Description
Drawing is an important means to analyse information and develop rigorous arguments both conceptually and visually. Going beyond the how-to drawing manual, this book provides an instrumental approach to drawing, especially computer-generated drawings; it outlines how drawings should be used to convey clear and analytical information in the process of design, as well as the communication and discussion of a project. In depth examples are provided how to communicate effectively. The final section demonstrates how to transform case-studies, directly connecting an analytical approach with the design process.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
- Description, Analysis and Transformation: Drawing as Diagram
CHAPTER 1: CONVENTIONS
- 1 Point, Line, Plane and Volume
- 2 Plan Conventions
- 2.1 Orthographic Projections (Elevation)
- 2.2 Cut-away Views (Plan and Section)
- 2.3 Paraline Drawings
- 2.4 Perspective Drawings
- 3 Graphic Conventions
- 3.1 Line Weight, Style and Type
- 3.2 Hatching, Texture, Material and Shading
- 3.3 Colour
- 3.4 Drawing Scale and Paper Size
- 3.5 Annotation and Dimensioning
CHAPTER 2: ARCHITECTURE
- 1 Description
- 1.1 Context: Location Plan and Site Section
- 1.2 Building: Plan, Elevation and Section
- 1.3 Building: Axonometric and Perspective
- 2 Analysis
- 2.1 Context: Figure-Ground Plan
- 2.2 Context: Orientation
- 2.3 Building: Massing
- 2.4 Building: Structural Organisation
- 2.5 Building: Programme
- 2.6 Building: Circulation-to-Use
- 2.7 Building: Part-to-Whole
- 2.8 Building: Repetitive-to-Unique
- 2.9 Building: Geometrical Order
- 2.10 Building: Parti
- 3 Comparison
- 3.1 Free Plan vs Raumplan
- 3.2 Deconstruction of Whole to Parts
- 3.3 Vertical vs Horizontal
- 3.4 Sectional Organisation
- 3.5 Landscape and Landform
- 3.6 Modularity
- 4 Comparative Matrices
- 4.1 Massing
- 4.2 Conceptual Organisation
- 4.3 Disposition
- 4.4 Distribution
- 4.5 Circulation
- 4.6 Difference
- 4.7 Growth
CHAPTER 3: THE URBAN
- 1 Description
- 1.1 Urban Plan
- 1.2 Land Use
- 1.3 Density
- 1.4 Circulation (Transport)
- 1.5 Open Spaces
- 1.6 Infrastructures
- 2 Analysis
- 2.1 Figure-Ground Plan
- 2.2 Hierarchies and Organisation
- 2.3 Part-to-Whole and Repetitive-to-Unique
- 2.4 Built Environment
- 2.5 Phasing
- 3 Comparison
- 3.1 Block
- 3.2 Enclave
- 3.3 Ground
- 3.4 Infrastructure
- 4 Comparative Matrices
- 4.1 Size
- 4.2 Distribution
- 4.3 Hierarchy and Layering
- 4.4 Difference
- 4.5 Growth
- 4.6 Architectural Types and Urban Morphology
CHAPTER 4: TRANSFORMATION
- 1 Typological Transformation
- 1.1 Timeline
- 1.2 Comparative Matrix
- 1.3 Comparative Diagrams
- 1.4 Typological Transformation Diagrams
- 1.5 Transformative Matrix
- 2 Design Examples
- 2.1 Tokyo Podium by Sakiko Goto
- 2.2 The City Campus by Marcin Ganczarski
- 2.3 The Chinese Unit by Yuwei Wang
- 2.4 Cité Housing by Alvaro Arancibia Tagle
- Drawing Acknowledgements and References
328 pages / 21,5 x 28 cm / English

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