1st Edition

Environmental Diversity in Architecture

Edited By Mary Ann Steane, Koen Steemers Copyright 2004
    252 Pages 110 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    252 Pages 110 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book takes the position that the dynamic of the architectural environment is a key aspect of good design, yet one which is not well anticipated or understood. Environmental variety is a design characteristic closely related to our experience of architecture - an architecture of the senses. Each chapter demonstrates how an understanding of a particular context or environmental characteristic in dynamic terms informs design. The book is an antidote to the misconceptions of 'optimum' environmental performance or fixed criteria, instead embracing the richness of environmental variety.

    Part 1: Introduction  1. Environmental Diversity in Architecture  Part 2 Framework  2. Social, Architectural and Environmental Convergence  3. The Ambiguity of Intentions  4. Human Nature  5. Designing Diverse Lifetimes for Evolving Buildings  Part 3: Urban  6. Urban Diversity  7. Outdoor Comfort  8. Intermediate Environments  9. The Reverential Acoustic  Part 4: Interior  10. Environmental Diversity and Natural Lighting Strategies  11. Daylight Perception  12. Exploring Thermal Comfort and Spatial Diversity  Part 5: Design  13. Experiencing Climate: Architecture and Environmental Diversity

    Biography

    Koen Steemers is a director of the Martin Centre for Architectural and Urban Studies and a senior lecturer at the University of Cambridge Department of Architecture. He specialises in aspects of environmental design in architecture, has practices as an architect in the UK and Germany, and is a Director of Cambridge Architectural Research Limited. His recent publications include Energy and Environment in Architecture (2000), and Architecture City Environment (2000), The Selective Environment (2002), Daylight Design of Buildings (2002).

    Mary Ann Steane is a lecturer in the University of Cambridge Department of Architecture. She lectures on environmental issues and is also a course director of the MPhil in Environmental Design. In the studio courses she delivers the acknowledgement and integration of environmental design issues is always given particular emphasis. Her research marries technical analysis with a more historical perspective. The current focus of her research is on natural lighting strategies, and seeks to enable more precise communication about light quality, and thus to develop a more nuanced appraisal of natural lighting strategies in their broader topographic, climatic and programmatic context.