Empathic space : The computation of human-centric architecture / guest-edited by Christian Derix and Asmund Izaki
Material type:
- 9781118613481
- NA 2760 .E47 2014

Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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National University - Manila | LRC - Architecture General Circulation | COA General | GC NA 2760 .E47 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | c.1 | Available | NULIB000014368 |
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GC NA 2750 .P56 2011 Problem solving and critical thinking for designers / | GC NA 2750 .S27 2018 Case study strategies for architects and designers : integrative data research methods / | GC NA 2750 .U59 2021 Analysing architecture : the universal language of place-making / | GC NA 2760 .E47 2014 Empathic space : The computation of human-centric architecture / | GC NA 2760 .M37 1990 Light, wind, and structure : the mystery of the master builders / | GC NA 2760 .V46 2002 Complexity and contradiction in architecture / | GC NA 2765 .S48 1970 Equipotential space : freedom in architecture / |
Editorial -- About the guest-editors -- Spotlight -- Introduction -- Heuristic generation -- Interactions in the field -- Cognitive conditions -- Experimental typologies -- Future forward -- Counterpoint -- Contributors.
In recent years, questions of space have gained renewed momentum in architecture and urban design, as adaptation, densification and sustainable regeneration have become an increasing priority. While most computing-based design tends to emphasise the formal aspects of architecture, overlooking space and its users, the ‘original’ computational design approaches first spearheaded in the UK in the 1960s and 1970s tended to be focused on behavioural and occupational patterns. Over the last decade, a new generation of design research has emerged that has started to implement and validate previous investigations into spatial computation, aiming to understand how to design spatial configurations based on user experiences. This revives an interest in the experiential that was first explored in the early 20th century by German and Nordic organic architects, who invented design methods that correlated cognitive responses of buildings' occupants to spatial structure. The current revival of human-centric design, however, represents the first design approach that synthesises spatial design and algorithmic techniques with organic design thinking, which could also be regarded as a return to the ‘first principles' of architectural design.
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