ARCHITECTURAL
DESIGN PROCESS
Design in the
context of
Architecture: the
activity of
generating proposals
that change
something that
already exists into
something that is
better.
ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN
Design in the
context of
Architecture: the
activity of
generating proposals
that change
something that
already exists into
something that is
better.
Initial
State
Transformation
ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN
Imagined
Future State
Initiation: Problem
identification
DESIGN
STAGES
Preparation: Collection and
analysis of information
Proposal-making: synthesis,
bringing together a variety of
considerations
Evaluation: Based on goals
Iteration: Cycles, Feedback
DESIGN PROCESS
ARCHITECTURAL
PROGRAMMING
The process of managing information
so that the right kind of information is
available at the right stage of the design
process and the best possible
decisions can be made in shaping the
outcome of the building designs.
The process that creates the structure
for fulfilling the dreams, hopes,
wishes and desires of the buildings
future inhabitants.
DESIGN PROCESS
ARCHITECTURAL
PROGRAMMING
The orderly definition of the
architectural problem and the
articulation of project requirements in a
manner that promotes the creation of a
responsible solution for the design of
the building.
The problem-seeking phase of the
design process.
The gathering, organizing,
analyzing, interpreting and
presenting of the information
relevant to a design project.
DESIGN PROCESS
ARCHITECTURAL
PROGRAMMING
Two main
concern:
areas
of
Analysis of the existing state
Projection of what the future
state should be
DESIGN PROCESS
Existing
ExistingState
State
THE PROGRAM
DOCUMENT
The
TheSetting
Setting
Cultural,
Cultural,Social,
Social,Political,
Political,
Historical,
Historical,Economic
Economic
Physical
PhysicalConditions/
Conditions/Site
Site
Data
Data
Geography,
Geography,Climate,
Climate,
Archaeology,
Archaeology,Geology
Geology
Client/User
Client/UserProfile
Profile
Demography,
Demography,
Organizations,
Organizations,Needs,
Needs,
Behavior
Behavior
Constraints
Constraints
Legal,
Legal,Financial,
Financial,Technical,
Technical,
Market
Market
DESIGN PROCESS
Future
FutureState
State
Mission
Mission
Goals
Goals
Performance
Performance
Requirements
Requirements
Concepts
Concepts
Issue
PARTS OF AN
ISSUE-BASED
PROGRAM
Fact
Values
Goals
Performance Requirement
Concept
DESIGN PROCESS
PARTS OF AN
ISSUE-BASED
PROGRAM
DESIGN PROCESS
PARTS OF AN
ISSUE-BASED
PROGRAM
ISSUE
- any matter, concern,
question, topic, proportion or
situation that demands a design in
order for a building project to be
successful for its clients and users.
DESIGN PROCESS
PARTS OF AN
ISSUE-BASED
PROGRAM
DESIGN PROCESS
PARTS OF AN
ISSUE-BASED
PROGRAM
FACT
are objective,
specific and verifiable by some
measurement or observation.
Their existence is not subject to
judgment but their use and
interpretation is based on values.
DESIGN PROCESS
VALUES:
PARTS OF AN
ISSUE-BASED
PROGRAM
different building
types require different design
responses for the same issues
based upon the values of different
users and the needs of different
activities.
Design issues, when processed
through the filter of values of the
client, user and designer yield goal
statements about qualities the
design must have.
DESIGN PROCESS
TOPIC OF
INQUIRY
PARTS OF AN
ISSUE-BASED
PROGRAM
INTERDISCIPLINARY
SCREEN
.Interpretive-Historical
Research
.Qualitative Research
.Correlational Research
.Experimental Research
.Simulation Research
.Logical Argumentation
.Case-study/ Mixed methods
DESIGN PROCESS
RESEARCHER/
DESIGNER
Goal: a statement of intention; an
PARTS OF AN
ISSUE-BASED
PROGRAM
end that one strives to attain or
that toward which effort or play is
directed; an action statement
Project Goal - goals that relate
only to the outcome of the
project; these are based upon the
underlying values of the designer,
clients and users.
Mission Statements- the overall
purpose; a statement that concisely
explains the need to undertake a
project in the first place.
DESIGN PROCESS
Performance
PARTS OF AN
ISSUE-BASED
PROGRAM
Requirement
a statement about the measurable
level of function that a designed
object, building, or place must provide
for a good to be met; performance
specification standard or criterion.
This statement is more specific than a
goal since it relates to function ( a
doing) instead of a quality (a being);
must be general enough to allow for
multiple, alternative physical solutions
or concepts
DESIGN PROCESS
CONCEPT PARTS OF AN
ISSUE-BASED
PROGRAM
a statement
of an ideal set of relationships
among several of the elements
under an architects control such
as form (dimension and direction)
material, texture, color (value,
intensity) and adjacency.
A concept statement is made up
of a single diagram and a few
words.
