Slide ARS 304 W03 TEORI ARSITEKTUR
Eka Permanasari
Rahma Purisari
THE USE OF TYPOLOGY
• Analyze and discuss the existing production
• To be used as tools in designing
BERNARD TSCHUMI: SPACES AND EVENTS
• Architecture may start with program. Yet event
that occurs in the space cannot be dissociated
from architecture
• There is no fixed relationship between
architectural form and the events that take
place within it.
• In Tschumi's theory, architecture's role is not to
express an extant social structure, but to
function as a tool for questioning that structure
and revising it.
BERNARD TSCHUMI: SPACES AND EVENTS
• Spaces we see on magazine has transformed
architecture as passive objects instead of
place that confronts spaces and action.
REM KOOLHAAS: DEFINITIVE INSTABILITY
• Mixed use
• Expect the unexpected in the
space
• Through the medium of the
Skyscraper, each site in the
Metropolis accommodates in
theory at least‐an unstable and
unforeseeable combination of
superimposed and simultaneous
activities whose configuration is
fundamentally beyond the
control of architect or planner.
Rahma Purisari
THE USE OF TYPOLOGY
• Analyze and discuss the existing production
• To be used as tools in designing
BERNARD TSCHUMI: SPACES AND EVENTS
• Architecture may start with program. Yet event
that occurs in the space cannot be dissociated
from architecture
• There is no fixed relationship between
architectural form and the events that take
place within it.
• In Tschumi's theory, architecture's role is not to
express an extant social structure, but to
function as a tool for questioning that structure
and revising it.
BERNARD TSCHUMI: SPACES AND EVENTS
• Spaces we see on magazine has transformed
architecture as passive objects instead of
place that confronts spaces and action.
REM KOOLHAAS: DEFINITIVE INSTABILITY
• Mixed use
• Expect the unexpected in the
space
• Through the medium of the
Skyscraper, each site in the
Metropolis accommodates in
theory at least‐an unstable and
unforeseeable combination of
superimposed and simultaneous
activities whose configuration is
fundamentally beyond the
control of architect or planner.