What is Architectural Space | Architecture 101 Series | All Things Architecture

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  • Опубликовано: 16 июл 2024
  • There's a lot of fancy jargon used in architecture, and probably the most used or, possibly, overused words is "space." You've probably heard people say something such as, "I love this space." It's usually on an episode of House Hunters. But what does that actually mean? What is architectural space? Where does our understanding of space come from? And what are some examples of well designed spaces? We're going to explore all of that and more on our first episode of Architecture 101.
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    Written, Narrated & Edited by Steve Park
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    © 2022 All Things Architecture.

Комментарии • 23

  • @TheLowLandGardener
    @TheLowLandGardener Год назад +7

    Space is a disguised word for freedom. Thats why we ask space in a relationship sometimes when what we actually want is freedom. Human are drawn to providing architecture to envelope space, to establish some kind of a control, people sometimes pretend to want freedom but in fact they want somebody tell them what to do. They want a sense of security. Architecture played a great role in our society by shaping our lives and culture simply by how it made us feel within a space.

  • @andrescarsonbrown3138
    @andrescarsonbrown3138 Год назад +5

    Thanks man. This encourages me to wish to explore architecture...if you think about it, there are so many places to see! Someone once told me that the superpower we have as architecture students allows us into spaces simply by saying, "I'm an architecture student and I wish to observe this space".

    • @AllThingsArchitecture
      @AllThingsArchitecture  Год назад

      I’m glad you enjoyed the video. Being a student does give you an different perspective on architecture, and it makes exploring buildings a rich experience.

  • @tyrabjurman3584
    @tyrabjurman3584 5 месяцев назад +2

    Space - The final frontier!

  • @davido3026
    @davido3026 Год назад +4

    SPACE...The interior volume you enter and do not want to leave.......the exterior space you would like to behold always...

  • @seanuminski
    @seanuminski 2 года назад +10

    I was surprised to learn that in landscaping and gardening, outdoor spaces are broken down into “rooms” too, seen either as an extension or a separation from the building

    • @davido3026
      @davido3026 Год назад

      you can integrate the exterior and bring it into the interior

  • @kenesufernandez1281
    @kenesufernandez1281 21 день назад +1

    ✨💖

  • @HarveyBernstein-hw4vy
    @HarveyBernstein-hw4vy 3 месяца назад

    Great

  • @BalqeesAlodaini
    @BalqeesAlodaini 6 месяцев назад

    Keep it

  • @faezedarvish4732
    @faezedarvish4732 2 года назад +2

    Hi; thanks for your useful information.
    I'm looking for the reasurch you mentioned by ^andreas dubava^ is there any resources that you can tell me?

  • @keleniengaluafe2600
    @keleniengaluafe2600 2 года назад

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @dopamine261
    @dopamine261 2 года назад +2

    Hey could you link me some of that Andreas Dubava Neuroscience research thank you

  • @sledghammermessiah3949
    @sledghammermessiah3949 Год назад

    Wheres part 2

  • @aestheticavocado437
    @aestheticavocado437 2 года назад +1

    is marsal augustus real name of that person? i googled it and i cant find him. Pls reply I want this for my university assignment.

    • @AllThingsArchitecture
      @AllThingsArchitecture  2 года назад +1

      August Schmarsow was the architectural theorist that first discussed the importance of space over the form.

    • @johnsola874
      @johnsola874 2 года назад

      @@AllThingsArchitecture thanks for the name

  • @nasserkachlan6867
    @nasserkachlan6867 Год назад

    Hey bro can we have the resources… specially the research paper of Andreas the Brazilian researcher

    • @AllThingsArchitecture
      @AllThingsArchitecture  Год назад

      Andrea de Paiva has written several papers on neuroscience and architecture. Here’s one of her papers to check out: www.researchgate.net/publication/325016082_Neuroscience_for_Architecture_How_Building_Design_Can_Influence_Behaviors_and_Performance

    • @nasserkachlan6867
      @nasserkachlan6867 Год назад

      @@AllThingsArchitecture thank you
      I appreciate that 😍

  • @johnsola874
    @johnsola874 2 года назад +2

    next time you mention a weird name, pls show it in your video , I cant spell just by saying it. the augutus part

  • @1EARTHARCHITECT
    @1EARTHARCHITECT Год назад

    Nice beginning but rather amateur with several errors; pre WWII all architecture for the last ten thousand years or so, naturally followed our binocular brains assigning an axis to every space and to every piece of stuff defining that space both inside and out because that is the most efficient way to process the information - why we like symmetry and balance of form - all as taught by the Beaux-Arts - the baby thrown out with the bathwater of ornamentation.