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Lecture 6

ARCH 455 URBAN DESIGN MAJOR ELECTIVE I by Şebnem Hoşkara & Naciye Doratlı EMU Faculty of Architecture Department of Architecture. Lecture 6. Visual Dimension of Urban Design. VISUAL CONCEPTUALIZATION OF URBAN DESIGN – Cullen 1961 Tugnutt & Robinson 1967.

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Lecture 6

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  1. ARCH 455 URBAN DESIGN MAJOR ELECTIVE IbyŞebnem Hoşkara & Naciye DoratlıEMU Faculty of ArchitectureDepartment of Architecture

  2. Lecture 6 Visual Dimension of Urban Design

  3. VISUALCONCEPTUALIZATION OF URBAN DESIGN– Cullen 1961 Tugnutt & Robinson 1967 • THE SCHOLAR HIGHLIGHTED THE PERCEPTUAL AND SPATIAL QUALITIES OF THE URBAN ENVIRONMENT

  4. TODAY’S MENU • URBAN ARCHITECTURE • VISUAL APPROPRIATENESS • Development size • Local style - identity • Massing • Detailed design – frame + corner • Scale • Focal points / Landmarks • Townscape

  5. URBAN ARCHITECTURE • The visual-aesthetic character of the urban environment derives not only from its spatial qualities, but also from the colour, texture and detailing of its defining surfaces. • warm colours: seem to advance into a space; • cool colours: give more spacious feelings; • A space can also feel harsh and inhuman if its surfaces lack fine detail and interest at human scale. • Activities occuring within and around a space can contribute to its character and sense of place.

  6. URBAN ARCHITECTURE • Aspace can feel harsh and inhuman if its surfaces lack fine detail and interest at human scale.

  7. URBAN ARCHITECTURE • MAIN ELEMENTS CONTRIBUTING TO THE VISUAL-AESTHETIC CHARACTER OF URBAN SPACE: ITS ARCHITECTURE AND ITS LANDSCAPING

  8. URBAN ARCHITECTURE • Architecture that responds and contributes positively to its context and to the definition of public realm. • This excludes freestanding buildings, except as occasional element. • Von Meiss: While the building fabric gives an ‘image of continuity, of expansiveness, stretching to infinity’, the object is ‘a closed element, finite, comprehensible as an entity’.

  9. URBAN ARCHITECTURE • Royal Fine Art Commission (RFAC) identified six criteria in attempting to understand what makes a ’good building’. • What is important is to avoid turning desirable principles into dogmatic imperatives.

  10. Six criteria identified by the Royal Fine Art Commission (RFAC) • Order and Unity • Expression • Integrity • Plan & Section • Detail • Integration

  11. A building could embody every criterion and still not be a ‘good’ building. • A good designer may successfully break the rules and still create good architecture.

  12. Order and Unity In terms of building elements and facade design, order is manifested through the means: • symmetry • balance • repetition • the grid • the bay • the structural frame

  13. Order and Unity • At street level, unity may come from repetition of an architectural ‘style’, or less formally, • from common underlying design patterns of motifs, or • unifying elements such as: - building silhouette - consistent plot width - fenestration patterns - proportions - massing - the treatment of entrances - materials - details etc.

  14. Expression • The appropriate expression of the function of a building which enables us to recognize a building for what it is. • While subject to debate, symbolic appropriateness is often considered a key requisite of good architecture: a house or a church should communicate its function. • Symbolic differentiation produces a hierarchy of building types which increases the legibility of urban areas.

  15. Expression A public building has a much larger scale, contrasting style, lavish detail and high quality materials, providing ‘landmarks’ in the street scene: (most private buildings in the townscape should be ‘backcloth’ buildings).

  16. Integrity • Through their form and construction, buildings should express the functions they and their individual parts fulfill; • Spaces should reflect their purpose and express the structure and construction methods. • The buildings should be visually appropriate in their form and construction

  17. Plan & Section • There should be a positive relationship between the building’s façade and its plan & section. (for two main reasons) - A building is designed as a totality in which the façade addresses the street in front and the plan and section that lie behind. - The relationship of section, plan and local context is fundamental in terms of the volume of development a site can accommodate (ie plot ratio)

  18. Plan & Section • Instances where this relation is false or weak are usually known as façadism – a functional and structural ‘dishonesty’ between a building’s interior and exterior Richmond Riverside, London

  19. Plan & Section a new building behind a retained historic façade. This is often a controversial issue in urban design and conservation

  20. Detail • When you are in an urban space, it is the details what holds your eye. • Lack of detail impoverishes architecture and leaves us without a layer of experience that brings us into a close contact with a building where we can admire the beauty of the materials and the skill of the craftsman. • Facades can be appreciated in terms of their visual ‘richness’ (the interest and complexity that holds the eye) and ‘elegance’ (a function of proportions that the eye finds pleasing and harmonious). • Detail and visual interest help humanize environments. • As buildings are seen in different ways- near and far, straight on or obliquely, detail is required at various scales, depending on their position in the townscape.

