Towards a Phenomenology of Architecture: Norberg-Schulz - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Towards a Phenomenology of Architecture: Norberg-Schulz

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Place: the concrete manifestation of human's dwelling ... e.g.,Tuscany. Complex Landscapes. Mixture of 'pure' archetypes. E.g., Beirut, Lebanon ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Towards a Phenomenology of Architecture: Norberg-Schulz


1
Towards a Phenomenology of Architecture
Norberg-Schulz
  • Phil 314
  • Philosophy and the City

2
some terminology
  • Dwelling gaining an existential foothold (5)
  • Genius loci the spirit of the place (5,
  • Place the concrete manifestation of humans
    dwelling
  • Concretize to make the general visible as a
    concrete, local situation
  • Cultural landscape an environment where man
    has found his meaningful place within the
    totality. (40)

3
3 steps towards a phenomenology of place
  1. Distinguish between natural (landscape) and
    human-made phenomena (settlement) (p. 10)
  2. Categories of earth/sky, outside/inside
  3. Character the basic mode in which the world is
    given (p. 14)

4
Possible relationships between natural and
human-made places gathering
  1. Visualize building demonstrates human
    understanding of nature by replicating what is
    seen in nature
  2. Complement building adds what is perceived to be
    lacking in nature
  3. Symbolize building demonstrates human
    understanding of nature and self by translating
    that understanding onto built form (Genius Loci,
    p. 17)

5
Genius Loci
  • Socio-economic factors are not the most important
    in shaping genius loci The existential
    meanings have deeper roots. They are determined
    by the structure of our being-in-the-world. (6)
  • if the settlements are organically related to
    their environment, it implies that they serve as
    foci where the environment is condensed and
    explained. (10)
  • Protecting and conserving the genius loci means
    interpreting it in ever new ways (18)

6
Cultural Landscapes
  • Through the interaction of surface relief,
    vegetation and water, characteristic totalities
    or places are formed which constitute the basic
    elements of landscapes. (37)
  • 3 archetypes
  • Romantic
  • Cosmic
  • Classical

7
Romantic Landscapes
  • Original forces strongly felt
  • Rugged with lots of places
  • Dwelling an interaction between humans and earth
  • e.g., Norwegian farm

8
Cosmic Landscape
  • Earth doesnt provide foothold
  • No individual places structured
  • Sky is structured by the sun rather than the
    earth
  • Genius loci a manifestation of absolute
  • e.g., Ulurul (Australia)

9
Classical Landscape
  • Intelligible composition of distinct elements
  • Meaningful order
  • Human scale
  • Dwelling by placing as equal partnershumans and
    nature
  • e.g.,Tuscany

10
Complex Landscapes
  • Mixture of pure archetypes
  • E.g., Beirut, Lebanon
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