Friday, June 20, 2014

W8 - The Lure of the Continuous Skin (TE2.3, CC3.4, C4.2, C4.4)

Introduction
Throughout my years of architecture education I have become more and more aware of the subtle relationship between architecture and humanity, in a sense that architecture is predominantly the product of human intervention, rather than two separate entities merging into symbiotic relationship where both contribute to one another's existence. This relationship affects an important aspect of our nature, which is the ‘human’ experiences, senses, thoughts and how these characters affect the decisions we make.
That is what I as an architecture student understood on the importance of architecture and how this sequential information process between man and the built environment have remained consistent throughout the architectural style evolution, and that idea guides me through my reading on Parametricism.

   Crowds modelled as physical flows.
   Source: 
Parametric Order – Architectural Order via an Agent
   Based Parametric Semiology
During my search on understanding Parametricism, its potential as an epochal architectural style of the 21st century, and the technologies that produces it and therefore allows its hegemonic appearance as a relevant architecture style, I mainly followed Patrik Schumacher’s stands on this new style, since he is the leading voice of this movement. I encountered frequently his notion of the capability of Parametricism to provide the current architecture’s task of organising and articulating, as he claims, “the societal complexity of post-fordist network society”.
The involvement of architecture in defining human behaviour and movement through Parametricism brought my attention and triggered my recollection on traditional architecture and its reconciliation between man and his built environment. Schumacher has indeed, elaborated consistently on the development of parametric style from retrospective approach of understanding previous architectural style all the way from the Gothic Architecture.

This has compelled me to come up with a research question:
“To what extent does Parametricism consider human values and human involvement/human ‘touch’ in architecture as compared to its predecessor?”

GOTHIC V.S PARAMETRIC

    (Left) Gloucester Cathedral, (Right) Installation – Zero/Fold | Adam Lazar Onulov

In the effort to find a parameter for this study, the Gothic Architecture is chosen as a representation of parametric style’s predecessor, since it is where as Patrik Schumacher suggests, “the transition from tradition-bound building to a self-consciously innovative architecture starting with the renaissance” happened. While I personally feel that this notion is too bold a statement, it does bring significance to this ‘transitional’ style as a starting point of a significant change in architectural implementation according to Schumacher's perspective. 

A quick review on the Gothic style - Preserving human nature through human intervention.
   Six characters of Gothic Architecture.
   Source: John Ruskin, Plate I, The Seven Lamps of Architecture,
   extracted from Lars Spuybroek's talk on "The Simpathy of Things" 2012



John Ruskin, an anti-classicist in the 19th Century Victorian era wrote a book on Gothic Architecture and defined the style in six characters; savageness, changefulness, naturalism, grotesqueness, rigidity and redundancy. His study on Gothic style antagonized the classicist architecture and its ‘a priori’ (theoretical deduction rather than empirical observation) methodology in style, where novelty is restricted and almost non-existent due to the constant association of ancient Greek and/or Roman principles, where variations of combinations are possible but the order is always fixed.
On the contrary, Gothic style, as Ruskin argued, has the capacity of “perpetual novelty”, i.e. ever-changing originality where complete repetition is almost inconceivable no matter how similar the order or figures may appear to be. This perpetual novelty brings forth the existence of human intervention in the production of the style, which can be elaborated from the first two characters of savageness and changefulness in Gothic style.     

   St. Peter's Basilica, Vatican City - Late Renaissance Architecture (the starting point of "self-consciously innovative" style. An example of
   how order and forms are unchanged, while combinations differ. Human interventions are mostly projected from its facade and
   ornamentations and act as separate elements from the forms.

Savangeness – Rough variation
Imperfection is in some sort essential to all that we know of life. It is the sign of life in a mortal body, that is to say, of a state of progress and change. Nothing that lives, is, or can be, rigidly perfect; part of it is decaying, part of it is nascent.” 
– John Ruskin, the Stones of Venice, 1853


      Variation of Rose windows with their configurations digitalized through visual
      interpretation. Extracted from
 Lars Spuybroek's talk on "The Simpathy of
      Things" 2012



