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<title>Departmental Papers (Architecture)</title>
<copyright>Copyright (c) 2013 University of Pennsylvania All rights reserved.</copyright>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers</link>
<description>Recent documents in Departmental Papers (Architecture)</description>
<language>en-us</language>
<lastBuildDate>Wed, 23 Jan 2013 17:55:55 PST</lastBuildDate>
<ttl>3600</ttl>








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<title>Dynamic Indices of Building Thermal Performance</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/28</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 10:54:20 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Frequency transform and finite difference techniques are applied to a simple network developed using the equivalent thermal parameter (ETP) methodology. Subsequently a set of normalized parameter groups derived from the systems equations and solutions are discussed as indices of building thermal performance.</p>

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<author>William Braham</author>


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<title>Eyes That Do Not See? The Practice of Sustainable Architecture</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/27</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 10:48:53 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Under New York law, roof-top water towers are invisible. The terms of the code are not vague; the silhouette of a water tower and the shadow it casts are transparent to the zoning envelope and the sky-exposure plane. This is not, of course, truly mysterious; it results from the neglect of a small effect in the guarantee of sufficient light at street level. But water towers are invisible in quite another sense and this raises useful questions about architecture.</p>

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<author>William Braham</author>


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<title>The Candle at the Table: Work, Waste, and Leisure in the Modern Home</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/26</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 10:45:37 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>We still light candles when we sit down to particular kinds of meals, whether those are ritual meals like thanksgiving, or intimate occasions, or even at expensive restaurants. The candle is an outmoded technological device. Its continued use offers a remnant of previous habits and a kind of resistance to the conditions of modern life.</p>

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<author>William Braham</author>


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<title>The Persistence of the Open Flame: Work and Waste in the Healthy, Modern Home</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/25</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 10:39:25 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>We still maintain open flames in our homes despite the development of cleaner, cheaper, and more efficient devices that can provide the same heat or light, often with greater comfort and control. My attention was drawn to this condition by Wolfgang Schivelbush's thoughtful book on the industrialization of light in the nineteenth century, which recounted the rejection of gas and then electric lighting in the living rooms of bourgeois and upper-class houses in Europe. A similar condition exists in America and, for example, we still light candles when we sit down to particular kinds of meals, whether those are ritual meals like thanksgiving and the Passover Seder, or intimate occasions, or even expensive restaurants.</p>

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<author>William Braham</author>


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<title>After Typology: The Suffering of Diagrams</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/24</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 10:35:11 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Architects produce diagrams, not buildings, but diagrams that are wholly immanent, wholly embedded and coextensive with the materials, configurations, and forms of buildings. Theories of representation and expression have tended to privilege the concept over the building, treating the artifact as a site of interpretation, a mere extension of the process of its production. But if such concepts could be adequately expressed or understood separately from their manifestations, then the buildings themselves would be unnecessary. Architectural concepts only exist fully in their realization, as discoveries through the non-linear process called design. That condition of immanence inspires the recurring attention to method and process in the architectural discourse and equally the frustration with the embedded quality of the theorizing that it reveals.</p>

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<author>William Braham</author>


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<title>Emergence-cy! Notes on the Flow of Information in Architecture</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/23</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 10:28:30 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>For architecture, the critical tool of the information age has been neither the telephone, the computer, nor even the network, but the constantly expanding Sweet's Catalog and the whole messy system of distributing information about building materials, products, and processes. Sweet's originated in the 1890s as a service of <em>F.W. Dodge Construction</em> (who also began publishing the <em>Architectural Record</em> at the same time).</p>

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<author>William Braham</author>


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<title>Do Houses Evolve? Neo-biology at House_n</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/22</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 10:23:19 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Do houses evolve? The intuitive answer would have to be yes. The general assessment that houses are better apparently supports that conclusion, as does the fact that those improvements occurred incrementally over the last century or so with the steady introduction and refinement of indoor plumbing, central heating, refrigeration, air conditioning, electric lighting. Despite a certain resistance to the conditions of rapid change, best characterized in architecture by historic preservation, belief in evolutionary development is now so very widely accepted that the collective attention of designers has shifted to the process of adaptation itself, to anticipating and providing for the next technique, device, or development.</p>

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<author>William Braham</author>


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<title>Biotechniques: Form Follows Flow?</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/21</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 10:19:05 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>This paper examines the eco-systems model that underlies the LEED Green Building Rating System, comparing it to a number of other contemporary manifestations of the same model. As attendants at Greenbuild know well, the rating system offers credit for a number of well-recognized strategies that improve resource efficiency and indoor quality. Those strategies are based on an ecological model of the building and its occupants, which views them as agents in a dynamically interconnected system of flows and exchanges. between humans, their technological activities, and the biosphere. Or, in Sim van der Ryn's apt motto of ecological design: "form follows flow." (van der Ryn 2003)</p>

