RE: Architectural Design Issues
May 25, 2014 at 6:47 am
(This post was last modified: May 25, 2014 at 7:02 am by Azurisy.)
(May 25, 2014 at 5:25 am)KichigaiNeko Wrote: Thank you.
Now they seem even more odd as here in Perth these issues are addressed. Then again, you seem to want to redesign Sydney Australia and I do not think that is possible or even probable.
Two things you seem to be missing....
The light
The environment the building sits in.
Have you seen the movie 'The Lake House'? Big fan here of Llyod Wright designs
Oh and the all important..... Just how are people going to interact with this building/ infrastructure?
As you know you can build any path you like but people will always take a 'short cut' and thus render your careful design an anathema
Yes, what you say is true.
However, my architectural design issues concern anywhere in the world, not just Sydney Australia. They are quite theoretical and speculative at this stage.
As for Sydney, Australia, the city is not inland so as to engender the above design strategies as practicable. Sydney Opera House is already a classic example that addresses my first critical design point.

The second critical design point of hybridisation for wilderness is far from possible and also irrelevant, given the city's proximity to the sea.
I will check The Lake House.
Wouldn't you mind expanding on two missing things - light and the environment? Do you mean these as missing design strategies, or as missing existing environmental aspects, or what else do you mean these things? Personally and professionally, I believe that Sydney deserves a long way to become a POROUS poly-city, due to its weak transport infrastructure/connectivity far and wide, such as Richmond, Newcastle and Wollongong. Infrastructure wise, this is my new architectural intervention project, subject to research, experimentation and global scrutiny! I have done some architectural research on the design of vertical/terrace farms right in the city, considering quite complex infrastructural interventions, such as on underground stormwater systems.
I look forward to our further discussion!