Architectural Morphospace: Mapping Worlds of Built Forms
A method is proposed for plotting the plans of a large variety of rectangular built forms across a two-dimensional ‘morphospace’ of possibilities. The plans are enumerated by means of a technique of binary coding, such that similar shapes are grouped within distinct areas of this morphospace. Some a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environment and planning. B, Planning & design. Planning & design., 2010-04, Vol.37 (2), p.197-220 |
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creator | Steadman, Philip Mitchell, Linda J |
description | A method is proposed for plotting the plans of a large variety of rectangular built forms across a two-dimensional ‘morphospace’ of possibilities. The plans are enumerated by means of a technique of binary coding, such that similar shapes are grouped within distinct areas of this morphospace. Some applications to a geometrical history of building types are sketched, with examples from 19th-century pavilion hospitals, English elementary schools, and early New York skyscrapers. The purpose is to provide classification of built forms, to understand their interrelationships in a systematic way, and to see how building types have followed characteristic ‘morphological trajectories’ through this space of forms. It is a tool with which to approach the history of architecture from a geometrical point of view. It is not primarily conceived as an aid to design: nevertheless the paper concludes with some brief speculations about possible implications for design methods, using genetic algorithms. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1068/b35102t |
format | Article |
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title | Architectural Morphospace: Mapping Worlds of Built Forms |
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