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In recent architecture, design has prioritised an engagement with time through its creation of temporary and highly flexible structures. There has, however, been less focus on how the design of buildings might impact the experience of time of the people who inhabit them. Here the distinguished author and emeritus professor Juhani Pallasmaa, who is renowned for his writings on the phenomenology of architecture, provides a reminder of the importance of what it means to ‘dwell in time’.
In recent architecture, design has prioritised an engagement with time through its creation of temporary and highly flexible structures. There has, however, been less focus on how the design of buildings might impact the experience of time of the people who inhabit them. Here the distinguished author and emeritus professor Juhani Pallasmaa, who is renowned for his writings on the phenomenology of architecture, provides a reminder of the importance of what it means to ‘dwell in time’.
Inhabiting Time
Pallasmaa, Juhani (author)
Architectural Design ; 86 ; 50-59
2016-01-01
6 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Milan Kundera , Manifesto of Futurism , Andrei Tarkovsky , Water Lily paintings , Sigmund Freud , Salk Institute , Karsten Harries , Fallingwater residence , time‐space compression , St Peter's Church , Sigfried Giedion , Lawrence Halprin , Jorge Luis Borges , Paul Virilio , In Search of Lost Time , David Harvey , Paul Valéry , ‘The Steppe’ , Kimbell Museum , Luis Barragán , Marcel Proust , Anton Chekhov , Karnak Temple Complex , Cubism , Postmodern architecture , Italo Calvino , Sigurd Lewerentz , Frank Lloyd Wright , Italy , Brion‐Vega Cemetery , Dimitris Pikionis , Daniel Bell , Sweden , Filippo Tommaso Marinetti , Socrates , Nostalgia , Gaston Bachelard , Carlo Scarpa , Fredric Jameson , National Assembly in Dhaka , Claude Monet , Louis Kahn , Edward Relph
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