Lars Spuybroek spoke on the “Nordish characters” exemplified in the Gothic style of roughness and savageness and how these characters are produced by the human intervention and his incapacity to produce perfection. What’s significant about this character is how imperfection is permitted in architecture in order to allow “natural” characters to flow into architecture and consequently creates a subtle natural relationship between man and his built environment, as opposed to Parametricism’s reliance on the almost unseen limitation of algorithmic computation to evaluate what is required for the users’ wellbeing.
This permissive attributes on the human capacity therefore allows locality, reality and values projected by the architecture, which until now, remain as a major responsive aspects of architecture that architects and end-users prefer to be irreplaceable.
Changefulness – Smooth variation
The Gothic’s capability to instil perpetual novelty in architecture style allows smooth transitional change between variables that can be achievable through human intervention and intelligence without the need of computation. This changeful character challenges the separation from form to structure and from structure to ornamentation. Lars Spuybroek gave an example of these sorts of undefined elements by demonstrating the Gothic style of rib vault designs.
By looking at the ribs of the Gloucester Cathedral’s corridor, there is no clear distinction between the windows, the walls and the ceiling. The resulting configuration of decorations merges different forms together the same way Parametricism allows continuity of forms without rigid contrasts between form elements.  But what distinguishes it from Parametricism is how it is limited by human capability and imperfection in constructing the elements, rather than the parametric limitations by its set of design criteria demonstrated through computation. This human interpretation of organic movement that vitalizes geometry, as Wilhelm Worringer expressed, forces the sensibility of the users, hence allowing sympathetic communication which intuition establishes between the user and the architecture. 
The human values are therefore appreciated and subconsciously sympathized, generating an experience for the users of the building that enables them to recognize the ‘human’ character embedded within the building.
Self sketched (2014) - An illustration showing the similar process of Gothic Architecture, which is derived through intuition, undefined, permissive imperfection of human capacity and the inseparable elements configured to form a whole. 

Parametricism - Of form, not content.
Since traditional architecture is in fact well-known for its coherence with human intervention, I wonder, does human intervention and the preservation of human values continued to be considered throughout this so-called “self-consciously innovative architecture” styles and ultimately the 21st Century Parametricism? Schumacher did stresses his idea on architecture's responsibility in the built environment by being in charge of the form, rather than its content, and deny architecture's need to be competent on social justice as shown in his facebook post below:
But has Parametricism at least been able to preserve human values through its technological advancement and application? If it is true that Parametricism can contributes towards the civilizational progress of the post-fordist network society, are human value and human intervention still included as topics of reflection? 

Parametric Semiology on human behaviour

Schumacher's attempt to illustrate architecture's societal function through spatio-morphological framing of communicative interaction is as close as he gets to demonstrates Parametricism’s capacity of shaping humans and their social characteristics. Through articulation he proposes two task dimensions: phenomenological project and semiological project.
The three dimensions that together procure architectural order, derived conceptually by two binary distinctions, which are organisation and articulation. Extracted from Patrik Schumacher's talk on "Parametric Order - 21st Century Architectural Order" 2012. 
Contributions of the fundamental dimensions of architecture make to architecture's essential societal functions. Extracted from Patrik Schumacher's talk on "Parametric Order - 21st Century Architectural Order" 2012. 
 
In the effort of proposing parametric semiology to frame social behaviour through architecture, Schumacher demonstrated the use of crowd modelling tools like ‘MiArmy’ or ‘AI.implant’ as a means to make behavioural modelling within designed environments. These tools allow a more coherent understanding on crowd circulation flows and helps architects to apply proper navigation for the users within its built environment. Moreover, the use of this modelling is in the process of being upgraded to even simulate detailed human interaction towards his surrounding physical context, as Jan M. Allbeck from George Mason University explains:

“We use roles and groups to help specify behaviours, we use a parametrised representation to add the semantics of actions and objects, and we implemented four types of actions (i.e. scheduled, reactive, opportunistic, and aleatoric) to ensure rich, emergent behaviours.”
   "Functional crowds" - Crowds with aleatoric, reactive, opportunistic and scheduled actions.
   Source: Patrik Schumacher, 
Parametric Order – Architectural Order via an Agent Based Parametric Semiology 2012.
     (Above left) Parametric Semiology: Semio-field, differentiation of public vs. private as parametric range.
     (Above right) 
Parametric Semiology: Semio-field, master-plan with program distribution.
     (Below) 
Vienna University of Applied Arts, Masterclass Hadid, Parametric Semiology: Semio-field. Project authors: Magda Smolinska, Marius
     Cernica, and Monir Karimi.
The diagrams above illustrate how phenomenological and semiological articulation configure and ultimately achieve the requirements for spatial optimization for the users. It involves the stimulating of perception and the consequential behavioural responses of the users to indicate important spaces, private and public spaces and the transitions in between. The whole configuration almost acts as a farm that navigates cattle to and fro within their confinements using wooden railings (Since this metaphor was used by Schumacher himself to describe the traditional urban fabric, I believe the same can be applied to this approach, and it does sound quite disturbing). 

