Tuesday, 30 October 2012

Appropriatenesss of What You Communicate


The above image is from Yasu's lecture in week 12 regarding his interpretation of criteria and the appropriateness of what we present. He showed this image by Daniel Libeskind as an example of the effectiveness of communicating an idea despite the possibility that one may not have any idea of what they are looking at. One may not fully understand every aspect of what they are seeing, but the core idea or message of the image comes across regardless.

The image below is my own example of this kind of communication, taken from my Revit model of my architectural entity. Initially one may be confused as to what they are seeing, however upon closer inspection, one can see that there are various layers present that are connected via stairs. As well as multiple spaces, trees and a relationship to the surrounding roads and typography. I think this is an effective mode of communicating ones core ideas and key design elements.

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