I took the chance to walk up the hill and take some photographs of Lincoln's medieval cathedral. Its lit-up at night and dominates the skyline of the city alongside the castle tower next door. Its just as impressive two miles down the hill of Lincoln, to have the chance to walk round it close-up was an even greater experience.
Friday, 27 January 2012
Friday, 20 January 2012
Aberdeen University Library
I was shown this by a project partner whilst looking at designing multiple tiers in a building. I love the contrast given between the curved overlapping cavities of each floor and the sharp, box-shaped exterior they lie in. It gives the interior a great sense of light and space and gives the building as a whole unity.



Saturday, 26 November 2011
Monday, 31 October 2011
Chaos to Cosmos- Final Composition
As mentioned in earlier posts, my current project has been to invent an element, mass produce it and arrange it in a composition ready for presentation. Below are photos of part of this final composition which I built earlier from our teams design. The brief was quite flexible, so my team decided to work in timber as it would be a higher quality than cardboard. Although this meant spending two afternoons in a workshop trying to build around 100 identical wooden shapes from scratch.
Thursday, 27 October 2011
Creating an Element
One of my current projects is based around inventing a 3D shape that could be used as an element of a larger pattern, based either on cosmos or chaos. I am working as part of a 3 man group, developing and constructing these elements for a presentation at the end of the week. I thought I would share some of the development composition ideas that I created for our element because I was fascinated by the variation of compositions that the shape could create.
The first thing I started looking at was a centralised, flower-like design that could be used to highlight the variation in angles and layers the shape has whilst lying on its base. These compositions were inspired by natural patterns I found in plants and flowers. I quite like the patterns below because it is a fully universal and versatile design that is fully symmetrical.
Monday, 24 October 2011
Pirates Are Good...
Probably the most inspiring bullet-point taken from my lectures in Design and Communication so far has been my tutors quote regarding originality...
Don't try to be original, try to be good.
It's an interesting point to be made; if you're inspired by another persons work, and you think that you could use the design and make it better, isn't it in the interest of the client to do that? All architects borrow influence from either their predecessors or contemporaries, and all those ideas are generally derived from nature or other artistic forms. The best designs are the ones that have grown from grass-roots rather than just appeared. He was basically saying not to hesitate jumping onto somebody's concept if you believe your developments can improve the outcome.
Cosmos and Chaos
Cosmos and Chaos are Ancient Greek deities that represent order and dis-order in cosmology. As an assessment, I have been looking at the small elements in architecture (i.e. bricks, planks, modules), and the way they join together to form either chaos or cosmos.

Chaos- The Greeks saw chaos as the scary, formless void which cosmos was born from. In contemporary terms it could be seen as the freedom of shapes from any geometrical norms. Post-Modernist architecture has great examples of these chaotic shapes that ignore the balanced ideas of the classicalists.
Cosmos- This is the order that emerged from the labyrinth of chaos in mythology. Cosmos is visible in lots of traditional buildings, in particular classical and neo-classical. It displays balance, symmetry and stability. Yet it's not just reserved for the ancients; it can be seen everywhere in modern design and blends seamlessly into the world around us, from masonry layouts to blocks of flats.
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