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Architectural Design Basics

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub

KNOWLEDGE ABILITIES SKILLS


Information Think Do
Memorize and Understand Analysis and Composition Communication
Names of things Analysis of Buildings Media of Communication
Elements of Architecture  Elements  Drafting
 Floor  Functions  Writing
 Wall  Context  Freehand Sketching
 Ceiling  Image  Models
 Door Functional Relationships  Pictures
 Window  Space Planning  Computers
 Others (Stairs,  Circulation Drawings
ramps, elevators)  Relationships  Plans
Environmental Factors Creativity  Section
Human Factors  Ideas  Elevation
 Scale and  Concepts  Perspective
dimensions  Process Graphics
 Physical needs Composition of Forms  Shapes
 Biological  Grid  Forms
 Psychological  Order  Scale
 Perceptual  Balance  Measurements
Building Systems  Symmetry Visual Illusion
 Structural  Rhythm Information
 HVAC Visualization  into Drawings
 Electrical  2D from/to 3D  from Drawings
 Sanitary  Reality from/to
 Mechanical Drawings
History of Architecture Looking vs. Seeing
 Buildings Estimation
 Architects  Distance
Theory of Architecture  Area
 Movements Interpretation
 Trends  Intentions
 Styles  Meaning
 Philosophies
Disciplines within Architecture
 Urban Planning
 Urban Design
 Architecture
 Interior Design
 Landscape
Other Disciplines
 Engineering
 Humanities
Social and Cultural Factors
The Profession
 Education
 Accreditation
 Professional
License
 Professional
Practice

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 1


Portfolio Requirement

Each student must maintain a record of his or her work in the graphics/studio
sequence.
This must be in the form of a 8 1/2" by 11" portfolio.
The portfolio must include examples of at least one major project from each semester
of the design sequence starting with the graphics studios in the first year.
It is recommended that all major projects be included in the portfolio as well as
selected examples of work from other courses such as building technology,
construction documents, and architectural photography.
The portfolio is a prerequisite for advancement in the studio course sequence and
may be requested by the studio critic (instructor) on the first day of class.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 2


Assignment 1: Elements and Principles of Design
Architectural Design Basics course has several facets. Besides design exercises and projects
conducted in the studio setting, the students also undertake design and graphic studies. Design
studies explore the place of ideas and concepts in formal invention and judgment. Graphic studies
explore the media for communicating and visioning the ideas. This is done in the "conventional"
and digital way.

The cliche "a picture is worth a thousand words" is a truism that derives from the image embodying
an ability to communicate ideas through the photographer's thought, feeling and sight. The
following exercises are intended to explore your way of seeing the world and will demonstrate that
the decisions you make composing form and space as a photographic image is not far from
composing these elements in architecture.

Although a picture is worth a thousand words, in this exercise you are only required to
communicate only two words. With your digital camera and your decision-making abilities,
photograph 21 different combinations of the following elements and principles of design. You have
to use each subject at least once.

ELEMENTS PRINCIPLES
Background Balance
Colour Contrast
Foreground Direction
Form Dominance
Grid Economy
Light Emphasis
Line Fragmentation
Mass Harmony
Material Hierarchy
Path Movement
Plane Order
Point Pattern
Shadow Proportion
Shape Repetition
Solid Rhythm
Space Scale
Structure Symmetry
System Time
Texture Unity
Type Value
Void Variety

Requirements: Produce; 1) a power point presentation of all resulting photographs and 2) print one
A3-size paper containing all pictures. Include the subject title, date and your full name.

Submission: To be presented according to scheduled presentations.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 3


Assignment 2: Architectural Typological Analysis
Using Elements and Principles of Design
Assignment

• Develop a typological analysis of several buildings of your choice to illustrate


the common features of their design style using your version of elements and
principles of design.
• Select at least 10 buildings from Kuwait to illustrate and prove your “theory”.
• Analyze the buildings and illustrate their common design features.
• You can expand the list by adding other elements and principles as needed.

Requirements

 Produce a PowerPoint Presentation of your study illustrating your analytical


study and results
 Write on A4 size paper a summary of your theory no more than 500 words and
5 pictures.
 Include the title of the exercise, date and your full name in the presentation and
the summary.

Submissions

 Written summary 40%


 PowerPoint Presentation 60%
 To be presented according to scheduled presentations.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 4


Exercise: Free Hand Sketching
Objectives:
Knowledge: To know the importance of freehand sketching.
Ability: To draw free hand sketches of shapes, objects, buildings and people.
Skills: Train students to use pencil and pens to draw sketches.

Assignment:
Using 4 "A4" size white paper, draw freehand sketches of:
1. 2D Shapes: lines, squares, circles, triangles, …
2. 3D Forms: cubes, cylinders, pyramids, …
3. Draw an exterior perspective of one of Khaldiyah campus buildings using pencil or marker
pens.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 5


Exercise: Points, Lines and Planes
Objectives:
Knowledge: The formal and informal organization of points, lines and planes.
Ability: To organize shapes in a meaningful way.
Skills: Train students to use points, lines and planes to produce patterns and shapes.