  21. Detail

  22. Detail • Small scale detail- important at ground floor level to provide visual interest for pedestrians. • Larger scale detail – for viewing over longer distances. • Details intensify about windows and doorways and at building corners. • Appropriate emphasis of entrances allows users to read the façade facilitate movement from the public to private realm.

  23. Integration • Harmonization of a building with the surroundings and the qualities needed for this. • Integration may sometimes be named as ‘fitting in’. This does not necessary means a slavish adherence to an architectural style. The stylistic dimension is only one aspect of fitting in.

  24. Integration

  25. Too much emphasis on this element denies the opportunity of innovation and excitement: • visual criteria such as scale and rhythm are often more important. Many of the most successful groups of buildings are of dramatically different materials and styles (the buildings around the Piazza San Marco, Venice). Integration

  26. Integration • A continuum of three basic approaches to creating harmony with the existing context can be identified. • Each represents a different design philosophy. Stylistic uniformity Continuity Juxtaposition/ contrast

  27. Integration • Stylistic uniformity Imitation of the local architectural character and in the process, possibly diluting the qualities desired to be retained.

  28. Integration • Juxtaposition/ contrast • New design, making few concessions to the existing architectural character. • Although this can produce vibrant and successful contrast, the approach is eminently capable of a ‘disastrous result in the form of arrogant exibitionism’.

  29. Integration

  30. Integration • Continuity • Involves interpretation- rather than simply imitation- of local visual character. • Typifying postmodern architectural design, this approach reflects a desire for new development to reflect and develop the existing sense of place.

  31. Integration

  32. VISUAL • Appearance – Visual appropriateness • Development size • Local style - identity • Massing • Detailed design – frame + corner • Scale • Focal points / Landmarks • Townscape

  33. Development size • Size/ volume of a particular development on a particular site is controled by plot ratios (gross floor area divided by site area), which are rather crude tools, as a given volume of development can be organized in various different ways. • Plot ratios should, therefore, usually be accompanied by some form of indicative massing.

  34. Development size

  35. Local style - identity

  36. Local style - identity

  37. Local style - identity

  38. Local style - identity

  39. Massing • The three dimensional disposition of building volume. • The total three dimensional massing of a building is often described as a building’s form. • The impact of new development needs to be considered from a range of viewing points and angles

  40. Massing • Single, monolithic forms that are not relieved by variations in massing. Boxlike facades and forms are disturbing when placed in a streetscape of older buildings that have varied massing and facade articulation. • Breaking up uninteresting boxlike forms into smaller, varied masses such as are common on most of the surrounding buildings.

  41. Detailed design – frame + corner • When you are in an urban space, it is the details what holds your eye. • Lack of detail impoverishes architecture and leaves us without a layer of experience that brings us into a close contact with a building where we can admire the beauty of the materials and the skill of the craftsman. • Facades can be appreciated in terms of their visual ‘richness’ (the interest and complexity that holds the eye) and ‘elegance’ (a function of proportions that the eye finds pleasing and harmonious).

  42. Detailed design – frame + corner • Detail and visual interest help humanize environments. • As buildings are seen in different ways- near and far, straight on or obliquely, detail is required at various scales, depending on their position in the townscape.

  43. Detailed design – frame + corner • Small scale detail- important at ground floor level to provide visual interest for pedestrians. • Larger scale detail – for viewing over longer distances. • Details intensify about windows and doorways and at building corners. • Appropriate emphasis of entrances allows users to read the façade facilitate movement from the public to private realm.

  44. Detailed design – frame + corner • Corners form significant elements in the townscape, which the Victorians in particular celebrated through corner emphasis. • In more recent times corners have frequently been ignored or treated negatively with building lines stepping back to leave wastelands and advertising hordings. • - Positive corners are of four basic types – hinged, wrapped, flowing (convex and concave) and skyline emphasis

  45. CORNERS

  46. Scale • Scale is the perception of an object relative to other objects around it and to our perceptions of those objects. Scale is more than size. • Certain scale giving elements are particularly important because we all have a clear perception in our heads of their size: - Generic scale the size of building elements relative to thier context- windows, doors, steps, decoration, material etc.

  47. Scale • human scale • The size of a building elements relative to the human body. • A building can be understood to be of a human scale, or not, or in or out of scale with its surroundings

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