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OverviewThis book focuses on symmetries in the analysis and synthesis of architectural designs. Crucial in the history of architecture, principles of symmetry provided the means to achieve balance and harmony of spatial composition in architecture. Less well known is the importance of symmetry principles in the analysis of the distinct constituents in a contemporary architectural design which may, at first glance, appear disorganized or even random. The revelation of different hierarchical levels wherein various types of symmetry or subsymmetry are superimposed provides a key for deciphering the underlying structure of spatial logic. The interaction between local and global subsymmetries is of particular interest. Operating with symmetry concepts in this manner offers architects, designers and students an explicit method for understanding the symmetrical logics of sophisticated designs and gaining insights into new designs. This book has two complementary objectives: to explore the fundamental principles of architectural composition founded on the algebraic structure of symmetry groups in mathematics and to apply the principles in the analysis and synthesis of architectural and urban designs. By viewing and decomposing architectural and urban designs in this manner, the hidden spatial logic and underlying order in a design become transparent. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jin-Ho ParkPublisher: Birkhauser Verlag AG Imprint: Birkhauser Verlag AG Edition: 1st ed. 2022 Volume: 6 Weight: 0.639kg ISBN: 9783031089459ISBN 10: 3031089456 Pages: 266 Publication Date: 25 September 2022 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsTable of ContentsAcknowledgements Foreword Preface Part I: Fundamentals of subsymmetries Chapter 1. Spatial transformations of shapes 1.1 Isometries of a plane 1.2 Similarity transformations 1.3 Groups and symmetries 1.4 Regular polygons and multiplication table 1.5 Subgroups Chapter 2. Plane symmetry groups 2.1 Cyclic and dihedral groups 2.2 Seven frieze groups 2.3 Seventeen wallpaper groups Chapter 3. Cayley diagrams 3.1 Cayley diagrams of the point groups 3.2 Cayley diagrams of the frieze groups 3.3 Cayley diagrams of the wallpaper groups Chapter 4. Subshapes and subsymmetries 4.1 Subsymmetries of regular polygons 4.2 Lattices of the subsymmetries of the frieze groups 4.3 Lattices of the subsymmetries of the wallpaper groups Part II: Decomposition and Recomposition of Architecture and Urban Designs Chapter 5. Subsymmetries of the point groups in architectural designs 5.1 Architecture and urban designs in antiquity 5.2 Modern examples 5.2.1 Frank Lloyd Wright’s use of mirrored and rotational symmetry 5.2.2 Rudolph Michael Schindler’s unique elaborations of subsymmetries 5.2.3 Gregory Ain’s Mar Vista Track Project 5.2.4 Subsymmetries of two civic works by modern architects 5.2.5 Constructing new designs with subsymmetries of the point groups Chapter 6. Subsymmetries of the frieze groups in architectural designs 6.1 Gregory Ain’s “paired and mirrored” method 6.2 Superimposed floor plans and stacked massing 6.3 Façade manifestations 6.4 Sectional wall layers Chapter 7. Subsymmetries of the wallpaper groups in architecture and urban designs 7.1 Culturally embedded building facades and screens 7.2 Incremental housing designs 7.2.1 Charles Correa’s clustering method 7.2.2. James Stiring’s incremental clustering and further experiments 7.3 High-rise housing projects 7.3.1 Le Corbusier’s influences and after 7.3.2 Two mega housing and further design experiments 7.4 Urban layouts based on the wallpaper subsymmetries 7.4.1 Expansion to urban planning 7.4.2 Experimental urban layouts Conclusion BibliographyReviewsAuthor InformationJin-Ho Park teaches architectural design, formal theories, and history as a professor in the Department of Architecture at Inha University, Korea. Prior to joining Inha University, he taught in the School of Architecture at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA as an associate professor with tenure. He earned his Ph.D. in architecture from University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He served as corresponding editor of the Nexus Network Journal and is now a contributing editor Open House International (Emerald Publishing). His research has been published in various referred journals, nationally and internationally. His book publications include Designing the Ecocity-in-the-Sky (Images Publishing 2014) and Graft in Architecture: Recreating Spaces (Images Publishing 2013). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |