Aasmeena Sheik
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Papers by Aasmeena Sheik
The relationship between architecture and geometry has frequently been a median issue in architectural theory and practice. Since the historic architecture, to the modern era architecture; the constructive, metaphysical, and aesthetic roles or geometry in architecture have been accurately used. As different kinds of geometry were evolved through the centuries, its perceived use to architecture developed equivalently from Vitruvius's early use of Euclidean ruler and compass constructions for architectural plans to the use of modern geometry to describe the structure of architectural forms.
Apart from these and other surveillance about building forms, the relevance of geometry to architecture is demonstrated importantly by directing to occurrences of geometric forms in nature, space, architecture and other designs. In precise to the context, geometry is omnipresent in all the spheres of life.
This paper starts with a brief introduction of cognitive architecture followed by a review of the book 'Cognitive Architecture – Designing for how we respond to the built environment’.
The relationship between architecture and geometry has frequently been a median issue in architectural theory and practice. Since the historic architecture, to the modern era architecture; the constructive, metaphysical, and aesthetic roles or geometry in architecture have been accurately used. As different kinds of geometry were evolved through the centuries, its perceived use to architecture developed equivalently from Vitruvius's early use of Euclidean ruler and compass constructions for architectural plans to the use of modern geometry to describe the structure of architectural forms.
Apart from these and other surveillance about building forms, the relevance of geometry to architecture is demonstrated importantly by directing to occurrences of geometric forms in nature, space, architecture and other designs. In precise to the context, geometry is omnipresent in all the spheres of life.
This paper starts with a brief introduction of cognitive architecture followed by a review of the book 'Cognitive Architecture – Designing for how we respond to the built environment’.