Relationship Between Structure and Architecture Presentation
Relationship Between Structure and Architecture Presentation
S U B M I T T E D B Y:
R. L . MA N AS A ( 10061A A 042) ,
B . N AV E E N K U M A R ( 1 0 0 6 1 A A 0 0 7 ) ,
M . S A S I D H A R R E D DY ( 1 0 0 6 1 A A 0 2 9 ) .
INTRODUCTION
Structural Engineering andArchitectureare two
different sciences that are inter-related. Structural
Designing deals with the study of design of steel in a
structure i.e., the internal skeleton of the structure that
helps to keep the structure durable, sound and stiff.
Whereas Architectural Design deals with design of
spaces meant for a particular function. It helps to
create ambient environment that is pleasing to eye.
The Architect designs the building keeping all the
functional aspects in mind that are to be incorporated
into the design and then they are executed by a Civil or
Structural Engineer.
EXAMPLE:
STATUE OF
LIBERTY
Commodity:
Commodity, which is
perhaps the most
obvious of the
Vitruvian qualities to
appreciate, refers to
the practical
functioning of the
building; the
requirement that the
set of spaces which is
provided is actually
useful and serves the
purpose for which the
building was
Delight:
Delight is the term for the effect of
the building on the aesthetic
sensibilities of those who come into
contact with it.
It may arise from one or more of a
number of factors.
The symbolic meanings of the
chosen forms, the aesthetic qualities
of the shapes, textures and colours,
the elegance with which the various
practical and programmatic
problems posed by the building have
been solved, and the ways in which
links have been made between the
different aspects of the design are all
possible generators of delight.
FIRMNESS:
Firmness is the most basic
quality.
It is concerned with the
ability of the building to
preserve its physical
integrity and survive in the
world as a physical object.
The part of the building
which satisfies the need for
firmness is the structure.
Structure is fundamental:
without structure there is
no building and therefore
no commodity. Without
well designed structure
Structures of Falling
Water
IGLOO
The location of the structure
within a building is not
always obvious because the
structure can be integrated
with the nonstructural parts
in various ways.
Sometimes, as in the simple
example of an igloo, in which
ice blocks form a selfsupporting protective dome,
the structure and the space
enclosing elements are one
and the same thing.
TEPEE
Sometimes the structural
and space enclosing
elements are entirely
separate.
A very simple example is the
tepee, in which the
protecting envelope is a
skin of fabric or hide which
has insufficient rigidity to
form an enclosure by itself
and which is supported on
a framework of timber
poles.
Complete separation of
structure and envelope
occurs here: the envelope
RONCHAMP CHAPEL
The chapel by Le Corbusier
at Ronchamp is a similar
example.
The highly sculptured walls
and roof of this building
are made from a
combination of masonry
and reinforced concrete
and are self-supporting.
They are at the same time
the elements which define
the enclosure and the
structural elements which
give it the ability to
maintain its form and resist
load.
Conceptual sketch of
arena
Aerial view of hockey
arena
FOSTER ASSOCIATES
In most buildings the relationship
between the envelope and the
structure is more complicated
than in the above examples, and
frequently this is because the
interior of the building is
subdivided to a greater extent by
internal walls and floors. For
instance, in Foster Associates
building for Willis, Faber and
Dumas, Ipswich, UK. the
reinforced concrete structure of
floor slabs and columns may be
thought of as having a dual
function. The columns are purely
structural, although they do
punctuate the interior spaces and
are space-dividing elements, to
CONCLUSION
To sum up, these few examples of very different
building types demonstrate that all buildings
contain a structure, the function of which is to
support the building envelope by conducting the
forces which are applied to it from the points
where they arise in the building to the ground
below it where they are ultimately resisted.
Sometimes the structure is indistinguishable from
the enclosing and space-dividing building
envelope, sometimes it is entirely separate from
it; most often there is a mixture of elements with
structural, non-structural and combined functions.
In all cases the form of the structure is very closely
related to that of the building taken as a whole
and the elegance with which the structure fulfils
ROLE OF
STRUCTURE
IN A
BUILDING
ORNAMENTATION OF STRUCTURE
There have been a number of periods in the history
of Western architecture in which the formal logic
of a favored structural system has been allowed
to influence, if not totally determine, the overall
form of the buildings into which the age has
poured its architectural creativity.
In the periods in which this mood has prevailed,
the forms that have been adopted have been
logical consequences of the structural armatures
of buildings.
The category ornamentation of structure, in which
the building consists of little more than a visible
structural armature adjusted in fairly minor ways
for visual reasons, has been one version of this.
PARTHENON
The architecture of the Parthenon is tectonic: structural
requirements dictated the form and, although the purpose
of the building was not to celebrate structural technology,
its formal logic was celebrated as part of the visual
expression.
The Doric Order, which reached its greatest degree of
refinement in this building, was a system of ornamentation
evolved from the post-and beam structural arrangement.
There was, of course, much more to the architecture of the
Greek temple than ornamentation of a constructional
system.
The archetypal form of the buildings and the vocabulary and
grammar of the ornamentation have had a host of symbolic
meanings attributed to them by later commentators.
No attempt was made, however, by the builders of the Greek
temples, either to disguise the structure or to adopt forms
other than those which could be fashioned in a logical and
straightforward manner from the available materials.
2 STRUCTURE AS ORNAMENT
The relationship between structure and
architecture categorized here as structure as
ornament involves the manipulation of structural
elements by criteria which are principally visual
and it is a relationship which has been largely a
twentieth-century Phenomenon.
Three versions of structure as ornament may be
distinguished
symbolically.
artificially created circumstances
a visual agenda is pursued which is incompatible
with structural logic
STRUCTURE AS ORNAMENT
The conclusion which may be drawn from the
above examples of structure as ornament is that
in many buildings with exposed structures the
structure is technically flawed despite appearing
visually interesting. This does not mean that the
architects and engineers who designed these
buildings were incompetent or that the buildings
themselves are examples of bad architecture.
It does mean, however, that in much architecture
in which exposed structure is used to convey the
idea of technical excellence (most of High-Tech
architecture falls into this category), the forms
and visual devices which have been employed
3 STRUCTURE AS ARCHITECTURE
There have always been buildings which consisted
of structure and only structure.
The igloo and the tepee are examples and such
buildings.
Occasionally, they have found their way into the
architectural discourse and where this has
occurred it has often been due to the very large
scale of the particular example.
Examples are the Crystal Palace in the nineteenth
century and the CNIT building in the twentieth.
CRYSTAL PALACE
BACKPACKERS TENT
The backpackers tent an extreme example of the
need to minimize weight in a portable building
has already been mentioned.
Portability requires not only that the building be
light but also that it be demountable another
purely technical consideration.
In such a case the resulting building form is
determined almost entirely by technical Criteria.
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