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that architecture is realized using building materials as well as how a material expresses its properties and idiosyncrasies, allowing their characteristics or appeal to emerge. This is also demonstrated in the way material – in recent understanding of materiality – came to be considered as an active ingredient in the processes of making architecture as opposed to being confined within the context of the social and economic context for architecture.
132:'s notion of the "new window", which pertains to computer terminals and designates video as an architectural element, architecture assumes a dematerialized form, where dimensions are lost with the onset of aesthetic disappearance. The analogy is that "telematics replaces the doorway" and "pixel replaces the bolt". According to
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Materiality in architecture is not limited to theoretical positions on the perceived materiality of images, texts, or other objects of representation. It could denote the materiality of specific projects when considering the full range of materials used. It has also been described as the circumstance
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concerns in architectural design and are typically unique with each project. Specific discussions include how the materiality of architecture creates the process of flows that sustain social life. There are other modern interpretations such as the feminist framework introduced in
Jennifer Bloomer's
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to produce them. For some, distinguishing these two types of materials is relevant in the process of building because they have different characteristics and attributes. This is highlighted in the case of problems arising from reconciling the physicality of matter and the intangibility of digital
47:
Architectural systems are defined by its physical components called materials. These materials serve as the language that articulate architectural vision or that it serves to make architectural ideas tangible. Consciousness of materials is, therefore, considered a requirement for architects.
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The concept plays an important role in architectural practice, which is actualized through the body and senses of an architect interacting with his physical work environment. It defines critical aspects concerning the governance and engagement of an architectural system.
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is a concept or the applied use of various materials or substances in the medium of building. This concept was previously regarded as a secondary consideration in architecture but recently emerged as an important element due to advances in
136:, the virtual concept operated through a frame that serve as a portal to another world, rendering a characterization where materiality is located on one side of the frame and immateriality on the other.
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Recent conceptualizations of materiality cites an "immateriality" of contemporary architecture and this mainly based on the use of virtual material. This discourse draws from the
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philosophy, which describes virtual as "what every object carries with it" one that is neither its reality nor merely what it could have been but what it is imagined to be.
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Zarzycki, A. (2006). "Light, materiality and narrative: beyond form-making in architecture". SESSION, Boston, Massachusetts, Article No. 20
186:; Casella, Eleanor Conlin; Evans, Gillian; Knox, Hannah; McLean, Christine; Silva, Elizabeth B.; Thoburn, Nicholas; Woodward, Kath (2014).
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materials. On, the other hand, there are those who focus on integration where digital characteristics increasingly enrich materiality.
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Material is a relative term in architectural design and so may be used to designate materials which are considered to be
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Rübel, D., Wagner, M., Wolff, V. (2005). "Materialästhetik. Quellentexte zu Kunst, Design und
Architektur", Berlin
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96:
145:
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Medway, P. (1996). "Virtual and
Material Buildings: Construction and Constructivism in Architecture".
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Bringing the World Into
Culture: Comparative Methodologies in Architecture, Art, Design and Science
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The
Routledge Companion for Architecture Design and Practice: Established and Emerging Trends
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projects, which demonstrated metaphoric sites where imaginative narratives are explored.
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87:. Therefore, what separates a virtual material from a natural one is some aspect of the
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Bernardi, Joanne; Usai, Paolo
Cherchi; Williams, Tami; Yumibe, Joshua (2021).
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Discussions on the materiality of architecture are usually synonymous with
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printed on plastic are a good example of this. Observationally, therefore,
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Fundamental
Concepts of Architecture: The Vocabulary of Spatial Situations
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Feminist
Practices: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Women in Architecture
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Materiality and
Organizing: Social Interaction in a Technological World
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67:. Some materials may be considered as combinations of the two. Certain
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Leonardi, Paul M.; Nardi, Bonnie A.; Kallinikos, Jannis (2012).
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524:. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. p. 320.
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Hill, J. (2006). "Drawing Forth Immaterial Architecture".
471:. Asp / Vubpress / University Press Antwerp. p. 152.
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Crysler, C. Greig; Cairns, Stephen; Heynen, Hilde (2012).
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Pink, Sarah; Ardèvol, Elisenda; Lanzeni, Dèbora (2016).
291:
Material Design: Informing Architecture by Materiality
318:. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. p. 237.
240:. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 277.
344:Digital Materialities: Design and Anthropology
497:The Virtual Window: From Alberti to Microsoft
79:materials can be said not to exist without a
8:
346:. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 7.
316:The Digital Turn in Architecture 1992 - 2012
188:Objects and Materials: A Routledge Companion
499:. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 174.
394:The SAGE Handbook of Architectural Theory
446:. Farnham, UK: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
396:. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE. p. 96.
367:Janson, Alban; Tigges, Florian (2014).
293:. Basel: Walter de Gruyter. p. 8.
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63:or text) or other materials which are
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421:. London: Bloomsbury. p. 179.
261:Kanaani, Mitra; Kopec, Dak (2015).
371:. Basel: Birkhauser. p. 189.
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576:Architectural Research Quarterly
419:An Anthropology of Architecture
215:. Oxon: Routledge. pp. i.
211:Loschke, Sandra Karina (2016).
190:. Oxon: Routledge. p. 81.
578:, Cambridge University Press,
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557:The South Atlantic Quarterly
213:Materiality and Architecture
18:Materiality (disambiguation)
522:Provenance and Early Cinema
156:List of basic design topics
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289:Schröpfer, Thomas (2012).
161:List of building materials
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606:Architectural terminology
495:Friedberg, Anne (2009).
467:Lombaerde, Piet (2010).
95:as well as a process of
43:Material and materiality
442:Brown, Lori A. (2013).
417:Buchli, Victor (2013).
146:Herzog & de Meuron
71:which are composed of
545:Written Communication
314:Carpo, Mario (2013).
35:and digital science.
16:For other uses, see
265:. Oxon: Routledge.
33:digital fabrication
601:Building materials
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378:978-3-0346-0892-3
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325:978-1-118-42591-6
300:978-3-0346-0035-4
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595:Categories
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109:structural
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126:Deleuzian
113:aesthetic
85:substrate
83:physical
140:See also
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69:veneers
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