Assignment:
Using A4-size white paper develop an abstract pattern, a portrait of a building, a person, or an
object using the following elements:
1. Points or dots of different or equal size using black or colored pens.
2. Lines of same and different thickness or width, cut from black or colored papers.
3. Planes of same of different sizes and shapes, cut from black or colored papers.
4. Points, Lines and Planes of same of different sizes and shapes, cut from black or colored
papers.

Materials:
- Colored paper
- Cutting knifes
- Glue

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 6


Exercise: Bas-Relief and Carved Cubes
Objectives:
Knowledge: Bas- relief technique.
Ability: The goal of this exercise is to improve the students imagination abilities.
Skills: Imagine a three-dimensional form with the help of two-dimensional sketches.

Assignment:
Soft materials can be selected for the creation of Bas- relief work. A two-dimensional sketch or
composition can be drawn on the flat surface. The student starts carving out the surface and tries
to explore different types of volumes. Triangular shape can be carved out as a concave pyramid
or a square can be converted to a square based empty cuboids.
You are required to develop 2 assignments :
1. using a 03 cm x 30 cm, 2.5 cm thick board and
2. a 51cm x 15 cm x 15 cm cube.

Materials:

 Soft material like foam or clay.


o 30 cm x 30 cm, 2.5 cm thick board.
o 15 cm x 15 cm x 15 cm cube
 Carving tools
 Cutting knifes

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 7


Exercise: The GRID
Objectives:
Knowledge: To learn about the "GRID" as an important tool in organizing architectural spaces.
Ability: To be able to select the appropriate grid for a project.
Skills: To accurately draft different types of grids.

Assignment:
1. On a white 50x70 cm sheet, draw the following grid patterns with pencil and then with ink.
2. Trace the same assignment with ink on a calc paper.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 8


Exercise: Abstraction
Introduction

Abstraction is a technique adopted by artists from historical times to bring out the essential
aesthetics of the subject. The basic visual element of the line itself is the most primitive abstract
artistic expression. Daily newspapers, magazines, books have several illustrations in the form of
advertisements. Experienced professionals of visual art design all these advertisements. The
subjects in these illustrations are also full of variety, they contain human beings, animals, trees,
flowers, leaves, mountains, rivers, sand dunes and numerous such subjects. The subjects are either
artificially composed or photographed as a composed object.

Objectives:
Knowledge: Abstraction as an artistic technique.
Ability: To be able to perform abstraction from original forms.
Skills: To develop abstraction of a from or subjects.

Assignment:
Students are asked to select a number of such compositions in the form of printed photographs,
pictures, advertisements and illustrations from the available books and magazines. Initially their
selection is based on the logic "I like it" and "I don't like it". These pictures are supposed to be the
pictures that are "the best" from student's point of view. Subsequently students are asked to make
sketches, based on these compositions and to create an abstracted version of the original picture in
exactly 5 steps.
Students are asked to adopt following 5 techniques for abstraction:
1. To eliminate details.
2. To convert three-dimensional picture into two-dimensional line work.
3. To draw the same picture by using dots.
4. To draw the same picture by using technique of smudging and undefined hazy shapes .
5. To eliminate the colors or adopt new color scheme.

Materials:
- Select five pictures from (preferably architectural subjects) suitable for the different types of
abstraction.
- 50 x 70 cm white cardboard.
- Draw the following border and perform the abreaction for each picture.

Due dates:
Monday, March 22, 2004 Border, selection of pictures and abstraction schemes, start.
Wednesday, March 24, 2004 Completion and submission of assignment

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 9


A Eliminate Abstract Original
details
B
S Convert
T 3-D to 2-Dl

R
A
Re-draw
50 cm using dots

C
T Re-draw
smudging
I
O Adopt a new

N
color scheme

Kuwait University Department of Design Basics in Arch. Name:


College of Eng. & Petroleum Architecture Ex. 5: Abstraction Date:

70 cm

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 10


Exercise: Stairs and Staircases Design
Objectives:
Knowledge: To know and understand the design requirements of staircases.
Ability: To design different types of stairs and staircases.
Skills: To draft and make models of staircases.

Assignment:
1. Design open steps that connects to the entrance of an elevated ground level in plan, section,
and elevation. The ground floor is elevated 1.20 m above the ground level.
2. Design a typical staircase to serve 5 typical floors 3-m high. Draw Ground Floor Plan,
Typical Floor Plan, and a Section.
3. Design a spiral staircase that connects a ground level of a villa to the upper floor only. The
ground floor height is 3 m (floor to floor). Draw Ground Floor Plan, Upper Floor Plan, and a
Section.
4. Make models of your staircases.
5. All drawings and models should be scale 1:50 on 50 x 70 cm size paper as indicated.

