Relationship-based Architectural Design: Methodological Developments

Abstract

This research and development focussing on relationships in architecture originates on one hand from a review to some of the canonical metabolist and post-modernist writings from 1960’s to 90’s. On the other hand, it stems from an anthropological reading of architecture during the recent ontographic turnaround. The study of relationships has been an inherent, but often hidden topic in some of the key writings of such architects as Christopher Alexander, Kisho Kurokawa, Fumihiko Maki, Aldo Rossi, Colin Rowe with Fred Koetter, as well as Robert Venturi. This work takes a step from anthropological ontography, which is the descriptive and speculative study of people and their world of objects, into metaxography; the study of relationships between objects. The metaxographic approach contributes to the topical development of non-anthropocentric culture. The detachment of relationship-based architecture from human-based, rationalist, functional and performative design approaches replaces these attributes with adaptability, flexibility, changeability and resilience and in this way contributes to sustainability. The metaxographic approach is pragmatist and involves relationship-centred cross-disciplinary learnings from methods in other fields to architecture. The approach helps in managing collage formation, visualisation of relationships, layered system and permutations within spatial language systems and consequently lays new theoretical basis for relationship-based computational design, as well as produces physically new type of architecture.

Presenters

Antti Ahlava
Full Professor, Architecture, Aalto University School of Art, Design and Architecture, Etelä-Suomen lääni, Finland

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Architectonic, Spatial, and Environmental Design

KEYWORDS

Formal Analysis, Relationships, Design Methods, Spatial Systems, Collage, Adaptive Reuse