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<author>William Braham</author>


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<title>Active Glass Walls: A Typological and Historical Account</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/20</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 15 Aug 2008 10:15:33 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>This paper provides a summary analysis of the typological and historical development of active glass walls. From the beginning of the glass revolution, the fascination with large areas of transparency has been tempered by the negative environmental effects they can produce: excessive heat loss when it is cold, excessive heat gain when the sun shines, and even excessive daylighting.</p>

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<author>William Braham</author>


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<title>Correalism and Equipoise: Observations on the Sustainable</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/10</link>
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<pubDate>Thu, 17 Apr 2008 10:01:43 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Modern environmentalism originates with the recognition of ecological connectivity and the negative effects of technological intervention. This paper examines critical concepts developed by the architect Frederick Kiesler and the critic-historian Siegfried Giedion for their relevance to that discourse. Kiesler’s principle of Correalism and Gieidon’s appeal for Equipoise offer both a prehistory to the current mandates about sustainability and cautions about its limitations. The sustainable is ultimately a social condition that cannot be applied therapeutically nor ever wholly institutionalized.</p>

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<author>William Braham</author>


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<title>Walter Benjamin and the Tectonic Unconscious: Using Architecture as an Optical Instrument</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/9</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 14 Sep 2007 11:40:07 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>The writings of Walter Benjamin include appropriations and transformations of modernist architectural history and theory that offer an opportunity to broaden the interpretation of how the relationship between the 'unconscious' and technologically aided 'optics' is figured in his commentaries on cultural modernity. This essay focuses on three moments in his writings, each of which touches on this topic in a different way: first, on Benjamin's reading of Carl Bötticher's theory of architectural tectonics as a theory of history in which the unconscious serves as a generative and productive source that challenges the existing matrix of representation; secondly, on Benjamin's transformation of Sigfried Giedion's presentation of iron structures into optical instruments for glimpsing a space interwoven with unconsciousness, a new world of space the image of which had seemingly been captured by photography; and thirdly, on Benjamin's suggestion that the mimetic faculty continues to play within representation, history and technology to produce similarities between the human and the non-human. In each instance, Benjamin reworked the dynamic dualism of nineteenth-century architectural tectonics - (self)representation seeking reconciliation with alterity - into a dialectic. In so doing, he set the cause of revolution (of a modernity yet to come) against metaphysical and utopian claims, progressive and regressive alike.</p>

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<author>Detlef Mertins</author>


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<title>The Modernity of Zaha Hadid</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/8</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/8</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 12 Sep 2007 13:10:17 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>During the heyday of postmodernism in the 1980s, as architects turned to historical styles, urban traditions, and popular culture to rebuild the public support that modernism had lost, Zaha Hadid declared that modernity was an incomplete project that deserved to be continued. This was an inspiring message and its bold vision was matched by projects such as the competition-winning design for The Peak in Hong Kong (1982-1983). Hadid's luminous paintings depicted the city and the hillside above it as a prismatic field in which buildings and landform were amalgamated into the same geological formation of shifting lines, vibrant planes, and shimmering colors, at once tangible and intangible, infused with the transformative energy that Cubist, Futurist, and Expressionist landscapes had sought to capture.</p>

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<author>Detlef Mertins</author>


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<title>Where Architecture Meets Biology: An Interview with Detlef Mertins</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/7</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/7</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 12 Sep 2007 12:44:35 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>I began doing research on Mies van der Rohe in the early nineties, after Fritz Neumeyer had published his book <em>The Artless World</em>, (1994). Neumeyer foregrounds Mies' library, the books that Mies read. He was also the first to collect all the things that Mies himself wrote. One of the things that I found very surprising was that Mies was a reader of science, and especially of biology in the 1920s. He had a collection of about 40 books by the botanist Raoul Francé, the author of Der Sanze als Erfinder ("The Plant as Inventor," 1920). This was surprising, for I had always thought of modernism as an architecture of technology rather than an architecture that was imbued with organic aspirations and ethos. One thought of organic architecture more in terms of biomorphic form; in the German context, one thought of Hugo Häring, but not the straight-up-and-down, orthogonal architecture that Mies developed, or his expression of structure.</p>

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<author>Detlef Mertins</author>


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<title>Design in the World: An Interview with Detlef Mertins</title>
<link>http://repository.upenn.edu/arch_papers/6</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jul 2007 11:28:38 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>Geoff Manaugh, editor of <i>BldgBlog</i> , interviews Detlef Mertins, Professor and Chair of the Architecture Department at the University of Pennsylvania for the website <i>Archinect</i> . The interview covers a range of subjects concerning architecture and education today, including the nature of contemporary experimental design, the role of digital media, formats of commercial development, issues of ecological design, and architecture's social and political responsibilities.</p>

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<author>Geoff Manaugh et al.</author>


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