is this a diagram of the 3 possible solutions (or, as you term them, "methods of exploitation") to generate interactions between people in relationship to different types of movement? or is this about different types of movement in rel. to each other?
its unclear...
if its the 1st one... how? if its the 2nd one... why?
it's, right now, more about different types and speeds of movement, and where they are found in the project. The site will have a body of movement that will be of different speeds and types than the program. In organizing the site/program in this way, I can organize the different movements in the project. By organizing the movements in this way, people will be exposed to new combinations that will be unexpected and unusual. This experiences associated with this unexpectedness will hopefully alter their perceptions.
the first one: (nesting) how? by overlapping the different components of the project, site and program (and the various parts included in the program) in some sort of concentric organization. (literally putting say, a chunk of a fast site imbedded within a still area of the baths)
the second one: (layering) why? to achieve a specific way to organize movement. like nesting, but not in concentric rings, but in a piling up of strips. perhaps in this scenario, the site jets through the greenhouse, or maybe the moving water courses through the library. some kind of linear layering.
2 comments:
is this a diagram of the 3 possible solutions (or, as you term them, "methods of exploitation") to generate interactions between people in relationship to different types of movement? or is this about different types of movement in rel. to each other?
its unclear...
if its the 1st one... how?
if its the 2nd one... why?
it's, right now, more about different types and speeds of movement, and where they are found in the project. The site will have a body of movement that will be of different speeds and types than the program. In organizing the site/program in this way, I can organize the different movements in the project. By organizing the movements in this way, people will be exposed to new combinations that will be unexpected and unusual. This experiences associated with this unexpectedness will hopefully alter their perceptions.
the first one: (nesting) how? by overlapping the different components of the project, site and program (and the various parts included in the program) in some sort of concentric organization. (literally putting say, a chunk of a fast site imbedded within a still area of the baths)
the second one: (layering) why? to achieve a specific way to organize movement. like nesting, but not in concentric rings, but in a piling up of strips. perhaps in this scenario, the site jets through the greenhouse, or maybe the moving water courses through the library. some kind of linear layering.
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