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The Committee on the Environment (COTE®) is an AIA Knowledge Community working for architects, allied professionals, and the public to achieve climate action and climate justice through design. We believe that design excellence is the foundation of a healthy, sustainable, and equitable future. Our work promotes design strategies that empower all AIA members to realize the best social and environmental outcomes with the clients and the communities they serve.

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  • 1.  Shelter, Survival & Design Excellence

    Posted 01-03-2012 04:23 PM
    This message has been cross posted to the following Discussion Forums: Regional and Urban Design Committee and Committee on the Environment .
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    This is a substantially re-written version of "Measuring Design Excellence"
     

    Explaining architectural design excellence to a skeptical public will require a better explanation of decisions. It is one thing to introduce students to the architectural language of imagination and quite another to measure excellence on a scale that will convince the public. The public expects an explanation in return for commitment and does not believe it cannot understand. 

    Progress toward excellence, however, implies a goal. The goal appears to be recognition within the profession. This means that awards are understood by the initiated but claims of public benefit are met with skepticism. If architecture wishes to bridge the public-private gap, it must explain its decisions to a public that depends on shelter for survival. This will require a new system of measurement based on a vocabulary and language that can explain and defend decisions.  

    Sullivan and Wright           

    If Louis Sullivan remains in the pantheon of architectural heroes, his observation that form follows function remains as well. This observation applied to the organic functions of nature, however; and "organic architecture" became a poetic analogy for Sullivan's ornamentation and the appearance of shelter created by Frank Lloyd Wright. It remains relevant however, because it represents an intuitive glimpse into the future.   

    The benchmark for excellent design in nature is survival. The benchmark for excellent design in architecture WILL be survival as populations grow and we attempt to provide shelter within a Built Domain that does not threaten its source of life - The Natural Domain. Organic architecture is a tall order for a profession that is struggling to define excellence in traditional practice, however. The symbiotic goal is clear but progress will require an increasing ability to explain how the context, form, function and appearance of architecture contribute to the goal. The difficulty is magnified when a beneficial quality of life is also specified for populations that currently sprawl to survive without considering the consequences.  

    Function 

    Excellence in architecture has been defined with site plans, floor plans, elevations, sections, details, life support systems, specifications, contracts and budget; but these components have made no organic contribution and have been difficult to explain beyond the time involved to design, the cost involved to build and the client satisfaction produced. As a consequence, architecture remains an artificial creation imposed on a natural world.  

    We cannot fully explain design excellence from the organic perspective of Sullivan and Wright until we can measure the symbiotic contribution of architectural decisions; but we have only begun to recognize the ladder of knowledge required for evaluation and explanation. We can begin climbing by learning to explain the logical process of problem definition, evaluation, and decision in a format that facilitates public explanation, since it is the foundation for architectural context, form, function and appearance. The key words in this sentence are evaluation and explanation. Calculation is often engineering.  

    The evaluation of shelter options based on problem definition is architectural design. At the present time, this is often an intuitive effort learned from experience that reduces the odds of repeating success across the entire profession. The first step, then, is to build the knowledge and tools that will permit efficient forecasting and evaluation of options. Decisions must become symbiotic solutions for survival. At this point context, form, function and appearance will be evaluated for excellence from a different perspective.  

    Opinion  

    The world of artistic opinion will remain hypothesis for architectural design -- until it can be supported and defended by a foundation of organic knowledge. This achievement will convince the public that we can make a positive contribution to their sustainable future. Opinion is instinct, intuition and hypothesis. It can lead to knowledge but it dies with talent and has difficulty repeating success.  

    Context 

    We travel through context and survive in buildings. An architect who is forced to sacrifice context for capacity introduces intensity that is not a public benefit. We only need to look at the tenement targets of social reform and public health for proof of this axiom.  

    The language of context is intensity, and its vocabulary includes design specification components that can be measured. Intensity is calculated from these measurements. It can also be predicted with the help of embedded equations in the design specification templates of forecast models.  

    Intensity represents one measurement of our quality of life and ability to provide shelter within a symbiotic Built Domain, but at the present time it's like taking blood pressure without the knowledge required for interpretation. A measurement requires extensive research to connect it to reality. Architectural intensity is a blood pressure reading without a frame of reference. This frame of reference represents the next step in a long history of architectural research. It began with the strength of materials and has spun-off entire professions until its success now shelters its greatest challenge.  

