
    then back again. About repetition and practice
    Piano observes, This is very typical of the
    craftsman's approach. You think and you do at the
    same time. You draw and you make. Drawing ... Is
    revisited. You do it, you redo it, and you redo
    it again.

19
Lars Spuybroek, 2008
  • Similarly for Spuybroek, the inherently
    empathetic nature of materiality is the basis for
    a politics of the object, enacted through the
    material logics of architecture, which are
    understood as continuous with those of the world.
    It is the "burning surfaces" of space, he
    concludes, that "make us catch fire. That is true
    continuity.
  • from the foreword by Detlef Mertens

20
Form Findingvs.Form Making
21
Functionality
  • "It is the pervading law of all things organic
    and inorganic, Of all things physical and
    metaphysical, Of all things human and all
    things super-human, Of all true
    manifestations of the head, Of the heart, of
    the soul, That the life is recognizable in
    its expression, That form ever follows
    function. This is the law.
  • Louis Sullivan

22
Expression
  • ... Eduard Sekler defined the tectonic as a
    certain expressivity arising from the statical
    resistance of constructional form in such a way
    that the resultant form could not be accounted
    for in terms of structure and construction alone.

23
Rationality
  • These notes are about the process of design
    the process of inventing physical things which
    display a new physical order, organization, form,
    in response to function.
  • every design problem begins with an effort to
    achieve fitness between two entities the form in
    question and its context. The form is the
    solution to the problem the context defines the
    problem.
  • Christopher Alexander

24
Efficiency
  • Efficiency depends on the trinity of material,
    shape and the process of making. The lighter that
    constructions have to be, the more critical the
    balance between these three.
  • Adriaan Beukers

25
Nature
26
Minimal Architecture
  • Tomorrows architecture will again be minimal
    architecture, an architecture of the self-forming
    and self-optimization processes suggested by
    human beings. This must be seen as part of the
    new developing ecological system of the people
    who have densely and peacefully settled the
    surface of the earth. It ia an architecture that
    respects genuine traditions and the multiplicity
    of forms in animate and inanimate nature.
  • Frei Otto

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  • Membranes
  • The structural membrane acts also as the
    weathershield

29
  • Cable Nets
  • A separate grid of structural cables supports a
    nonstructural weathershield

30
  • Arches, Vaults Shells
  • Arch and vault constructions use little material
    and small mass when the form is generated by the
    inverted catenary, or for shells, the inverted
    net.

31
Informal by Cecil Balmond
  • the informal steps in easily, a sudden twist or
    turn, a branching, and the unexpected happens -
    the edge of chance shows its face
  • Delight, surprise, ambiguity are typical
    responses ideas clash in the informal and
    strange juxtapositions take place. Overlaps
    occur. Instead of regular, formally controlled
    measures, there are varying rhythms and wayward
    impulses.
  • Uniformity is broken and balance is interrupted.
    The demand for Order! in the regimental senses is
    ignored the big picture is something else.

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45
U.Penn Blogosphere by metamechanicForm and Space
are dead. (I am emulating Nietzsche here)
Forms and Algorithms is a pre-requisite to Cecil
Balmonds studio. . why are architect students
learning VB and C in the realm of SmartGeometry,
Generative Components, and Rhino scripting, why
so rigourous? Well its the end of this Form and
Space obsession of architecture. I am sure this
isn't Balmonds intention, but thanks to the
rebels against the cube, Form and Space are done.
Here is the quick history1. Modern
architecture oblished sic ornament and
abstracted the basics forms for us (Adolf Loos,
De Stijl)2. Space became free flowing (FLW,
Mies)3. Then all the straight forward basic
principles failed on many levels, urban planning,
meaning, etc... 4. Po-mo, Italian Rationalism
but within a context of the varnacular ic,
Michael Graves, Corb's brutalism and Ronchamp,
Robert A.M. Stern historical crap, Archigrams fun
overly technolica sicl conceptions, Archizooms
presentation of full force modernity as an
apocalyptic situation5. Semiotics, writing
cities, etc...importing linguistics and social
sciences (Henri Lefebvre, Roland Barthes, etc...)
so that architecture may form a language6.
Deconstruction...importing a philosophy to
deconstruct the language of architecture
(Derrida, Deleuze)7. Situationism and
Events...importing hedonistic temporal duration
cinematic experience architecture crap (Debord,
cinematic application of Bergson)8.
Existenialism sic, Power, and
Dwellin...Heideger, Foucalt, etc...9.
Blobs....10. Ribbons...11. High-Tech as style
and justified by Sustainability12. Gehry
Technoligies sic ....capable of making
extremely complicated forms affordable and
buildable via Catia platform based Digital
Project13. Forms and Algorithms...I know you're
saying how can you end it with a class you're
taking. trust me its the end, and Forms and
Algorithms is just another Brick in the Wall.
46
U.Penn Blogosphere by metamechanic
see the cycle. clarity via scientific analysis
rebelled against via artistic concepts, just to
become scientific again... you're thinking, won't
architects resort to rebelling again....what do
you propose? I have one answer for you...CAS's
and Emergence....complex adaptive systems and
emergence, a combo of phase transititions sic
in physics, cellular automata, economics
realization that their objects of study are
agents of irrational behavior. in the world of
architecture this means our forms and spaces
evolve themselves via genetic rules and the
enviroment sic. So why would Form and Space be
dead? well, emergence and CAS's exclude the
designer from the design of forms and space. the
designer designs the rules and lets it
fly.Conclusion the study of form and space in
itself is dead, we've covered all the bases so
let us move on to more important
things...please! Form and Space should be taught
like English 101 i.e. this is a cube, cubes are
useful for this, this is a blob, historically
applicable as this...but no need in wasting hours
of studio time justify Form and Space... with
that said I love my Forms and Algorithms class, i
intend to use to exclude me from design decisions
unless of course I want to make one, but I really
don't feel like justifing sic form and space
anymore, its so damn elementary.
47
A Final Thought
  • In theory, there is no difference between
    theory and practice, but in practice there is.
  • Jan L. A. van de Snepscheut, 19531994

