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30
MAR
2014
by Nikos Salingaros
News Articles Theory and History
Unified Architectural Theory
Nikos Salingaros
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As you may have seen, ArchDaily has been publishing UNIFIED ARCHITECTURAL
THEORY, by the urbanist and controversial theorist Nikos A. Salingaros, in serial form.
However, in order to explain certain concepts in greater detail, we have decided to pause
this serialization and publish three excerpts from another of Salingaros books: A THEORY
OF ARCHITECTURE. The previous excerpt explained the difference between Pattern
Language and Form Language. The following excerpt will establish how these languages
can combine to form the Adaptive Design Method.
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to understand what an adaptive design method refers to. Out of many contemporary
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approaches to design, there are very few that result in structures and environments that are
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I have indicated very briefly what a pattern language and a form language are; we still need
adapted both to physical human use, as well as to human sensibilities. In the past, the
opposite was true. Human use is straightforward to understand: the physical dimensions
and geometry have to accommodate the human body and its movement.
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beings feel at ease; make them feel psychologically comfortable so that persons can carry
out whatever functions they have to unselfconsciously, without being disturbed by the built
environment in any way. This imposes a strong constraint on the design process to adapt to
the many factors (both known and unknown) that will influence the user on many levels,
including emotion. An adaptive design method should accommodate all these criteria, and
this Chapter shows how this may be accomplished.
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A major source of confusion is that a design method could adapt to a style, but not to human
use and sense of wellbeing. For example, it might adapt to (conform to) a set of
predetermined geometrical prototypes, such as cubes and rectangular slabs. It takes on that
particular form language. Minimalist modernism has a clearly-defined geometrical goal; i.e.,
its peculiar crystalline form language. It is successful on its own terms while at the same
time ignoring, or not trying to accommodate, human patterns of use and the sensory
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incompatible with Alexanders Pattern Language. In this Chapter, I will use the term
Metal 2.0
Apavisa
adaptive to refer strictly to fitting the built environment to human beings, and not to
Porcelain Stoneware
response to built form and surface. This is the reason why minimalist modernism is
Since there exist an infinite number of patterns that can contribute to a pattern language,
TerraClad Ceramic
Sunshade System
Boston Valley Terra Cotta
and an infinite number of form languages, there are of course an infinite number of adaptive
design methods that combine two languages. Each adaptive design method is unique. The
crucial point is that there are also an infinite number of design methods that act against
Ceramics
adaptive design by producing structures which are not suitable to human needs. In the
absence of an accepted term for design that ignores human needs, I will call such actions
non-adaptive design.
Post-industrial design is not fundamentally adaptive. Its form language (or rather, set of
related form languages) produces structures that are often hostile to human sensibilities.
Studies by environmental psychologists have confirmed physiological reactions such as the
onset of anxiety and signals of body stress in such environments. I want to look for systemic
causes of this non-adaptivity. For reasons already discussed in Chapter 6, minimalism
effectively precludes the use of patterns, both visual and Alexandrine patterns. That means
that patterns of human activity cannot be accommodated within its design canon, thus
characterizing it as non-adaptive. To proudly proclaim such a design method as functional
is a mockery of the term, but it is admittedly a remarkably effective propaganda ploy that
helps in its proliferation.
Architectural form languages survive because they often acquire non-architectural meaning,
after which they can ignore the need to be adaptive to human needs. In that case, a form
language is no longer part of an adaptive design method; it becomes split from its
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An adaptive design method requires the union of a pattern language with a form language.
If either the pattern language or the form language is flawed, then the design method will fail
to create adaptive structures. For example, high-rise towers set in vast open spaces satisfy
neither a viable form language nor a pattern language they are iconic design failures that
get repeated because architects make a lot of money building them. One may claim to
employ a pattern language together with a primitive form language to create structures
barely suitable for human habitation and use, such as contemporary buildings that try to use
Alexandrine patterns. Those buildings may partially satisfy some functional patterns, but the
more they stick exclusively to a minimalist or high-tech form language, they more they will
feel dead and alienating, so that their users are uncomfortable.
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Nikos Salingaros
Two instances of partial success come to mind. In the mixed example of central Tel Aviv, an
early modernist form language is tied to a traditional European urban pattern language, as
laid out by Sir Patrick Geddes, with successful results. The buildings do not connect so
much on an architectural scale, yet they do connect well on the urban scale to create a
lively environment. Other illustrative examples with mixed success include dwellings built by
alternative counterculture architects soon after the Pattern Language appeared. They
satisfy all the patterns, but they look somewhat chaotic and unbalanced far from
satisfying Alexanders original intent of ordered geometrical coherence. The reason is that
their builders had no form language to draw upon. These buildings were built within a
culture that did not wish to refer to any tradition, and did not have the capacity to create a
new form language (the multicolored psychedelic art of that culture was never applied to
architecture in a way that would help the geometry).
In the opposite instance, one can use antipatterns together with a form language to damage
both built and natural environments. Twentieth-century buildings were built using a distorted
version of the Classical form language that are inhuman either because of scale,
megalomania, or the desire to intimidate. They may look nice from a distance, but are
hostile in actual use. This is a characteristic of Fascist architecture.
Some modernist architects were also very fond of employing parts of a form language of
rich, detailed materials, but to intentionally create alien forms. The surfaces are adaptive in
these cases, but the geometry is not (sending a mixed message of attractive materials in a
hostile setting). Another failed example is found in recent traditional-looking mansions
isolated in American suburbia. They use a form language (that happens to be irrelevant to
the site) but no urban pattern language, so those buildings remain disconnected. They have
a great image, but no functionality on the urban scale. It is only the correct pairing of pattern
language with form language that results in an adaptive design.
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As the above examples make clear, an adaptive design method provides the means of
creation, but not the product. It gives one the framework and tools for creative expression. It
still requires a talented architect or sensitive non-architect to use the language to design a
building. Working with a complete, richly-expressive language makes that task
immeasurably easier. Great architects can use an existing form language in an innovative
manner to create new architectural expressions, or they can invent their own form language.
(A pattern language, however, cannot be invented: it has to be discovered). A primitive form
language severely reduces architectural expression. With a flawed form language, new or
old, even the greatest architect has trouble making something useful and adaptive.
Nikos A. Salingaros, A Theory of Architecture (see this books Wikipedia entry) is now
available in an international edition HERE with shipping to anywhere in the world. Readers
in the US can choose between the new printing with Index HERE and the original printing,
which is selling at half price HERE. Translation into Chinese HERE, and Persian HERE.
Cite:
Nikos Salingaros. "A Theory of Architecture Part 2: The Adaptive Design Method" 30 Mar 2014. ArchDaily.
Accessed 3 Nov 2015. <http://www.archdaily.com/491122/a-theory-of-architecture-part-2-the-adaptivedesign-method/>
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