Readings:
Ernst Neufert, Architect's Data, p. 191-194

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 11


Open Steps

Typical staircase Spiral staircase

50 cm

Kuwait University Department of Design Basics in Arch. Name:


College of Eng. & Petroleum Architecture Ex. 6: Staircase Date:

70 cm

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 12


Exercise: Nine Square Matrix
Introduction
The nine-square problem has a rich history. It supports communication objectives in the areas of
model building, layout, and concept diagramming, and draws on general design principles
previously introduced and explored. The project's theoretical focus is the definition of architectural
space. Its key objectives include being able to define a hypothesis or strategy for investigating
complexity in spatial definition; being able to consciously manipulate the number, attributes, and
organization of architectural elements to create spatial compositions of relative complexity; and
being able to communicate in words and diagrams the hypothesis investigated, concepts employed,
and discoveries made in the investigation. The project provides students a formal format for
exploring basic issues of architectural design related to simplicity and complexity, proportion and
scale, and the defining of sets of relationships between parts and the whole.
Requirements
In this exercise the student is to design and construct a total of nine architectonic compositions of
spaces, each illustrating combinations of floors, walls, and roofs defined in a matrix provided by
the faculty. The horizontal edge of the matrix consists of three "continua" of simple to complex
solutions. The vertical edge establishes the combinations of the basic architectural elements of
floor, walls, and roof to be investigated. The use of the matrix and continua ensures that the models-
the externalization and representation of ideas--become sources of understanding and discovery.
Design decisions are seen not as right or wrong but appropriate or inappropriate given the
context and goals.
The project is given an explicit research or investigation orientation. It requires the student to
consciously identify a set of factors to be investigated, and to explicitly communicate them to
others. This process builds both vocabulary and the ability to translate ideas into words and
diagrams. It also aids in building an understanding of the difference between a concept and a
specific manifestation of that concept. The project's meaningfulness grows in direct proportion to
the degree to which students invest themselves in some discovery.
The solution to each continuum is to exhibit three clearly different and evenly spaced levels of
complexity, with a smooth gradation across the continuum. Each composition within a continuum
must contain a minimum of three visually accessible, inhabitable spaces, as well as scale human
figures.
Solutions to the exercise are presented in models constructed of white or colorless opaque,
translucent, or transparent materials. The models must be accompanied by a two-dimensional
presentation that communicates in words and diagrams the complexity hypothesis; the specific
concepts employed in its exploration; and observations on the successes, failures, and discoveries of
the investigation. This component of the presentation is an essential part of the research orientation
of the project. Its role is to make explicit the hypothesis or positions that the investigation is
exploring, identify the specific concepts being manipulated and reflect on the exploration's
discoveries. The process of making project-thinking explicit facilitates conscious decision making
and meaningful learning.

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THE INTENT OF THE PROJECT
This project provides students with a formal format for exploring basic issues of architectural
design related to simplicity and complexity, proportion and scale, and making sets of relationships
between parts and the whole. The project is designed for a guaranteed level of success to encourage
beginning students.
THE DURATION OF THE PROJECT
The project lasts for two week in a sixteen-week sequence. The "Nine-Square Matrix project is
presented near the beginning of the second eight weeks. It sits as an architectonic project in the
middle of an abstract-to-architectural continuum that begins with basic design principles and builds
to encompass a broad range of architectural issues.
THE PROJECT
The student is to design and construct a three-dimensional composition of spaces for each
combination of floors, walls, and roofs at each level of complexity identified in the investigation
matrix-a total of nine compositions. Each simple-to-complex continuum (1/2/3, 4/5/6, and 7/8/9) is
to exhibit three clearly different and evenly spaced levels of complexity; they should present a
smooth gradation from simple to complex. Each simple-to-complex continuum and/or the matrix as
a whole is to test a defined hypothesis concerning the perception of spatial complexity. The models
may be constructed only of white or colorless opaque, translucent, or transparent materials. The
sites/bases may be nine individual, three horizontal, or one inclusive unit. The compositions may
not extend horizontally past the boundaries of their individual sites and/or the base. Each
composition must contain a minimum of three visually accessible, inhabitable spaces, each of which
employs its assigned combination of floors, walls, and/or roofs. A minimum of one scale figure
must be placed within one of the inhabitable spaces of each composition. An inhabitable space is
any space with no dimension less than the height of the scale figure.
The models must be accompanied by a two-dimensional presentation that communicates in words
and diagrams the complexity hypothesis; the specific concepts employed in its exploration; and
observations on the successes, failures, and discoveries of the investigation.

Simple Complex
N
i
n
e 15x 15 cm
Floors
S
q
u
a
50 cm r Floors
e and
s Walls

M
a
Floors
t
and
r
Walls
i
and
x Roofs

Kuwait University Department of Design Basics in Arch. Name:


College of Eng. & Petroleum Architecture Ex. 5: Abstraction Date:

70 cm

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 14


Exercise: Room Design
Objectives:
Knowledge: To know the design requirements of different residential room types.
Ability: To be able to design different types of rooms according to their function.
Skills: To correctly draft and make models of rooms.

Assignment:

1. Design six types of rooms used in a residential unit using a generic room design.
2. The rooms should include:
a. bathroom
b. kitchen
c. bedroom
d. living room
e. dining room
f. office
3. Draw scale 1:50 a plan and 2 sections, showing doors, windows, wall thickness and interior elevations, for
each of your rooms on a 50 cm x 70 cm white board (Canson) sheet with pencil and then ink.
4. Make a model of one of your designs.

Readings:
Ernst Neufert, Architect's Data, p. 245 - 306

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Project: Visitors' Center in an Island
Objective:
Knowledge: To know how to solve a small architectural project.
Ability: To analyze and learn from architectural precedence and to express and discuss architectural
design ideas and concepts.
Skill: To draw a complete small architectural project and present architectural drawings using
pencil and ink.