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49
Zen 8
  • When this transcendence occurs in such events as
    the first airplane flight across the ocean or the
    first footstep on the moon, a kind of public
    recognition of the transcendent nature of
    technology occurs. But this transcendence should
    also occur at the individual level, on a personal
    basis, in one's own life, in a less dramatic way.

50
Zen 9
  • Such personal transcendence of conflicts with
    technology doesn't have to involve motorcycles,
    of course. It can be at a level as simple as
    sharpening a kitchen knife or sewing a dress or
    mending a broken chair.

51
A.W. Pugin
  • 76 page book entitled Principles of Pointed or
    Christian Architecture
  • Two great rules of design
  • there should be no features of a building which
    are not there for convenience, construction or
    propriety
  • ...all ornament should consist in the essential
    construction of the building. In pure
    architecture, the smallest detail should have
    meaning or purpose.
  • Rational Building Monolithic Construction

52
John Ruskin The Seven Lamps of Architecture
  • The Lamp of Truth
  • Architectural Deceits
  • 1st The suggestion of a mode of structure or
    support, other than the true one......
  • 2nd The painting of surfaces to represent some
    other material than that of which they actually
    consist.....
  • 3rd The use of cast or machine made ornaments of
    any kind.

53
Pier Luigi Nervi, 1961
  • the unlimited possibilities of design offered
    by scientific theories of construction, the
    executions made possible by new building
    materials and current techniques, and the
    architectural themes growing ever greater and
    more complex as dictated by our social and
    economic developments, open horizons of
    unprecedented possibilities of construction as
    compared to what humanity has achieved from
    prehistoric times to the present.
  • Nevertheless these marvelous possibilities cannot
    be fully developed if the three fundamental
    factors of any construction the architectural
    concept, the structural analysis and the correct
    solution to the problems of execution do not
    proceed in close collaboration having as its aim
    the sole and unique goal of arriving at a
    proposed result combining functionality, solidity
    and beauty.

54
Aris Konstantinidis, Architecture, 1964
  • Good architecture starts always with efficient
    construction. Without construction there is no
    architecture. Construction embodies material and
    its use according to its properties, that is to
    say, stone imposes a different method of
    construction from iron or concrete.

55
Sigurd Lewerentz St. Peters
  • The column itself is not what it at first appears
    to be split in two from top to bottom, its twin
    cross-trees which are not symmetrical carry
    at their extremities yet further beams which are
    also split into pairs. Upon these beams stand
    steel struts to support the metal ribs that
    support the brick vaults at both springing and
    ridgelines alternately. Then again, these ribs to
    the vaults are neither horizontal nor do they run
    parallel but expand and contract as they run from
    wall to wall. Lewerentz speaks of the vaults as a
    recall of the ancient symbol of the heavens, but
    here his treatment of them is strangely moving
    and insinuates into the mind a closer analogy to
    the rhythm of breathing the rise and fall, the
    interlocking of expansion and contraction.

56
Pjer Feld, 1983
  • The use of a given material should never happen
    by choice or calculation, but only through
    intuition and desire.
  • The calculated column expresses nothing more
    than a particular number . . . In a world that is
    determined by calculation, material loses all
    capacity for the expression of constructive
    thought.
  • For the young architect each material is a
    measurement of strength. To apply the material to
    its ultimate capacity is natural for youth. The
    expression of this inherent force complements a
    natural vitality. The material's sensation
    carries its conviction and the energy of youth
    attains a structural perfection.
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