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DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2. DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2. What we have covered so far: Week 1 was presentation/graphics packages + CorelDraw Week 2 was the assembly of your models Week 3 was spatial planning
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DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 • What we have covered so far: • Week 1 was presentation/graphics packages + CorelDraw • Week 2 was the assembly of your models • Week 3 was spatial planning • Week 4 was a “holiday” (yay), and this week, you will continue spatial planning and we will examine • Design intent
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 lecture understanding design intent Design intent is essential for the design and communication of a design/space/etc Before you start designing your space, you need to identify the design intent. Design intent defines the purpose and function of the finished design based on specifications or requirements (your brief). Capturing design intent builds value and longevity into your design. This key concept is at the core of the design process Once you have identified the design intent, you then need to communicate it
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 lecture understanding design intent Design is a process in which designers use their expertise and experience to produce design solutions Most design outcomes exhibit the design in its completed form, but don’t always reveal how and why the design has been designed the way it is. Design intent is the motivation and reasons behind the design process The capture, representation and transmission of design intent is of great significance to the externalisation of your design process and design decisions (often hidden and under-valued by the client and the public)
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 lecture understanding design intent The final outcomes of a design process is usually technical documentation /VISUALISATION such as drawings, development reports, and digital (and less so these days, analogue) modelling. These are not only the embodiment of the design process, but they also communicate technical information among designers, between designers and the engineering/construction team. However, technical documentation /VISUALISATION does not record design motivations, the exploration process and solutions, nor the reasons why you designed what you did; they can only describe what the design is and do not explicitly reflect how and why design outcome is what it is. This lack of information makes it difficult for the client/users of the space to understand the design.
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like? Design intent can be (but is not limited to): • Reflections – text and drawings • Sketches – process, outcomes • Materials and use • Bubble maps/diagramming • Notations • Technical drawings with overlays
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like? The subtleness of water colour shows design intent while leaving just the right amount of detail to the viewers imagination.
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What does it look like?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Design intent: What is design intent? • Intent can be: • Functional: Describes WHAT the design is and does • Functional Requirements: drawings to illustrate and record basic site information (direction, dimension, street) • Functional Specifications: identify objects - spaces, things, shapes, views, lights and circulation • Non - functional: Experiential Interior Design (EID) • Experience: drawings to demonstrate experiential aspects of the space • Perception: identifying physical aspects that create a response to sensorial, emotional, intellectual, pragmatic and social experiences. • Design methods: Describes HOW design interacts with other elements or aspects • Scenarios / situations: reveal contexts and intentions of design • Problem solving: reveals a designer’s thinking graphically and facilitates problem solving and creative exploration • Reasons/rationale: Describes WHY elements/aspects were designed a certain way • Selection process: why certain forms/materials/choices are being made • Plans and Methods: the way that planning has been carried out (i.e. spatial planning) • Alternatives: what alternatives are being offered? Why?
DTB203 Interior Visualisation 2 2014.2 Next week • Week 6: FEEDBACK on Ass 1 progress