AbstractsGeography &GIS

An Architectural Investigation of the Haptic Sense: A Material Exploration of the Balance Between Building, Body, and Landscape.

by Jared Lee Martinson




Institution: Virginia Tech
Department: Architecture
Degree: M. Arch.
Year: 2011
Keywords: Sense; Building; Body; Landscape; Haptic
Record ID: 1892053
Full text PDF: http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07172011-175309/


Abstract

Missing from much of civic/public spaces today is the potential choreography between body, imagination, and the built environment. This is often a result of a diminished sensation between ourselves and the coupling of constructed and natural spaces. It is precisely this miscommunication which led to an exploration of the haptic sense and a material investigation of the choreography between our bodies, our buildings, and our landscape. In order to create a memorable space or in the case of this exercise, create place from path, a conservation of the spirit of the players/pieces is necessary. The experience of being in a place occurs in time, is much more than visual, and is as complex as our bodies and as immense as our imaginations. The movement of our bodies traversing a built environment gives value to the spaces we inhabit. Through the investigation of a little league baseball park along the Potomac River in Alexandria, Virgina, a series of haptic patterns with distinct pauses and progressions in which the body and mind responds to the situation presented is created.