DocumentCode
292293
Title
Analysis of configuration: knowledge of context and precedent in architectural design
Author
Penn, Alan ; Hillier, Bill
Author_Institution
Bartlett Sch. of Archit., Planning, Building & Environ. Design, Univ. Coll. London, UK
fYear
1995
fDate
34859
Firstpage
42552
Lastpage
42560
Abstract
Design, and in particular the design of the built environment in which we live and work, is an enterprise about which it is surprisingly difficult to talk. Part of the problem is that the right words don´t exist to discuss an activity which seems at once to be highly personal, but whose product is public and, preeminently among the arts, social in its intent. However, if we look at the way that architects and design teams commonly work we discover regular patterns that suggest that there may be an objective logic in what otherwise appears to be a primarily subjective activity. We suggest that there are two main forms of knowledge which are brought to bear on design: knowledge of context-the particularities of site and brief, and the regular behaviours of built forms, the space patterns they create and their functional outcomes; and knowledge of precedent-the body of buildings and projects with which the designer is familiar, which is used as a source, and which forms the index against which the designer checks in aiming to innovate. By developing appropriate representations of built forms and spatial pattern or `configuration´ we argue that both forms of knowledge can be moved from their current status as fields of knowledge which are gained through personal experience and applied mainly through intuition, and are in this sense `autonomic´, towards the `heteronomic´ knowledge characteristic of science which it is possible both to share and contest
Keywords
architectural CAD; human factors; intelligent design assistants; knowledge based systems; knowledge representation; spatial reasoning; architects; architectural design; built environment; built forms; context knowledge; design teams; heteronomic knowledge; objective logic; precedent knowledge; regular patterns; space patterns; spatial pattern;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
iet
Conference_Titel
Knowledge-Based Approaches to Automation in Construction, IEE Colloquium on
Conference_Location
London
Type
conf
DOI
10.1049/ic:19950837
Filename
405220
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