You always aim to achieve that moment of insight that leads to ingenuity and novelty in your design, but sometimes it remains elusive. This book presents a variety of techniques for mapping and making hands-on design/build projects, and relates this work to real architecture. It helps you to learn new ways of seeing and making that will enhance your creative design process and enable you to experience moments that lead to ingenuity in design.
Each of the book’s two parts, "Seeing" and "Making," is organized according to technique, which ranges from quantitative analysis and abstraction to pattern and scale, to provide you with a framework for mapping and hands-on exercises. Interviews with architects Yoshiharu Tsukamoto (Atelier Bow-Wow) and Jesse Reiser and Nanako Umemoto (Reiser + Umemoto) give you perspective on using these exercises in practice.
Acknowledgements Introduction Part 1: Seeing: Framework for Mapping 1. Mapping a Structure Exercise 1: Silo 1.1 Quantitative Information 1.2 Photography 1.3 Figure and Ground 1.4 Perception 2. Mapping a Physical Movement Exercise 2: Hands 3. Mapping a Narrative Exercise 3: Remembrance Interview with Yoshiharu Tsukamoto, Atelier Bow-Wow, Tokyo Part 2: Making: Framework for Hands-on Work 4. Imagery Exercise 4: Making a Screen 5. Material Exploration Exercise 5: Making an Enclosure 6. Lag Exercise 6: Making a Device for Perceiving Physical Movement 7. Geometric Scale Exercise 7: Making a Cube Interview with Jesse Reiser and Nanako Umemoto, Reiser + Umemoto, New York Bibliography Image Credits Index
Biography
Taiji Miyasaka is Associate Professor of Architecture at Washington State University at Pullman.
"By brilliantly pairing student work and contemporary precedents, theoretical texts and interviews, Taiji Miyasaka unpacks the nature of "ingenuity" through the most basic of human actions, seeing and making. This book is a must read for design students and educators in the digital age, illuminating the slow and methodical path to authenticity contrary to the culture of instant gratification."
Kentaro Tsubaki, Tulane School of Architecture, New Orleans, USA