Assignment:
Students are required to design a Visitors' Center for Umm Al-Maradem Island. It should contain an
exhibition, three-dimensional model of the island, interactive touch-screen exhibit, a tower with
telescopes for viewing the island, picnic area, gift-shop, and toilets for men and women.

Program:
1. Exhibitions area 100 m2
2. Toilets for men 15 m2
3. Toilets for women 15 m2
4. Gift-shop 20 m2
5. Watchtower 10 m high
6. picnic area around the center 200 m2

Requirements:
1. One cardboard 100 x 70 cm each student is required to draw the following:
1. Layout scale 1:200
2. Ground Floor Plan scale 1:100
3. Entrance elevation scale 1:100
4. Side elevation scale 1:100
5. Section scale 1:100
6. Interior or Exterior perspective or isometric
2. Model scale 1:100

Submission date
Monday, May 24, 2004 at 2:00 PM

Jury
Wednesday, May 26, 2004 from 9:00 AM to 2:00 PM

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 16


Visitors' Centers Examples
San Francisco Bay Visitor Center, Sausalito, California S.F. Bay Model Visitor Center
Information

Overview of the Model and Visitor Center


The model , located on Richardson Bay in Sausalito, California, is a unique scientific tool for exploring water
movement patterns in the San Francisco Bay-Delta Estuary.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built the bay part of the model in 1956 to test a series of barrier and water quality
proposals. This tidal hydraulic model has since been expanded to include "The Delta" and is used to test the effects of
oil spills, salt-water intrusion and pollutant dispersion.
The San Francisco Bay Model Visitor Center offers the public a variety of opportunities to learn about the estuary, the
natural environment and the role of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. An orientation video features computer-
generated images of the bottom of the bay. Audio tours are available in English, French, German, Japanese, Spanish and
Russian. Each month the Visitor Center has exhibits, and programs for adults and school-age children.

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Jewel Cave's Visitor Center

Jewel Cave's Visitor Center was first opened in June of 1972. The Visitor Center is home to the Headquarters and
offices for the Monument, as well as the main visitor services. Located in the Visitor Center is a small museum area
with displays and information about the cave, a large-scale map of passageways of Jewel Cave, a small bookstore
managed by the Black Hills Parks and Forests Association, interactive computers and more.
The Visitor Center is the main contact station for the Monument, and all Monument information is available at the
Center. It is the starting point for all of the Monument's hiking trails, as well as the starting point for the Scenic and
Spelunking Tours. For more information about these, see TOURS. For information about the hiking trails and other
activities on the surface, see SURFACE

MAINLAND HEADQUARTERS AND ROBERT J. LAGOMARSINO VISITOR CENTER

The Robert J. Lagomarsino Visitor Center on the mainland features a museum, living tidepool exhibit, three-
dimensional models of all the park islands, interactive touch-screen exhibit, a tower with telescopes for viewing the
islands, picnic area, a bookstore, and an outdoor native plant garden. Visitors will enjoy the 25-minute park movie, "A
Treasure in the Sea", throughout the day in the auditorium. Every Saturday and Sunday park rangers present free
interpretive programs on the natural and cultural resources of the park. Throughout the week, other programs and school
visits may be scheduled by calling the visitor center. All facilities are fully accessible.
Every Saturday and Sunday we offer several scheduled programs. Programs include Tidepool Talk at 11:00 a.m. and
Recreating at Channel Islands National Park at 2:00 p.m. At 3:00 p.m., rangers offer programs that look in depth at a
variety of topics about the park. Programs are free to the public.

NASA Visitor Center

NASA Visitor Center offers exhibits, tours, interactive presentations, and programs to show visitors from around the
globe what the Goddard Space Flight Center is all about.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 18


Picnic tables are available to the public, which offers a wonderful view of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Campus. Smoke free facility Handicap accessible.

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Exercise: Design and Materials
Objective:
Architectural composition depends on the designer’s selection of appropriate materials in order to
express certain design ideas. Linear form, organic, sculptural, traditional, hi-tech, … are some of
these expressions that can be provided by the use of different materials. The physical characteristics
of the material provide certain qualities and potentials for making the desired architectural
compositions and expressions. Some of these
characteristics are as follows:
 Kind: Wood, metal, paper, textiles, etc.
 Form: Linear (1D), Planar (2D), Volumetric (3D), etc.
 Surface: Color, texture, transparency, reflectivity, etc.
Types of Architecture:
 Walls Architecture: Design depends on vertical planes supporting roofs and defining
spaces and activities.
 Mass Architecture: Design depends on addition and subtractions to a basic mass in order
to express design ideas.
 Layered Architecture: Design depends on floors (layers) supporting activities and
functions.
 Elements Architecture: Design depends on collection of elements to form spaces and
sheltering.

Exercise
The student in this assignment is required to make four different compositions for imaginative
monuments or buildings using four different materials. The design element in this exercise is to
provide an interior space while developing the exterior volume.
The student may use certain materials with different effects of Color, texture, transparency, or
reflectivity. All four compositions will be placed on one base that is 50X70 cm wooden board.
Examples of possible materials that the student can use - but not limited to - are as follows:
 Wooden cubes
 Wooden sticks
 Play-dough
 Cardboard
 Foam
 Plastic
 Glass
 Other --------

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 20


Exercise: Archimedean
Objectives:
Knowledge: To know about regular solids and semi-regular solids
Ability: To visualize 3D solids from drawings.
Skill: To draft and make models of solids and semi-regular solids.

