Cover image for Compositions in architecture
Title:
Compositions in architecture
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons, 2009
Physical Description:
vii, 328 p. : ill. ; 28 cm.
ISBN:
9780470053645

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30000010203371 NA2750 H38 2009 Open Access Book Book
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30000010117764 NA2750 H38 2009 f Open Access Book Book
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30000010117765 NA2750 H38 2009 f Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Architecture

Use the patterns of architectural composition to inspire creative design

In Compositions in Architecture , Don Hanlon offers students an excitingly original path to dis-covering architectural composition, one that avoids the traditional either/or choice between theory and practice. By exploring the underlying patterns of organization in architecture, this book enables the reader to connect architectural theory with the design process. And by relating what happens in the design studio with how the architect thinks about architectural composition, the approach spurs creative thinking.

With examples that range across diverse cultures and historical periods--from the famous to the obscure--the author reveals the universal compositional strategies that can be used to solve particular architectural problems. Readers will explore:

The five formal properties of composition--number, geometry, proportion, hierarchy, and orientation

How the plan conveys the central organizing strategy of a building

Typological similarities of architectural forms that cut across cultural, social, historical, and geographic boundaries

Enriched by a graphic approach that will appeal to visual learners, Compositions in Architecture reveals the formal structures in architecture throughout the world as well as through the ages and inspires architects to turn abstract ideas into real-world design.


Author Notes

Don Hanlon is Professor of Architecture at the University of Wisconsin--Milwaukee. He is the recipient of the UWM Alumni Award for Teaching Excellence and the AIA-UWM Student Chapter Educator Award, both in 2001. Professor Hanlon is a registered architect working on residential, commercial, and institutional projects.


Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
Five Formal Properties Of A Composition
Notes On The Plan
Type
The Square
Layering
Linear Forms
Core And Shell
Frame And Object
Clusters
Subtractive Spaces And The Deep Wall
Articulated Skin
Metamorphosis
Deformation
Conclusion
Glossary
Bibliography
Index Of Buildings