design+and+building+process

Dieter Rams [] [] [] []

Design and Theory Principles
[] PFBE practices through teaching six major principles about sustainable urbanism. [|[1]] They are as follows: = = = = = The Fibonacci Sequence / Golden ratio = [] [] []
 * 1) Engender Social Interaction
 * 2) Make Places
 * 3) Allow Movement Logically and Legibly
 * 4) Sustain Land Value
 * 5) Design Using Natural Harmonics
 * 6) Build Beautifully

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Wabi-sabi
"Wabi-sabi is the most conspicuous and characteristic feature of traditional Japanese beauty and it occupies roughly the same position in the Japanese [|pantheon] of aesthetic values as do the [|Greek] ideals of [|beauty] and perfection in the West." [|[1]] "if an object or expression can bring about, within us, a sense of serene melancholy and a spiritual longing, then that object could be said to be wabi-sabi." [|[2]] "[Wabi-sabi] nurtures all that is authentic by acknowledging three simple realities: nothing lasts, nothing is finished, and nothing is perfect." [|[3]]

Characteristics of the wabi-sabi aesthetic include [|asymmetry], [|asperity] (roughness or irregularity), simplicity, economy, austerity, modesty, intimacy and appreciation of the ingenuous integrity of natural objects and processes.

Cultivate Your Wabi-Sabi Sensibility in 10 Easy Steps "Change Your Vision" Five easy steps to awakening your wabi-sabi mind. Excerpted from by Robyn Griggs Lawrence. Clarkson Potter/Publishers. © 2004.
 * 1) ** Quiet your home **. Most of us contend with a daily onslaught of motors and machines ‑- not to mention the human noise generated by the Loud Family next door. You can bring nourishing quiet into your home through structural changes such as better windows and cork floors or with smaller fixes such as heavy window draperies and rubber mats for your kitchen appliances. Even better, leave the dishwasher turned off and wash the dishes by hand. This quiet task can be a meditation in itself.
 * 2) ** Give yourself sacred space **. Don't deny yourself the luxury of a dedicated meditation room or space. If you don't have an extra room for this, find a special rug that you can unroll in a corner to designate the space.
 * 3) ** Clear the clutter **. Start slowly, uncluttering your house one drawer or closet at a time. Keep clutter from overwhelming you by spending 15 minutes at the end of the day clearing away all that's accumulated. Get rid of one item for everything you bring in. And create plenty of storage ‑- built-in storage is ideal ‑- to keep it all contained.
 * 4) ** Appreciate imperfection **. Don't throw out that much-loved but chipped vase, the old wooden coffee table that bears the scars of toddlers and adults alike, or that old tarnished goblet. Begin your wabi-sabi journey by letting the paint on an old chair crumble or by hanging antique doors. Be wary of counterfeits: True wabi-sabi eschews mass-produced distress for real antiques and flea market finds. Also be wary of taking the "wabi-slobby" approach and entering into überdistress ‑- wabi-sabi is never messy or slovenly. Worn things take on their magic only in settings where it's clear they don't harbor bugs or grime.
 * 5) ** Take inspiration from nature's color palette **. Borrow colors from the autumnal landscape ‑- hues ranging from soft slate gray to matte gold, with occasional spots of rust breaking the subtle spectrum ‑- for a serene, wabi-sabi look. Take a long walk in March or November, and let nature inspire you.
 * 6) ** Make it yourself **. Nothing compares to the satisfaction of curling up with an afghan you made yourself. But perhaps more importantly, there's the calming, centering act of setting stitch upon stitch, slowly building something that no machine could make better. You say you're just not crafty? Anyone can make collages (using magazine and newspaper clippings, flowers and leaves, wrapping paper), dry flowers (just hang them upside down in a closet) or create an indoor rock garden (it only takes a few).
 * 7) ** Bring nature indoors ‑- no matter what the season **. Open yourself up to a whole new world of flower-arranging prospects. Pick a few stems of the chicory growing between the sidewalk cracks and let them settle into an old bottle or a rusty can. In winter, gather a basket full of dried grasses and seedpods. Wabi-sabi flower arrangements follow no rules or regulations ‑- except for one. They should honor the current season.
 * 8) ** Bring in pieces of soul **. What gives a home soul? A sepia-tone photograph of your grandmother as a young bride. Linens your mother embroidered. Your five-year-old's artwork. Getting the picture?
 * 9) ** Study the masters **. William Morris, Frank Lloyd Wright and Charles and Ray Eames all came under the wabi-sabi influence ‑- whether they knew it or not.
 * 10) ** Try the candle trick **. So, you come home at the end of a long day and the dog's been on the sofa again and the breakfast bowls are still full of dried oatmeal, and the entry hall // still // needs a coat of paint. Turn out the lights and light some candles. Nothing looks quite so bad when the atmosphere is dim and flickering.
 * 1) Give yourself five minutes of quiet time each day. If you like it, work up to 20. Slowly.
 * 2) Visit a flea market or junk shop. Don't buy anything. Just walk around and note what really appeals to you. (Okay, if you see something you // must // have, go ahead and take it home.)
 * 3) Take a daily or weekly walk outdoors. Keep a mental or actual log of seasonal changes (color, light and nature's mood) that you see.
 * 4) Make something -- anything: a painting, a paint-your-own pottery piece, a driftwood picture frame. Place it in your home where you'll see it often. Admire it. No matter what it looks like.
 * 5) Place one flower, branch or stem you've found outside your door (no matter what the season) in a place where you'll see it every day: your desk, your bedside table, next to the refrigerator. When it catches your eye, stop for a second or two and admire its singular beauty.

Vastu shastra
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Vastu shastra prescribes desirable characteristics for sites and buildings based on flow of energy ( [|prana] in [|Sanskrit] ). Many of the rules are attributed to cosmological considerations - the sun's path, the rotation of the earth, magnetic field, etc. The morning sun is considered especially beneficial and purifying and hence the east is a treasured direction. The body is considered a magnet with the head, the heaviest and most important part, being considered the [|North Pole] and the feet the [|South pole]. Hence sleeping with one's head directed north is believed to cause a repulsive force with the Earth's magnetic north and thus considered harmful. Bedrooms are therefore designed keeping this in mind. This is a wide spread practice in [|India] even today. Energy is primarily considered as emanating from the northeast corner and many site and building characteristics are derived from this. Sites sloping down towards north or east from higher levels of south and west are considered good. Open spaces in site and openings in the building are to be more in the north and east than in the south and the west. No obstacles are to be present in the north and the east. Levels and height of buildings are to be higher in the south and west when compared to the north and east. The southwest corner is to be the highest, followed by southeast, then by northwest and finally by northeast. The triangle formed by joining the southwest, southeast and the northwest corner of the site is attributed to the moon and the triangle formed by joining the northeast, northwest and southeast corner of the site is attributed to the sun. The former are prescribed to be heavier and higher and the latter light and lower. Sites having a longer east-west axis are considered better. The diagonal connecting southwest and northeast is to be longer than the diagonal connecting southeast and northwest. An extended northeast corner is considered beneficial.