The Trinquetaille Bridge, Vincent van Gogh
Medium: oil,canvas

Origami Around
Claire Keane
almost home
No title available

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

Product Placement
AnasAbdin
Keni

pixel skylines
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
$LAYYYTER
NASA

Discoholic 🪩
we're not kids anymore.
i don't do bad sauce passes
tumblr dot com
DEAR READER
sheepfilms
todays bird
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Philippines
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
@studiarchi
The Trinquetaille Bridge, Vincent van Gogh
Medium: oil,canvas
Sorry I meant improving skills in designing a floorplan with good functional aspects hope I was more specific this time :/
Thee things: observe, explore and practice.
Observe everyday the world around you. How people move in a space, sizes of spaces, how light affects the spaces and a million other details we take for granted everyday. Research the type of building you are designing and see what makes it work (or not work). Visit them and learn from floor plans of previous successful projects.
Explore options, never start with a preconceive notion of what you want the floor plan to be.You might have starting points like allowable area of the site to use or an entrance point but try out different configurations. I would start with simple bubble diagrams or adjacency diagrams but do not confuse those with architecture they are only to help you visualize the connections between spaces. Do not ignore this step and jump right into drawing rooms.
Practice makes (near) perfect. The more options you ty the better you will get at resolving the project’s challenges. The more projects you do the better you will get to resolving a floor plan. Many architects get stuck on a concept and try to make the plan fit that idea. Let the idea gow organically with the basic organization of the structure. I have found that a good plan tends to almost resolve itself and I am just a medium to draw it.
PS Do not try to copy someone else’s plan it will only lead to heartbreak when it does not work.
Stairs Composition in Three Points Perspective. Watch drawing timelapse: https://youtu.be/pd9uYOJqC34
Complete guide to drawing stairs in perspecrive video soon! :) https://www.youtube.com/drarchw
Interior of the Jupiter Temple (Mausoleum) in the Palace of Emperor Diocletian in Split by Charles-Louis Clerisseau
French, 1757
pen and Indian ink and brown wash, brush and brown and grey was
State Hermitage Museum
like or reblog if you save or use!!
port murray house, scotland 1963-2016 peter womersley AR 1964.
renold chains head office, wythenshawe, manchester. cruickshank & seward. AR 1954
The Queen Margaret Union, University of Glasgow, Walter Underwood & Partners, 1968
Photo: Simon Phipps
Florence, Italy - photography by: Michelle Heimerman - Saveur April/May 2017
Cathedral of Saint Mary of the Flower Il Duomo di Firenze: was begun in 1296 in the Gothic style with the design of Arnolfo di Cambio and completed structurally in 1436 with the dome engineered by Filippo Brunelleschi. The exterior of the basilica is faced with polychrome marble panels in various shades of green and pink bordered by white and has an elaborate 19th-century Gothic Revial facade by Emilio De Fabric.
styles: Italian Gothic - Renaissance - Gothic Revival
info via wiki
The Giant’s Staircase- Venice
Portal of the Church of S. Maria della Visitazione, Venice. Consecrated 1524.
The Abbey of St Gregory the Great. Somerset, UK. 19th century
Graphic History of Architecture by John Mansbridge
THE CORINTHIAN ORDER
According to Vitruvius, the Corinthian capital is a stylized representation of acanthus leaves growing through a basket. The volute scrolls at four corners, which have been transformed into downward-turning foliage, are carried over from the Ionic capital. The slender, fluted column shaft of the Ionic order is repeated, but the overall proportions of the Ionic and Corinthian orders differ considerably, due to the doubled height of the later capital.
The Corinthian order remained in continuous use for a much longer time than the Doric and Ionic orders. Although the earliest examples date from the classical period, the Corinthian order was not widely-known until Praxiteles chose it for the circular temple sheltering the Aphrodite of Knidos (c. 330 BC). The order was used in the Hellenistic kingdoms and adopted by the conquering Romans, who used throughout the empire. The order persisted through the 11th and 12th centuries, when Corinthian capitals in southern France and Spain served as models (and often as materials) for Romanesque foliate and historiated capitals.
Exquisite replicas of the Corinthian order such as the Panthéon belong to the rich history of the revival, rather than survival, of antiquity.