School boards.Kaufmannische Schule, the small commercial school in Laufenberg, fronts a busy street on one side and on the other faces downhill towards low-cost housing, also designed by the architects, the medieval town and the Rhine. This two-sided condition becomes a theme in plan, section and elevations and its manipulation again demonstrates Burkhalter & Sumi's interest in careful complexity and in the use of materials and construction to reinforce spatial and perceptual aims. The school sits parallel to the street, defining a playground space between it and an old school house. (In fact, this east wall is designed to be played against.) While the quiet north side is simply glazed glaze n. 1. A thin smooth shiny coating. 2. A thin glassy coating of ice. 3. a. A coating of colored, opaque, or transparent material applied to ceramics before firing. b. with double-height windows, the street side asserts its presence through colour, a copper clad roof and its massing. Simultaneously, however, it endeavours to be reserved: it matter-of-factly peels back its wooden skin to let one slide inside; it has few openings, and its narrow wooden slats reduce its perceived mass. It hinges itself to the building by annexing the only fully transparent opening on the street facade. The tension is heightened by articulating the entry as a separate element through scale and use of a complementary colour, green to the building's red. The building appears bipartite BIPARTITE. Of two parts. This term is used in conveyancing as, this indenture bipartite, between A, of the one part, and B, of the other part. But when there are only two parties, it is not necessary to use this word. from the street though it has a clear ABA Aba (ä`bä), city (1991 est. pop. 264,000), SE Nigeria. It is an important regional market, a road and rail hub, and a manufacturing center for cement, textiles, pharmaceuticals, processed palm oil, shoes, plastics, soap, and beer. rhythm in the plan and cross section, with a corridor separating the classrooms from the staff rooms and library. The exterior skin makes a functionalist func·tion·al·ism n. 1. The doctrine that the function of an object should determine its design and materials. 2. A doctrine stressing purpose, practicality, and utility. 3. reading of the side elevations difficult. The clear organisation is made ambiguous by the centrality of the one and a half storey tall entry hall and its bleeding into the corridor. It is sheltered and calm, illuminated indirectly from the other spaces except for one large window on the street which silently lets in the busy world. The long section steps considerably to reveal the building's richness. The library, for example, faces the street and is half sunk. Its window is screened by twisting the exterior wooden slats, allowing a wheel's-eye view of passing traffic to adults and of the sky to children. The restrained treatment of the interior, where the architects use materials that one associates with the exterior, namely asphalt asphalt (ăs`fôlt, –fălt), brownish-black substance used commonly in road making, roofing, and waterproofing. Chemically, it is a natural mixture of hydrocarbons. tile flooring and exposed concrete, makes it feel surprisingly spacious. Rooms facing outwards in various directions coupled with the split-level corridor generate a centrifugal force centrifugal force Fictitious force, peculiar to circular motion, that is equal but opposite to the centripetal force that keeps a particle on a circular path (see centripetal acceleration). that strains against the exterior envelope. For Burkhalter & Sumi SUMI Software Usability Measurement Inventory (measures software quality from the user's point of view) , construction and materials reinforce their interest in the complexities of space and the Gestalt Gestalt (gəshtält`) [Ger.,=form], school of psychology that interprets phenomena as organized wholes rather than as aggregates of distinct parts, maintaining that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. of form. |
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