    Context is the relationship of building mass and pavement to open space. Project open space is a commodity that remains after building, parking and miscellaneous pavement areas are provided. It has been an after-thought, but design that ignores open space produces random intensity and potential over-development. Open space now represents a dilemma and an opportunity within a limited Built Domain. 

    Form and Appearance  

    Form and appearance without an explanation of context and function produce incomplete shelter solutions from an organic perspective. Sullivan and Wright were intuitively correct. They were simply limited in their ability to pursue the analogy they drew. Organic form follows function, and both are determined by a response to context that we call adaptation and natural selection. These are design decisions in the natural world. Context is given and response is a mystery of infinite proportion being slowly unraveled by science. In the artificial world of shelter we are expected to define sustainable context and adapt to its parameters with city design decisions. It's a tall order but an essential goal. 

    Architectural form presently emerges from design decisions based on opinion.  We travel to stare in wonder at exceptional talent but should be standing in a museum. This is the gallery approach to architecture, but it has always been more than fine art. 

    Sullivan and Wright were inspired by organic appearance but could not explain the natural design decisions that led to its form and function. Organic theory was opposed by industrial theory and the modern period of architecture emerged. It theorized that form was a product of industrial function. Natural function became an obstacle and form followed invention while speculation responded with sprawl.  

    What seemed infinite was visually confirmed as a small planet protected by a thin film of atmosphere at risk in 1969. The Natural Domain became an environmental asset to be preserved and the Built Domain began to emerge as a threat to survival. The Built Domain continues to expand its presence and the intuitives among us sense the presence of a predator, but the predator is past practice. It has always devoured those who fail to adapt. Some are raising their heads in alarm but there is no place to run. There is only one certainty in this situation. The planet knows how to adapt without permission. We can only guess at the right path to follow with the help of research and evaluation. Fine art is the voice of intuition, but the language of survival is knowledge built on its foundation. 

    Intensity 

    The design components of intensity can be measured, forecast and catalogued. This means that the physical, social, psychological and economic implications of intensity measurements can be studied. This in turn can improve future design decisions intended to shelter activity within a limited Built Domain. 

    Architects attempt to balance intensity with open space to produce desirable context, but much of it is compromised because they do not control the land. They serve an owner who may consider open space a "taking" when it interferes with maximum development capacity. The result is unexpected intensity, stress that has not been measured and sprawl across the planet. 

    The language of intensity is based on a vocabulary of design component values. They are used by embedded software equations to forecast development capacity options. These are intensity options that can be compared to the context measurement and evaluation of existing conditions. This means that architecture has a much greater role to play in city design if it chooses to take the assignment and confront past practice. The alternative is continuing encroachment that will force the Natural Domain to respond with natural selection.  

    Design Excellence 

    Design excellence is currently measured with the yardstick of opinion. If a convincing explanation of public benefit is an architectural objective, a new measurement system will be required. At the present time, education and research leave us with little more than opinion. This is not knowledge in my dictionary. Form must follow functional knowledge before we can achieve symbiotic, organic goals within a limited Built Domain. 

    My impression has been that architecture wishes to measure design excellence using public benefit as one criterion. Claims of benefit based on opinion will not be equal to the challenge. Collaborative research is needed to evaluate the physical, social, psychological and economic consequences of intensity decisions. This is a challenge for the profession. It is not a task for a practitioner who can only apply the existing tools of his or her profession. 

    If I have made myself clear, design excellence evaluated with opinion will have a difficult time convincing the public of substantial benefit. Intensity can be measured, evaluated and forecast; but it has not been an architectural topic or a city design plan for economic stability. It has been a response to land ownership limitations and free enterprise objectives that have magnified its impact. When architects express a concern for the Built Domain and demonstrate that they understand intensity options, they will begin to address context in the public interest with research and measurement that supports their design arguments. From this standpoint, design excellence is not a product but a collection of decisions represented by a product that has successfully adapted to its organic responsibility. Our task is to identify success with the collaborative measurements, evaluation and knowledge required. The final reward will be continued survival with dignity; and it will be granted, not given, without explanation. 

