2. tectonic technic Yale Center for British Art Louis I. Kahn 1976 Centre Georges Pompidou Piano & Rogers 1977
3. “ If one poses the question as to what might be a comparable ground for architecture, then one must turn to a similar material base, namely that architecture must of necessity be embodied in structural and constructional form.” “ However, building remains essentially tectonic rather than scenographic in character and it may be argued that it is an act of construction first, rather than a discourse predicated on the surface, volume and plan, to cite the “Three Reminders to Architects” of Le Corbusier. Thus one may assert that building is ontological rather than representational in character and that built form is a presence rather than something standing for an absence. In Martin Heidegger’s terminology we may think of it as a ‘thing’ rather than a ‘sign.’” Kenneth Frampton from “Rappel a l’Ordre, The Case for the Tectonic”
4. Tectonics…… “ a manifestation in architecture of the esthetic imperative as part of human nature. It attends to the potential of building for qualities inherent in the material, economy in their use, potential for elegance in resolution in their juxtaposition, and the total compositional quality of form. It goes beyond necessity and responds to a sensibility of a higher order as mastery and skill. It relates to the sensibility that has characterized all fine works of architecture. It has been the quality of all work of architecture” . Tectonics Studio description in ArchitectureCUHK 2007
5. Yale Center for British Art Louis I. Kahn Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 1976
32. “ Technics is an approach that considers the technical systems of a building, that is, structure, envelope, environmental controls, etc., not only in the way they contribute to the functional requirements of architecture but also in their relationship to the physical form and appearance of the building.”
33. Maison du Verre P. Charreau Paris 1929 The evolution of contemporary hi-tech architecture has its origins in the twentieth century. New methods of construction (reinforced concrete and modern steel framing) offered opportunities in design to create greater flexibility in planning and a new formal vocabulary that embraced transparency (both literal and phenomenal) and a minimalist aesthetic that favored a direct expression of the structure and construction.
47. Fleetguard Factory Richard Rogers Renault Distribution Center Norman Foster Quimper, France 1981 Swindon, England 1982
48. Engineering / Architecture Robert Maillart > A. Peret > E. Freyssinet > P. L. Nervi > E. Torroja > R. Morrandi > F. Candela > C. Menn > F. Otto > H. Islar > S. Calatrava
59. What is the scope of architecture from a technics view? “ Architecture is both an interior and an exterior experience. The best architecture comes from a synthesis of all of the elements that separately comprise a building; from its relationship to the streetscape or skyline to the structure that holds it up, the services that allow it to work, the ecology of the building, the material used, the character of the spaces, the use of light and shade, the symbolism of the form and the way in which it signals its presence in the city or the countryside.” Norman Foster What is the purpose of design from a technics view? “ The designer’s task could be summed up as analyzing set problems in the widest sense and organizing the best available resources to achieve the highest-performance solution in the most economical manner.” Norman Foster