Exercise:
Use white thick paper to make 2 pieces of each or 12 pieces of only one of the following shapes.
Draft using your drafting tools with the greatest accuracy and neatness.
Use a square unit of 5 cm as your basic unit.
Add 1-cm flaps where needed.
Make a creative model using your 12 pieces.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 21


Exercise: Survey of an Existing Space
Objectives:
Knowledge: Conventional plans & elevations as three dimensional surfaces.
Ability: To develop drawings and models of existing spaces.
Skills: To survey, measure and draft plans and elevations of existing spaces.

Exercise
Team exercise: Measure design studio room in detail. Record data on blackboard.
Individual Exercise: Draw plans & elevations from measured data per diagram below. Draw plans
& elevations on board in ink from field measurements to scale at 1:50. Cut out & fold.

True ceiling plan

Window elevation

(Above drawing is diagrammatic only)


End Elevation End Elevation

Plan

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 22


Exercise: The Color Wheel
Objectives:
Knowledge: To learn about the basics of colors and their use in architectural graphics.
Ability: To be able to select the appropriate color scheme for a project.
Skills: To accurately color a color wheel.

Assignment:
On a white sheet, draw the attached color wheel exercise.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 23


Exercise: Neighborhood Poster

Introduction
Studnets are required to design and compose a poster that illustrates the important environmental
and architectural features of their neighborhoods.

Objectives
Knowledge: To learn about the context of their everyday life experience. To develop ways of
looking at architectural features of the environment.
Ability: To be able to select and photograph the appropriate buildings and environments that
represent their neighborhood.
Skills: To make composition of graphics and draw accurately from pictures, drawings and maps.

Assignment
On a transparent sheet 100 x 70 cm using B&W ink only, develop a composition of graphics, maps,
photographs, drawings, and any other suitable illustration to illustrate the important architectural
features of your neighborhoods.
1. Take several photographs ( 2-3 rolls of films or a large number of electronic shots) of the
important architectural features of your neighborhoods. Mark the location of your photo on the
neighborhood map. Discuss with instructor to select appropriate images.
2. develop a composition that contains at least the following:
- Name of neighborhood
- Neighborhood map
- At least 3 images of the important architecture features of the neighborhood (public buildings,
shopping centers, parks, landmarks, distinguished villas, ... )

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Project: Roundabout Improvement
Objective:
Knowledge: To know how to solve a small architectural problem using precedence. To find
information related to an architectural project or architect.
Ability: To analyze and learn from architectural precedence. To express and discuss architectural
design ideas and concepts.
Skill: To draw a complete small architectural project. To present architectural drawings using pencil
and ink.

Assignment:
Students are required to design a landmark for one of Kuwait’s roundabouts.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 25


Exercise: The Analysis of an Existing Space (1)
Objective:
Train students to document and analyze existing spaces.

Assignment:
The next series of problems will involve the documentation and analysis of one of the six existing
spaces on campus. In order to prepare for this exercise you should visit all of the spaces listed
below. In your sketch book you should record your observations about the space. Do not merely
draw a "picture" of the space but try to describe it in as objective a way as you can. Some questions
might be:
 What is the underlying geometric order of the space?
 What are the proportions of the space?
 How is light brought into the space?
 How is the space defined?
 What is the relationship between sub-spaces?
 How does the space relate to the context of both the building and the campus?

1. The entrance of Khaledyah Llibrary


2. The entrance of Khaledyah Administration Building
3. The entrance of the engineering building 14 KH
4. The courtyard between the library and administrative building
5. The male students' cafeteria

N.B. No Photos are allowed for this exercise. Use only "sketches".

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 26


Exercise: The Analysis of an Existing Space (2)
Objectives:
To promote the conception of space as a positive entity and understand its definition. To develop an
ability to observe and record architectural phenomena. To introduce analytical and abstract
thinking. To introduce basic drawing and model conventions. To introduce the role of precedent.

Assignment:
Objectives:
Project: Day 1 - During drawing class Each of you will be assigned to an existing space on campus.
You are to record the space in its context in plan and section through direct field observation, with
particular attention payed to the way in which the space is defined and articulated.
Day 2 - On white horizontal 11x17" sheets of paper draw the plan and section, using freehand soft
pencil (B) lines.
Day 3 - Make an abstracted axonometric drawing of the space.
Days 4, 5, 6, and 7 - Make a model of the space. The model is to be made of white board. Make any
required revisions to your to your drawings.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 27


Exercise: The Abstraction and Analysis of an Existing Space (3)
Objectives:
To encourage abstract thinking. To introduce diagrams as an aid to architectural thinking To
encourage speculation about architectural phenomena

Project:
Now that you have observed, recorded, and represented an existing space you are to engage in a
process of critical speculation about the space. Develop a series of analytical diagrams that
elucidate the issues listed below. In addition to the diagrams you are to draw a cut away worm's eye
axonometric. All material is to drawn using freehand pencil lines on 11"x17" white paper.

