The Order Problem SetProblem 2: Hierarchy by LocationThe premise of the aesthetic concept of hierarchy is that certain architectural spaces or forms are more important than others. The value of a space or form is defined by the culture. Francis D. K. Ching, in his "Form, Space and Order" defines three ways in which forms can achieve hierarchical prominence: through being the exception to the norm in either, location, unique shape, or exceptional size. Additionally, one can create hierarchy by the relative level of articulation or detail. Of the three images below which is the best example of the use of hierarchy created by location?
Problem 1 | Tutorial | Problem 3 Aesthetics | Order Problems | vocabulary | The Architecture Project University of Arizona Tuesday, September 2, 1997 lapointe@u.arizona.edu
http://tutorials.architecture.arizona.edu/
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