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Disrupting Normal Experiences: An Interview with the Curators of Svizzera 240

October 21, 2020 Dima Stouhi 0

Scale is a very important referential element in built environments. Once manipulated, however, it becomes a key tool that completely changes the way we experience architecture. One of the most prominent projects that put scale at the forefront was the Svizzera 240: House Tour, the Swiss pavilion at the 2018 Venice Biennale, a project that triggered people’s behaviors and perception of space, and left them feeling as though they were experiencing an “Alice in Wonderland”. The project was awarded with the Golden Lion award for best National Pavilion, described by the Biennale organization as “a compelling architectural installation that is at once enjoyable while tackling the critical issues of domestic space”.

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History of Architecture: Ancient India & Southeast Asia

October 14, 2020 Dima Stouhi 0

As far as written records report, “prehistory” dates back between 35,000 BCE and 3000 BCE in the Middle East (2000 BCE in Western Europe). Ancient builders had a profound understanding of human responses to environmental conditions and physical needs. Initially, families and tribes lived together in skin-covered huts and bone structures. Thousands of years later, human settlements evolved into fortified mud-brick walls surrounding rectangular volumes with pierced openings for ventilation and sunlight. 

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“The Era of Powerful Buildings and Weak Entourage is Over”: Interview with Luxigon’s Eric de Broche des Combs

July 5, 2020 Dima Stouhi 0

The images that some visualizers have been presenting have allowed people to be fully immersed in virtually-built environments; exploring the space, observing how the sun rays create a dialogue between light and shadow, experiencing what they might hear or feel as they walk by one room to another, all before excavation work begins and the first block is laid. 

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History of Architecture: Ancient Greece

July 3, 2020 Dima Stouhi 0

As far as written records report, “prehistory” dates back between 35,000 BCE and 3000 BCE in the Middle East (2000 BCE in Western Europe). Ancient builders had a profound understanding of human responses to environmental conditions and physical needs. Initially, families and tribes lived together in skin-covered huts and bone structures. Thousands of years later, human settlements evolved into fortified mud-brick walls surrounding rectangular volumes with pierced openings for ventilation and sunlight. 

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Architecture Plagiarism: Are We Being Inspired or Are We Cheating?

July 1, 2020 Dima Stouhi 0

There’s always an ongoing debate on whether some designs are stolen or “modified” to become original. Most people assume that if we post pictures of our designs online, we would be giving away our work and other designers and architects will eventually steal them. But should we really hide our designs from the public? Are plans and sections so sacred and innovative to the extent that architects are applying copyrights to them?

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History of Architecture: Megaliths, Mesopotamia, and Ancient Egypt

May 14, 2020 Dima Stouhi 0

As far as written records report, “prehistory” dates back between 35,000 BCE and 3000 BCE in the Middle East (2000 BCE in Western Europe). Ancient builders had a profound understanding of human responses to environmental conditions and physical needs. Initially, families and tribes lived together in skin-covered huts and bone structures. Thousands of years later, human settlements evolved into fortified mud-brick walls surrounding rectangular volumes with pierced openings for ventilation and sunlight.