Issues:
Geometry - regulating lines
Geometry - form square, circle
Symmetry v. Asymmetry
Space primary/secondary
Multiple and overlapping spatial readings
Center v. Edge
Circulation - sequence and movement
Implied tectonics
Light
Hierarchy
Program
Proportion
Material
Scale
N.B. This list is not exhaustive and you may add other issues

In general the process of abstraction entails the leaving out of information that is not pertinent to a
particular category and the representation of elements that are.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 28


Exercise: A Studio House
Objective:
This project, the final project of the semester, represents the application of all previously discussed
information regarding form and space, into one project.

Assignment:
This project, the final project of the semester, represents the application of all previously discussed
information regarding form and space, into one project.
The project, a small dwelling, represents the first application of these issues into an architectural
solution. Along with concerns for spatial definition, formal strategy, and a value for craftsmanship
the student is now concerned with the relationships of these formal and spatial ideas to the practical
aspects of architecture, including program, site, and structure.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 29


Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 30
From the Internet

Cornell University

ARCH 101 Design I


Fall. 6 credits. Limited to department students.
An introduction to design as a conceptual discipline directed at the analysis, interpretation, synthesis, and
transformation of the physical environment. Exercises are aimed at developing an understanding of the issues, elements,
and processes of environmental design.

ARCH 110 Introduction To Architecture


Design Studio Summer. 3 credits. S-U option. Open to non architectural majors in college, high school students in 11th
and 12th grades, and any individuals with a minimum of a high school diploma interested in exploring the field of
architecture. Not offered every year.
A course designed to introduce students to ideas, principles, and methods of solving architectural problems in a studio
setting. Through a graduated sequence of exercises culminating in a major term project, students explore the
architectural concepts of space, form, function, and technology. Instruction is via highly personalized critiques of
individual student work by assigned department faculty as well as by periodic reviews of the group by invited faculty
and guest critics. The course grade is based on the overall performance in the studio with special emphasis on the
quality of a major studio project.

U of Michigan

Arch 201: Basic Drawing


Prerequisite: None
Fall and Winter (3 credit hrs.)
A freehand studio drawing course limited to pencil and pen, this introductory class concentrates upon seeing, describing
and analyzing form through linear graphic means. Though intended primarily for students considering a design related
career, it is open to students from any discipline wishing to improve their visual literacy. The first half of the course,
unbiased toward a particular art, focuses upon understanding the role of line in creating form. Principles of orthographic
and perspectival projection are introduced in the second half of the semester.

Arch 202: Graphic Communications


Prerequisite: None
Fall and Winter (3 credit hrs.)
This studio drawing course emphasizes mechanical drawing means and is intended primarily for students contemplating
careers in architecture and related professional fields. The student is introduced to a wide range of basic techniques,
conventions and means used in the design fields, as well as selection of drawing instruments and surfaces. Considerable
attention is given to the development of a disciplined approach to the construction of measured drawings.

Arch 212 (HA 212): Understanding Architecture


Prerequisite: None
Winter (3 credit hrs.)
This course examines visual, cultural, historical and philosophical aspects of the man-made environment using
examples from the field of architecture and the allied arts. The intent of the course is to provide a general view and a
rudimentary understanding of the profession and the discipline of architecture. Upon completion of the course, the
student is expected to demonstrate an understanding of the ideation context and the formal attributes of the built
environments of various eras. The format includes two weekly lectures, weekly discussion sections and several basic
design problems.

Arch 218: Visual Studies


Prerequisite: None
Fall and Winter (3 credit hrs.)
This studio course provides an introduction to the elements, principles and techniques that underlie and inform the
analysis, creation and evaluation of visual organizations and are crucial to the process and product of form-making. The
course consists of:
1. An overview of selected topics pertaining to the perception of visual organizations.
2. The study of visual organizations entailing point, linear, two- and three-dimensional elements or combinations
thereof.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 31


3. The study of color and its influence on visual organizations.
A variety of studio exercises are used to apply the knowledge and skills acquired throughout the term.

Arch 316: Design Fundamentals I


Prerequisite: Year 3 standing
Fall (3 credit hrs.)
This course introduces the beginning student in architecture to a working understanding of the factors and issues that
underlie the translation of human needs and purposes into significant architectural form. Course objectives are:
1. To establish a base of design concepts and knowledge with an introduction to references and ideas to foster
independent inquiry.
2. To develop skills in environmental analysis, concept formation and certain aspects of design.
3. To familiarize students with images of architecture and design drawn from various times and cultures.
Specific topics include the basic elements, attributes and organizational principles of architectural form and their
relationship to design intention. Related topics include framework for design, design methods, site analysis and design,
human factors and environmental factors.

Arch 326: Design Fundamentals II


Prerequisite: Arch 316
Winter (3 credit hrs.)
Through the examination of exemplary buildings, this course considers techniques and strategies of architectural design.
Lectures present analyses of individual buildings relating their form and conceptual ambitions to relevant theoretical
premises and historical contexts. The works examined range from the early part of the last century through the present
and trace the diverse trajectory of developments in twentieth century architecture. Lectures and readings examine
structuring principals of design including programmatic organization, material construction, formal syntax and type.
The course aims to reveal and make available to students design strategies found in historically significant and varied
examples of architecture while instilling a critical understanding of all these approaches.