Parametric Phenomenology on human senses

Several attempts had been made by parametric practitioners to prevent further deprivation of vital human relationship with the built environment and to preserve and generate meaning through parametric association in architecture. The D-tower, designed by NOX whose head of architect is Lars Spuybroek himself, is an interactive sculpture and building that visually represents the collective emotions of the contextual users. The structure changes colour at night, with each colours representing the most deeply felt emotions of the day, indicated by the questionnaires answered by the inhabitants of the city via internet. The design outcome generated active participation of the city’s inhabitants, bridging a relationship between human emotions and values with the building while maintaining a sense of locality through the building.
D-tower (2001 - 2003), located in Doetinchem (NL) is an interactive sculpture and building by NOX/Lars Spuybroek and Q.S. Serafijn, co-developed with V2_.
A sensory parametric architecture thesis by Yirao Lee from Victoria University of Wellington attempted to integrate sensory experiences within parametric design by incorporating symbolic and phenomenological imperatives into the design. By experimenting on the interior ambiance through form and material parametrically, the design outcome of the thesis brings the possibility of reconnecting human existence within the parametric world.
However, the design experiment may also achieve its hypothesis without the use of parametricism and therefore does not produce the novelty that only parametric design can achieve. The result would be the same as how architecture has always been capable of producing, even in before the advent of parametricism. This reality undermines the technological advancement of Parametricism and is constantly the case in the discourse of the relevance of Parametricism as an epochal style of today.





Can Semiology parametric and Phenomenology parametric preserve and stimulate humanness through architecture the same way Gothic architecture has achieved?
Parametric semiology engages on human’s (or sentient beings) perception and comprehension by producing the type of built environment that optimizes navigation, communication and interaction, while providing transitional private to public space configuration appropriate for the program that it designs for. In terms of optimization of functionality for human use, parametric semiology is heading the right direction. But a church with human-made ornamentation and a modernist church of pure form can never produce the same atmosphere, even if the latter provides the most functional efficiency. On the contrary, John Ruskin, in his writing on Gothic Architecture exemplified the preservation of human nature in architecture and how this element radiates over the functional imperfection of its building. If humanness is considered irrelevant for the design of buildings of today as opposed to being functionally optimised, it does not explain why traditional buildings are ever-reusable and ever-qualified even for centuries, and how contemporary humans still able to connect themselves with these traditional buildings the same way their predecessors experienced. 

Therefore, based on my understanding, Semiology parametric and Phenomenology parametric CANNOT preserve and stimulate humanness through architecture the same way Gothic architecture has achieved.

Personal artwork, using acrylic on canvas (2014) - My attempt to demonstrate the interdependence of form and space, moulded by thoughts and intuition, thus letting human imperfection to drive the production of the art piece - paradoxically inspired by parametricism, but more similar to Gothic interpretation of style.


Conclusion

“Science has not and never will have the same ontological sense as the perceived world, for the simple reason that it is a determination or an explanation of that world.”

“Truth does not “inhabit” only the “inner man”. Or more accurately, there is no inner man; man is in the world, it is whithin the world that he knows himself.”      

- MERLEAU-PONTY, Maurice; Phenomenology and Perception, 2006

The same statements can be applied as an argument over the theoretical representation of Parametricism in architecture and its functional capability without clarifying why the idea of human connection with the style seems to oppose their relevance as an epochal style in architecture. Although the Practitioners of Parametric design appears to consistently bring forth their technological achievements and their capacity to produce an architecture style that allows an interaction between contextual phenomena and the users, or “cognitive sentients” through architecture, there is an apparent gap that is reserves for a discourse to understand the significance of human values and intervention through and towards architecture that I believe Parametricism has to consider.



Reference:
Ruskin, J. (1849), Plate I - The Seven Lamps of Architecture.
Ruskin, J. (1853), The Nature of Gothic, The Stones of Venice.
Schumacher, P. (2012), Parametric Order – Architectural Order via an Agent Based Parametric Semiology, Adaptive Ecologies – Correlated Systems of Living by Theodore Spyropoulos, AA Publications, London 2013
Schumacher, P. (2012), "Parametric Order—21st Century Architectural Order", Harvard University.
Schumacher, P. (2012), Parametric Semiology – The Design of Information Rich Environments, Architecture In Formation – On the Nature of Information in Digital Architecture, edited by Pablo Lorenzo-Eiroa and Aaron Sprecher, Routledge, Taylr and Francis, New York, 2013.
Schumacher, P. (2014), The Impact of Parametricism on Architecture and Society, interviewed by Angel Tenorio.
Spuybroek, L. (2012), "The Sympathy of Things", Faculty of Architecture, University of Innsbruck 
Worringer, W. (1911) Form in Gothic.
Yirao Lee, (2010), Sensory Parametric Architecture, School of Architecture, Victoria University of Wellington.

http://v2.nl/archive/works/d-tower
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CfAgl4dhuFs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zG2WMVkD5dw&hd=1

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