Reading 1. from: Zevi, Bruno. Architecture as Space; How to Look at Architecture. New York: Horizon, 1957. Pages 22-23.
Reading 2. from: Zevi, Bruno. Architecture as Space; How to Look at Architecture. New York: Horizon, 1957. (continuation from pages 23).
Reading 2. from: Zevi, Bruno. Architecture as Space; How to Look at Architecture. New York: Horizon, 1957. Page 23.
Reading 3. from: Zevi, Bruno. Architecture as Space; How to Look at Architecture. New York: Horizon, 1957. Pages 24-5.
Reading 4. from: Ching, Francis, D.K. Architecture: Form, Space & Order. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley & SonsHorizon, 2007. Page 195.
The following images described some of the ways that architecture is organized. Be prepared to name all 5.
Reading 5: Read the following from Frederick, Matthew. 101 Things I Learned in Architecture School. Cambridge, MA: MIT, 2007. p. 68.
Reading 6: Read the following from Pye, David. The Nature of Design. New York: Reinhold Pub., 1964. pp. 90-91.
Reading 7. from: Zevi, Bruno. Architecture as Space; How to Look at Architecture. New York: Horizon, 1957. pp. 29 & 30.
View of Piazza Navona, Rome, Italy, by Hendrik Franz van Lint. c. 1730.
Reading 8. from: Jackson, Iain. The Architecture School Survival Guide. London: Lawrence King Publishing Ltd, 2015. pp. 128 & 129.
Reading 9: Read the following from Frederick, Matthew. 101 Things I Learned in Architecture School. Cambridge, MA: MIT, 2007. pp. 6-7.
Reading 10: Read the following from Programs and Manifestoes on 20th-Century Architecture. Cambridge, MA: MIT, 1990. p. 25.
Try to answer the question, "What did Frank Lloyd Wright mean by 'Organic Architecture' "?
Reading 11: From Ching, Francis D. K., and James Eckler. Introduction to Architecture. p. 80.
Reading 12: From Tanizaki, Junichirô. In Praise of Shadows. (New Haven, Conn.): Leete's Island, 1977. pp 17-18.
Reading 13: From Tanizaki, Junichirô. In Praise of Shadows. (New Haven, Conn.): Leete's Island, 1977. pp 18-19.
Reading 14. from: Zevi, Bruno. Architecture as Space; How to Look at Architecture. New York: Horizon, 1957. Page 48.
Reading 15: From Moore, Charles Willard, Gerald Allen, and Donlyn Lyndon. The Place of Houses. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1974. Quote appears in Architecture: Form, Space and Order, p. 117.
Reading 16: From Bloomer, Kent C., and Charles Willard Moore. Body, Memory, and Architecture. New Haven: Yale UP, 1977. Quote appears in Architecture: Form, Space and Order, p. 211.
Reading 17. from: Jackson, Iain. The Architecture School Survival Guide. London: Lawrence King Publishing Ltd, 2015. pp. 98-9.
Note: An Axonometric is another name for a paraline or parallel Projection Drawing.
Reading 18. from: Blumberg, Naomi. "Linear Perspective." Encyclopedia Britannica Online. Encyclopedia Britannica, 17 Mar. 2016. Web. 24 Oct. 2016.
Read up to the section titled "Learning More" on Linear Perspective.
Reading 19: Read the following from Frederick, Matthew. 101 Things I Learned in Architecture School. Cambridge, MA: MIT, 2007. p. 70.
Reading 20: Frascari, Marco. Eleven Exercises in the Art of Architectural Drawing: Slow Food for the Architect's Imagination. London: Routledge, 2011. p. 85.
Palazzo Rucellia
Reading 21: from Botton, Alain De. The Architecture of Happiness. New York: Pantheon, 2006. pp 180-2.
Carl Frederik Adelcrantz, Sturehof Estate, near Stockholm, 1781
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