Princeton University

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 32


ENDS 105 - 505: Design Foundations
The objective of this course is to promote the basic understanding and the development of prime design ideas. In
practical terms, the first part of the course will deal with a series of independent studies addressing formal values,
functional requirements, and materialization constraints. Despite its apparent fragmentation, these studies will allow us
to place our particular attention on the development of a visual vocabulary, the management of programmatic
requirements, and the conceptualization of material concerns, but always making reference to a global architectural
framework. The second part of the course will deal with a single subject of design in which the students are expected to
produce an architectural solution that addresses the synthesis of all three fundamental concerns. Special attention will be
placed on the solution of inter-relations among them; here the generation of the prime design "idea" will be highlighted
and will play a decisive role as point of departure and integrator of the different design decisions.

Ohio State University


202 INTRODUCTION TO BASIC DESIGN IN ARCHITECTURE U 5
An introduction to basic design problem solving; concepts of point, line, plane, and space organization; principles of
unity/variety, order, balance, proportion, scale, etc.; orthographic projection and axonometrics; pattern diagraming; and
basic design consequences of human activity.

Virginia polytechnic institute and state university

college of architecture and urban studies

ARCH 1015, 1016 - FOUNDATION DESIGN LABORATORY


Laboratory, lectures, and seminars in which students and faculty explore the
nature of problems with which architecture is concerned and experimentally develop design methods for the structuring
of concepts and forms
that respond to identified need. ARCH 1015 fulfills the University Core Curriculum Area VI, Creativity and Aesthetic
Experience, requirement.
(2H,12L,6C).

University of Arizona

School of Architecture CAPLA

ARC 101: Foundation Studio I


2000 Fall
DESCRIPTION
Visual, haptic and cognitive representation by means of: freehand drawing and material manipulation.
Prerequisites: None.
Teaching format: Five hours per week in studio groups and one fifty-minute lecture on theory and principles, one fifty-
minute period may be used for videos, field trips, or reviews.
To design is
to plan and organize,
to order, relate
and to control
In short it embraces
all means opposing
disorder and accidnet
---Josef Albers , Search vs. Research
Drawing is indispensable as a tool which connects design decisions with the physical world of contruction, and for this
reason it has always been considered the basis of architectural education. Drawing is, in fact, the discipline that
connects sight and knowledge. The act of seeing, since it allows us to enter into a knowledge of the world of things in
which we live, is the first and foremost means by which we come to possess these things. To take this one step further,
the connection between drawing and knowledge can be thought of as the natural extension of the relationship between
sight and the outside world. It can be said, then, that drawing is knowledge. Therefore, there exists no better
demonstration of our knowledge of the external world than the ability to draw it. Through drawing we strive to possess
the world that exists outside us, and to make it part of ourselves.
Rafael Moneo, Foreword to Hypnos
Fundamental to good design are precise, measurable skills that may be learned. To achieve great design, one must have
the ability to apply those skills in a way that is less easily measured or taught--"exactitude winged by intuition" (Klee).

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 33


In the two-semester Foundation Studio sequence, the courses will teach the skills and, perhaps more importantly, the
ways of thinking to apply them.
The focus of this first semester is on seeing. It will introduce a vocabulary of design by means of freehand drawing
techniques and compositional design exercises.
21 November 2000 19:15:40

ARC: 201: Design Studio I


2000 Fall
DESCRIPTION
Composition: making of space by elements in motion and experiments probing the nature of materials. Introduction of
spatial elements (line, plane, volume) and tectonic elements (material, arrangement, light).
Prerequisites: Professional phase admission.
Teaching format: Studio, 6 credits
I suggest that every person opens an interior trapdoor, that he negotiate a trip into the thickness of things, that he might
make an invasion on their characteristics, a revolution, a turning over process comparable to that accomplished by the
plough or spade when suddenly millions of particles of dead plants, bits of roots and straw, worms and tiny crawling
creatures, all hitherto buried in the earth, are exposed to the light of day for the first time.
Francis Ponge, A New Introduction to the Pebble
from Education of an Architect
Good architecture starts always with efficient construction. Without construction there is no architecture. Construction
embodies material and its use according to its properties, that is to say, stone imposes a different method of construction
from iron or concrete. I believe we can create contemporary architecture with all materials-with any material as long as
we use it correctly according to its properties. In areas where we can find nothing but stone, we shall build with that
stone, that is the local stone. We shall create contemporary architecture as we would have done with any other material
(iron, concrete, wood) which we would have found in another area, because the leading ideas are the spirit of
construction and the flexibility of our outlook and not the constructional whim foreign to the site.
The finite location; the climate, the topography and the materials available each area determine the constructional
method, the functional disposition, and finally the form. Architecture cannot exist without landscape, climate, soil, and
manners and customs.
Aris Konstantinidis, Architecture, 1964
from Studies in Tectonic Culture
25 August 2000 19:44:46
ARCH 201
1999 Projects
 Reading the Landscape
The goal of this project is to begin the process of seeing and reading the landscape as place; to form a spatial
(architectonic) vocabulary that both analyzes and synthesizes the world we exist within; to examine the landscape of the
everyday for its spatial, temporal, and material traits.
 Principles & Elements
The goal of this project is to introduce students to the use of principles and elements of design through compositional
assignments. A series of exercises from one line composition to a three dimensional four line composition expose
students to the analysis of the different components in a composition.
 Nine Square Analysis
Architecture, like other forms of design, is not born of arbitrary decisions. For this exercise, students were asked to
choose a project from a given list and perform an analysis of the building, coming to understand of its
ARCHITECTONICS and its SPATIAL EXPERIENCE.
 Sequence
This project requires students to extend the analysis recently completed in previous project to look at the entire body of
work done by the same Architect. The focus of the investigation will be the elements of spatial sequences, which help to
visually organize and define a path. The intent of this exercise is that the study of isolated elements of a sequence and
the ways in which they can be manipulated to create an emotional/aesthetic impact will enable students to create
imageable spatial sequences in their own design work.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 34


