Spatial Intelligence: New Futures for ArchitectureThe book is organised into three distinct sections that in turn highlight the significance of spatial intelligence for architecture: the first section provides an overview of spatial intelligence as a human capability; the second section argues how the acknowledgement of this capability in architectural education and the profession should enable the demystification of the practice of design, forming the basis of a more democratic interface between society and practice; the final section explores exciting new opportunities for practice in the linking of real and virtual environments in the information age. |
Contents
Introduction | 8 |
The mechanics of spatial intelligence | 22 |
How spatial intelligence builds our mental space | 36 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Alamy approach architects architectural reality argued Australia Council awareness Bachelard Barcelona Barcelona Pavilion become brain building Centre century Cerdá chapter clients Colin Rowe communities consciously construction Corbis Council New Media create culture deep histories eidetic emerging ethical argument experience Fellowship at RMIT Gandelsonas garden Gaston Bachelard Godsell grid Henri Lefebvre histories in space human imagine individual intuition knowledge Kovac layers Le Corbusier learning Leon van Schaik lives Maggie's Centre mapping Massachusetts Media Arts Fellowship Melbourne memory mental space modern Museum narrative Nigel Coates Oliver Sacks Pavilion perhaps Peter Lyssiotis Peter Zumthor pioneers poetic practice Press Cambridge Press New York Review of Books Robert Venturi Scientist Scott Brown sense shared society spatial history spatial intelligence specific structures thinking Tom Kovac tradition unconscious understanding University urban virtual environments wall wonder Zaha Hadid