Sunday, September 29, 2019
The Purpose of Architecture
The purpose of architecture is to create useful spaces that people want to be in. Itââ¬â¢s not enough to make the space useful if people hate being in it. And itââ¬â¢s not enough to make people want to be in it if they canââ¬â¢t use it for its intended purpose. But being attractive without being useful is probably better than being useful without being attractive. If people like a space, theyââ¬â¢ll find a way to make it work. If people donââ¬â¢t like a space, theyââ¬â¢ll stay away, even if it à seems to meet all their practical needs.Architecture creates more than one kind of space. Interior spaces are the ones we usually think about. But architecture creates exterior spaces as well. A new building on a street makes it a different kind of street. Is it a street where people want to be, or is it a street they hurry through? The architect is as much responsible for the street his building sits on as he is for the space inside the building. If a new construction cre ates a long, blank wall that people instinctively avoid, the architect has effectively destroyed the street.Businesses on the other side of it will wither, and the street will exist only as a passage from one more desirable place to another. Style is less important than scale in creating spaces people like. Architecture on a human scale is inherently more friendly than architecture on a titanic scale. Monumental architecture needs smaller subdivisions to make itself relatable: the arches in a Roman basilica, or the stilts in a Mies van der Rohe office building.Great slabs of concrete or stone put us off instead of welcoming us; remembering the human scale is the thing that makes architecture work. These are all obvious ideas, but the enthusiasm of an all-encompassing theory of architecture can make an architect forget them. An architect needs to look at his plans and ask, ââ¬Å"Will people want to be here? â⬠Perhaps he should point to different spots on the blueprint at rando m: Will people want to beà here,à orà here,à orà here? If he can always answer yes to that question, heââ¬â¢s done his job well.
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