Podia, Plinths and Flying House | |
Otros Autores: | Carta, Silvio. |
Otros Autores: | acaa/Kazuhiko Kishimoto; Cadaval & Solà-Morales; Daniel Moreno Flores or José María Sáez; loannis Baltogiannis or Phoebe Giannisi or Zissis kotionis or Katerina Kritou or Nikolas Platsas; OAB-Office of Architecture in Barcelona or ADI Arquitectura; Schemata Architects; Schmidt Arquitectos; Schwartz/Silver Architects. |
Tema(s): | |
Resumen: | One of the main compositional principles since the time of Classical architecture, and even before, has been the tripartition of every building into plinth, body and roof. Each part, throughout history, has had a specific relationship with the city and its inhabitants: the plinth fosters direct connections with the streets and passersby, while the body constructs the urban tissue of the city in its tridimensional extent, and the roof determines its end in height, concluding the building. |
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Arquitectura
One of the main compositional principles since the time of Classical architecture, and even before, has been the tripartition of every building into plinth, body and roof. Each part, throughout history, has had a specific relationship with the city and its inhabitants: the plinth fosters direct connections with the streets and passersby, while the body constructs the urban tissue of the city in its tridimensional extent, and the roof determines its end in height, concluding the building.
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