Ar105 Theory of Architecture: Prof. G.Sangeetha
Ar105 Theory of Architecture: Prof. G.Sangeetha
Ar105 Theory of Architecture: Prof. G.Sangeetha
Dec 2020
Source:http://architecture.mit.edu
POINT
LINE
PLANE
VOLUME
AXIS
SYMMETRY
HIERARCHY
RHYTHM/REPETITION
DATUM
TRANSFORMATION
Overhead Plane
The overhead plane can be either the roof plane
that shelters the interior spaces of a building from
the climatic elements, or the ceiling plane that
forms the upper enclosing surface of a room.
Wall Plane
The wall plane, because of its vertical orientation,
is active in our normal field of vision and vital to
the shaping and enclosure of architectural space.
Base Plane
The base plane can be either the ground plane
that serves as the physical foundation and visual
base for building forms, or the floor plane that
forms the lower enclosing surface of a room upon
which we walk.
PLANAR ELEMENTS
• While we walk on a floor
and have physical
contact with walls, the
ceiling plane is usually out
of our reach and is almost
always a purely visual
event in a space.
Kaufmann House (Falling Water) , Connellsville, Pennsylvania, 1936-37, Frank Lloyd Wright.
Elevation
Space displaced by the mass of a
building. Notre Dame Du Haut, Ronchamp, France,
1950-55, Le Corbusier.
VOLUMETRIC ELEMENTS
AXIS