preview

Vertical And Horizontal Axis Of The Roof Garden

Decent Essays

In these two images, you can clearly see there are vertical and horizontal axis intersecting one another: the walls and the large frame windows. The concrete walls, thin but rigid, have axis the run vertically and what it seem to be supporting is a thick slab of the same material, that run horizontally across the entire image. Furthermore, the windows seem to also repeat the ordering principle of axis with wood trims. The windows have axis, but they are more defined and they have coloration and a pattern that make the axis stand out better than the axis off the walls, which are a bit subtle and silent. The descending concrete stair case in this picture is part of the roof garden located in the back of the museum. Looking at it, it looks like any regular stair case that people use to get from one level to the next; that’s without apply the ordering principle of rhythm. However, once you apply this principle and analyze the way the stair is structure—it has rhythm in the design. It’s not just a stair that has evenly and equally distributed steps, there are wide and large steps with that symbolizes a pause with each dozen of steps. The same can be say for the descending terraces and the hand rails. In particular, the hand rail is not connect, which reinforces the rhythm in the stair case. Upon walking toward the wide open entrance, your eyes will be directed toward a grand and beautiful art work hanging from the concrete wall. The art work has rhythm, axis, symmetry, and

Get Access