Re-solved. Iterating design solutions by understanding failure
Author(s) -
Peter McPherson,
Annabel Pretty
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the journal of public space
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2206-9658
DOI - 10.5204/jps.v2i3.125
Subject(s) - studio , typology , space (punctuation) , architecture , scale (ratio) , tutor , mathematics education , emulation , multitude , design studio , process (computing) , work (physics) , computer science , sociology , psychology , engineering , political science , visual arts , social psychology , art , telecommunications , law , anthropology , operating system , mechanical engineering , physics , quantum mechanics
Design is considered one of the most important parts of an architectural education. Much emphasis is placed upon the Design Studio within a School of Architecture, yet in the traditional tutor/student model how much opportunity is there for the student to understand the process of designing when emulation forms the heart of the learning?This paper reflects upon a series of large scale fabrication projects offered to students from 2012-2014 in Christchurch, New Zealand, under the umbrella of FESTA. These projects challenged the students to confront a series of ‘firsts’; to work collaboratively, to present themselves professionally, to navigate regulatory bodies, to engage with a client, and to realise a project at full, one to one, scale.These projects tend to exist without a specific precedent for students to draw upon, as would be usual when designing one of any number a normal building typology. This forces students into a space of discovery, one where a design can change for any multitude of reasons. Students are moved from the usual Design Studio experience of problem solving to one where the situation is uncertain and problematic, to a space of problem setting.
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