Title: Representations of sensory experiences in the early phases of architectural design: there is more than meets the eye
Authors: Catherine Elsen; Ann Heylighen
Addresses: Faculty of Applied Science, University of Liège, Chemin des chevreuils 1, 4000 Liège, Belgium ' Department of Architecture, Research[x]Design, Faculty of Engineering Science, KU Leuven, Kasteelpark Arenberg 1 box 2431, 3001 Leuven, Belgium
Abstract: In response to questions about designers' visual way of knowing and working, this article explores how sensory experience is conveyed during the early phases of architectural design. By processing 985 graphic components issued from a three-month ethnographic observation inside an architecture firm, and proposing an original methodology for their analysis, we identify and analyse graphic expressions of sensory-related design intentions. Multi-sensory dimensions of experiencing an architectural artefact, and the way architects deal with users experiencing space differently, are topics also considered in this article. The resulting observations remind us not to mistake apparent lack of graphical clues for lack of sensibility when it comes to addressing sensory experience during architectural design.
Keywords: architectural design; early design phases; conceptual design; perception; sensory experiences; representations; design research; ethnography.
Journal of Design Research, 2014 Vol.12 No.4, pp.239 - 259
Received: 01 Mar 2014
Accepted: 18 Apr 2014
Published online: 17 Dec 2014 *