DESIGN PROCESS
CHECKLIST
OF ISSUES
Audibility- the acoustic properties of an
environment that contribute to ones
ability to hear what needs to be heard and
to mask unwanted sounds
Behavioral Settings- the units for
describing the interdependencies of
activity and physical settings
Circulation- movement or flow of
people, objects, information or
substances
DESIGN PROCESS
CHECKLIST
OF ISSUES
Comfort - providing ease and
enjoyment
Convenience - ease of access to places,
materials and information
Durability - ability to endure the designed
use over time
DESIGN PROCESS
FACTS
SITE
Cultural
Demographic
Economic
Ethical
Political
Climate
Air Quality
Geography
Hydrology
Geology
Topography
Vegetation
Facilities
Social
Utilities
CONTEXT
Access
Visual
Resources
Codes
DESIGN PROCESS
USERS
Activities
Age Group
Anthropometrics
Organizations
Disabilities
Perceptual Abilities
Personalities
Roles
Values
Rules
Mission Statement :
MISSION AND
GOALS
To
create
a
residential environment that blends easily into a
variety of urban settings, and at the same time
provides space and support features required
by severely retarded/disabled adults.
Goal 1 (issue: social interaction/learning)
The meal preparation/dining areas should
promote active participation by the residents
and facilitate the learning of daily living skills.
Goal 2 (issue: territory)
Bedroom should promote a sense of ownership
and responsibility for the residents.
DESIGN PROCESS
PERFORMANCE
REQUIREMENT
Goal 1: The major portion of parking for the
downtown core should be a short pleasant walk
from most shopping destinations.
PR1:
Shoppers coming to downtown should
have to walk less than five minutes to get from
their car to 90% of their destination.
PR2:
Major pedestrian corridors between
parking and downtown stores should be visually
interesting and substantially protected from rain
and the afternoon sun.
PR3:
Major paths should create impulse
shopping and window shopping opportunities.
DESIGN PROCESS
THE REQUIRED
STATE
PROGRAM
PRESENT
STATE
The
environment
without the
project
REQUIRED
STATE
THE
DESIGN
PROCESS
DESIGN PROCESS
The
environment
with the
project
The Design Philosophy and
Overall Concepts
THE REQUIRED
STATE
PROGRAM
The Concept Breakdown
The Translation Guidelines
The Synthesis
DESIGN PROCESS
THE DESIGN
PHILOSOPHY
a statement of the beliefs, values
or viewpoints from which the
development of design solutions
take off. They are often formed
out of universally held principles,
and thus become bases for socially
desirable design objectives.
DESIGN PROCESS
OVERALL
DESIGN
CONCEPT
An initial generalized idea
A germination which is to be expanded
and developed later in some detail
A perception about form or relationships
among variables resulting from an analysis
of the problem
A mental image deriving from the project
situation
Rudimentary set of tactics for
proceeding with design
First ideas about building morphology
DESIGN PROCESS
CONCEPT
BREAKDOWN
This consists of sub-concepts that
correspond to particular areas of
architectural concerns.
An overall concept can be broken
down into sub-concepts falling
under one or more categories.
The mix varies depending on the
research problem.
DESIGN PROCESS
CONCEPT
BREAKDOWN
DESIGN PROCESS
CONCEPT
BREAKDOWN
DESIGN PROCESS
CONCEPT
BREAKDOWN
DESIGN PROCESS
These are specific design guidelines
formulated out of the sub-concepts.
TRANSLATION
GUIDELINES
They may be the refined versions of
the chosen sub-concept or could also
be the product of the consolidation of
two or more sub-concepts.
The guidelines prescribe performance
and quality standards that are based on
the design parameters derived out of
the performance requirements.
DESIGN PROCESS
TRANSLATION
GUIDELINES
Social and Academic Interaction
Goal : The facility should promote spontaneous social interaction
among students of all years and departments, faculty and
administrators to allow frequent exchange of information
TRANSLATION GUIDELINES:
-There will be two entrances to the building and these shall be spaced twenty meters
apart.
-The corridors shall not be less than 1.5 meters in width.
DESIGN PROCESS
-All studio doors shall open to common spaces such as lobbies and corridors.
-Doors shall not be less than 2.1 meters in width.
TRANSLATION
GUIDELINES
TRANSLATION GUIDELINES:
-There will be five (5) student organization kiosks, each of which will have a floor area of
at least ten (10) square meters.
-Student organization spaces shall be located in the two (2) minor lobbies adjacent to the
stairs.
-There shall be provided two (2) home labs for every three (3) hot labs.
DESIGN PROCESS
-Each wing shall have a mix of two (2) studios and two (2) faculty offices.
TRANSLATION
GUIDELINES
TRANSLATION GUIDELINES:
The main lobby from where the four corridors would branch out shall be irregularly shaped
such that no two corners would have the same configuration.
The main lobby shall have be 0.40 meters lower than the minor lobbies. The rooms shall be
0.20 higher than the lobby.
Rooms 201 , 203 and 204 will have movable partitions. This will allow the use of these three
(3) adjoining rooms as one big hall during special occasions.
Three hundred (300) square meters at the northeast corner will be dedicated for travelling
exhibits.
DESIGN PROCESS