University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

School of Architecture and Urban Planning,

200 ARCHITECTURAL FUNDAMENTALS I. 5 CR. U.

INTRODUCTION TO HOLISTIC ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN


EMPHASIS ON ARCHITECTURAL DRAWING CONVENTIONS AND THE RELATIONSHIP AMONG FORM,
THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT, PEOPLE, AND USE. PREREQ: SOPH ST; COMBINED GPA OF 2.50 IN
ARCH 100(P) & 101(P), OR CONS DEAN

201 ARCHITECTURAL FUNDAMENTALS II. 5 CR. U.

DEVELOPMENT OF ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SKILLS


EMPHASIS ON PERSPECTIVE, SKETCHING, DIAGRAMMING, ANALYSIS OF BUILDINGS, AND
PREPARATION FOR DESIGN SYNTHESIS. PREREQ: SOPH ST & ARCH 200(P); OR CONS DEAN

University of Pennsylvania
Studios

201: Visualization I: Drawing and Design (A) [1 cu].


An introductory drawing and design studio exploring two-dimensional image-making as the foundation for visual
communication and representation. In projects employing observed and imagined subject matter, conventional media
and drawing techniques are used to investigate making and seeing.

202: Visualization II: Drawing and Communication (B) [1 cu].


Prerequisites: ARCH 201.
A continuing drawing and design studio exploring two-dimensional visual communication through advanced
composition and media technique. With an emphasis on individual intent and analysis, imagination and craft are
incorporated into projects investigating the relationship between culture and content, media and image, narrative and
object, and historical and contemporary issues of representation and design.

301: Design Fundamentals I: Perception (A) [2 cu].


Prerequisites: ARCH 201, ARCH 202. An introduction to principles of visual perception and the language of visual
form. Students explore the relationship between the two-dimensional images and their corresponding three-dimensional
interpretations in plan, section, elevation, axonometric, one-point perspective, and two-point perspective. Moving back
and forth between these dimensions leads to the development of a working design method.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 35


302: Design Fundamentals II: Structure and Metaphor (B) [2 cu]
Prerequisites: ARCH 201, ARCH 202, ARCH 301.
An introduction to two-and three-dimensional design. Students explore the relationship between form and meaning,
investigating the relationship between visual structure and metaphor, acquiring creative problem-solving skills in
abstract and concrete processes, developing a sense of material and craft, and learning to communicate verbally and
graphically.

Course Staff: Julia Wood, David 'Max' Phillips

The AA's one-year, full-time Foundation course provides the opportunity to question and to experiment with both
theory and practice in the study of spatial issues. Emphasis is also placed on the use of different means to transform
careful observation and research into fabrication. We will develop working processes that result not just in sketches,
plans and models, but also in the reality of built structures as urban interventions.
Although the Foundation course operates independently of the course leading to the AA Diploma, it draws on the
resources of General Studies, Technical Studies and Communications Studies. Using teaching methods which embrace
architecture, art and other spheres of design, the course is particularly flexible and able to incorporate a range of ideas.
This provides students from a variety of backgrounds with the opportunity to engage with the rich educational, cultural
and social life of both the AA and London at large, whilst also allowing for time to focus on personal development and
objectives.
The Foundation course is open to all self-motivated students with an interest in architecture. Some of the applicants who
join have already begun their studies in architecture, art or engineering; some have in mind a change of career; others
come with raw ambition, direct from school.
The course is based on four main projects, interspersed with shorter exercises, workshops and seminars that cover
specific issues and techniques (photography, video and film, measured drawing, movement, colour, print-making,
model-making, plaster-casting, 3-D construction and Photoshop). The course capacity is around twenty students and,
from the outset, the teaching focus is on the individual. Regular one-to-one tutorials with the teaching staff allow
students to discuss their responses to project work, their more general interests and other concerns. The reality of
creative teamwork is challenged through group discussions, collaborations and peer assessment. Foundation aims to
encourage the use of both home and shared studio working environments, thus allowing the development of formal,
organized techniques and analysis, whilst also recognizing the role of intuition and spontaneity.
Work is monitored throughout the year in workshop and project juries, whilst a formal review in the Spring Term
evaluates how well a student is engaging with the course. The final assessment of the work takes place at the end of the
year, with a portfolio review and exhibition. At this point a decision is taken regarding the best future course of study.
Many students will pass to the AA First Year, whilst others will move to other recognized architecture courses or to a
career in art and design.

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 36


Suggestions:
Field trip
Visual illusions
Group assignment: A Nomadic Shelter: The 21st century tent

Dr. Yasser Mahgoub - Architectural Design Basics- KU (2) 2003-2004 37

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