     

    AUTHOR NOTE: Architecture needs to assemble educators, practicing offices, allied sciences and allied professions into a collaborative research center to create tools that can improve the performance and decisions of its practitioners. Research will require public funding and decisions will require public support. When public benefit can be explained, research grants and collaboration should be available.  

    The public issue involves the design of shelter. This includes its context, function, form and appearance within a limited Built Domain. It is the only way to protect the health, safety and welfare of growing populations from natural selection. Intensity options are a key but they have physical, social, psychological and economic implications that must be understood. This is the argument for research, and the benefit will be nothing less than symbiotic survival.  

    Portions of this article were excerpted and edited from my book, Land Development Calculations, ed. 2, and its attached forecasting software, Development Capacity Evaluation, v2.0 published by The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010.

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    Walter Hosack
    Author
    Walter M. Hosack
    Dublin OH
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  • 2.  Credibility for Design Excellence

    Posted 01-04-2012 01:44 PM
    Thank you very much for your thoughtful essay, Walter.  I very much enjoyed your discussion of what makes good design good...
    I am concerned, however, given your conclusion that we must "assemble educators, practicing offices, allied sciences and allied professions into a collaborative research center to create tools that can improve the performance and decisions or its practitioners.  Research will require public support..."  It seems to me that this conclusion dooms the effort to the stillborn  While you and I might share some enthusiasm for this notion, I am fairly confident that it is not widespread and certainly not if "funding" is involved - particularly when there are so many competing interests.
    I would ask us if this is our only alternative?  Can we not think of anything else that might give design quality some credibility in the eyes of the public?  Is this all we can come up with?
    If it turns out to be, I fear that we are destined for an extended forseable future where design merit rests soley on the quality of the photography.
    For instance, could we consider that our design awards programs might apply greater rigor in describing the design merits of the winning projects.  To often, we rely on the photography and a few cryptic, too clever "jury comments" to suffice to explain why a design deserves recognition.  Providing greater rigor in this description of quality, as you have pointed out, is no easy task and will certainly require more thoughtful review and documentation of our awards deliberations.
    My thanks to you for picking up this thread once again and my best wishes to all for a great 2012!

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    Stephen Loos FAIA
    Principal
    The Mulhern Group Ltd.
    Lyons CO
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  • 3.  RE:Credibility for Design Excellence

    Posted 01-05-2012 08:19 AM

    Steven,
    Thank you for your interest in my essay. It's also on my blog at www.thebuiltdomain.net along with a number of others that may be of interest.
     

    We may both be dealing with wishful thinking. Public funding may not be available but I don't believe explanations will be good enough without a stronger foundation of knowledge to defend them. Improving the discipline behind the explanation of problem definition, evaluation and decision is a good start, but it is only a start - and it should begin in school. Hypothesis is weak without proof, and we must find a better way to defend design opinion by resting it on a foundation of logic and knowledge. 

    Funding is a function of priorities. If you don't believe public funding will be available, then the profession will have to assess its own priorities, information sharing and funding capacity.  It boils down to questions that prompt leadership ideas. If my "Author Note" is impractical, then consider my essay a question. The answer is open to suggestion and the effort will remain subject to priorities. 
     
    PS: I have added an addendum to my essay, "Shelter, Survival and Design". It's included on the COD and RUDC sites.

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    Walter Hosack
    Author
    Walter M. Hosack
    Dublin OH
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  • 4.  RE:Shelter, Survival & Design Excellence

    Posted 01-06-2012 07:41 AM

    RESPONSE to COMMENT on RUDC: Population is the heart of the problem and it needs shelter to survive. The language of intensity and the vocabulary of design specification values are my attempt to rationally address the issue within a Built Domain that must be limited by science. The whole is still the sum of its parts and we can't ignore shelter, since each structure will contribute to sprawl until leadership recognizes the problem. The ultimate solution is symbiotic, and we must get there by whatever means necessary. You are right that buildings alone will not solve the problem, but buildings are part of the issue and serve to frame the problem. Organic architecture is an objective that may never be achieved, but we can do better and it is a worthy goal.  Please read "Design with Space" on my blog at www.thebuiltdomain.net. You might also be interested in my book and software noted on the site. We're not as far apart as you think. In fact, we agree and I have tried to create a language and software tool to address the issue with an approach to context design that I have called city design.

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    Walter Hosack
    Author
    Walter M. Hosack
    Dublin OH
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