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The Five Points of a New Architecture in Earthquake Zones Global Earthquake Model Caribbean Regional Panelist Robert V. Woodstock Programme Workshop Trinidad and Tobago, 2011 May 02-04 Configuration


  1. The Five Points 
 of a New Architecture 
 …in Earthquake Zones � � � Global Earthquake Model � Caribbean Regional � Panelist – Robert V. Woodstock � Programme Workshop � Trinidad and Tobago, 2011 May 02-04 �

  2. Configuration � The most important architectural d e c i s i o n s t h a t a ff e c t s e i s m i c performance are the critical decisions that create the building ʼ s configuration i.e. its size and shape. � � Simple symmetrical plans and forms are r e c o m m e n d e d o v e r c o m p l e x asymmetrical ones. � � “ A square plan provides for a near perfectly balanced system” � - Christopher Arnold, “Seismic Issues in Architectural Design, Designing for Earthquakes, A Manual for Architects” � �

  3. Influences on Seismic 
 Performance � • Scale � • Horizontal size � • Proportion � • Symmetry � • Distribution and Concentration � • Structural Plan Density � • Corners � • Perimeter Resistance � • Redundancy � � -­‑ ¡Christopher ¡Arnold ¡and ¡Robert ¡Reitherman � “Building ¡Configura3on ¡& ¡Seismic ¡Design” � Redrawn ¡from ¡Building ¡Configura3on ¡& ¡Seismic ¡Design, ¡Christopher ¡Arnold ¡and ¡Robert ¡Reitherman ¡

  4. Seismically desirable building attributes: � • Continuous load path � • Low height to base ratio � • Equal floor heights � • Symmetrical plan shape � • Identical resistance on both axes � • Identical vertical resistance � • Uniform section and elevation � • Seismic resistance elements at perimeter � • Short spans � • No cantilevers � • No openings in diaphragms (floors � and roof) �

  5. Historical Precedents: � The Parthenon � ������������������ � � �� �� �� � Golden ¡Sec3on/Eleva3on ¡redrawn ¡from ¡“Architecture:Form.Space ¡& ¡Order” ¡– ¡Francis ¡Ching ¡ Photo ¡credit: ¡Google ¡

  6. Historical Precedents: � • The Pantheon � � Plan ¡redrawn ¡from ¡“Architecture:Form.Space ¡& ¡Order” ¡– ¡Francis ¡Ching ¡ Photo ¡credit: ¡David ¡Mixer.com ¡

  7. The Domino System 1914-15 � The Domino skeleton consisted of six thin concrete columns that simply carried two horizontal slabs as the floors and another as the roof. The columns a n d s l a b s w e r e c o n n e c t e d b y a staircase. Apart from this nothing else was fixed, thus permitting a great flexibility. � Redrawn ¡from ¡Le ¡Corbusier: ¡Oeuvre ¡Complete, ¡Willy ¡Boesiger ¡ ¡

  8. LeCorbusier ʼ s Five Points of a New Architecture � • 1 - Raising the building on Pilotis � � • 2 - The Free Plan � • 3 - The Roof Garden � • 4 - The Free Elevation � � • 5 - The Horizontal Window � � �

  9. 1. Raising the building on Pilotis ¡ “ The rooms are thereby removed from the dampness of the soil; they have light and air; the building plot is left to the garden, which consequently passes under the house . ” ¡ -­‑ Le ¡Corbusier ¡Originally ¡published ¡in ¡Almabach ¡de ¡l’Achitecture ¡moderne, ¡Paris ¡1926 ¡ Redrawn ¡from ¡Le ¡Corbusier: ¡Oeuvre ¡Complete, ¡Willy ¡Boesiger ¡ Photo ¡credit: ¡Valueyou, ¡Wikiepedia ¡

  10. 2. The Open or “Free” Plan � “ The support system carries the intermediate ceilings and rises up to the roof. The interior walls may be placed wherever required, each floor being entirely independent of the rest. ” � - Le Corbusier Originally published in Almabach de l ʼ Achitecture moderne, Paris 1926 � Redrawn ¡from ¡Le ¡Corbusier: ¡Oeuvre ¡Complete, ¡Willy ¡Boesiger ¡ Photo ¡credit: ¡Great ¡Buildings ¡

  11. 3. The Roof Garden � The roof gardens will display highly luxuriant vegetation. Shrubs and even small trees up to 3 or 4 metres tall can be planted. � � In this way the roof garden will become the most favoured place in the building. In general, roof gardens mean to a city the recovery of all the built- up area. ” ¡ -­‑ ¡Le ¡Corbusier ¡Originally ¡published ¡in ¡Almabach ¡de ¡l’Achitecture ¡moderne, ¡Paris ¡1926 ¡ Redrawn ¡from ¡Le ¡Corbusier: ¡Oeuvre ¡Complete, ¡Willy ¡Boesiger ¡ Photo ¡credit: ¡Great ¡Buildings ¡

  12. 4. The Free Elevation � “ By projecting the floor beyond the supporting pillars, like a balcony all round the building, the whole facade is extended beyond the supporting construction. It thereby loses its supportive quality and the windows may be extended to any length at will, without any direct relationship to the interior division. ¡ -­‑ ¡Le ¡Corbusier ¡Originally ¡published ¡in ¡Almabach ¡de ¡l’Achitecture ¡moderne, ¡Paris ¡1926 ¡ � Redrawn ¡from ¡Le ¡Corbusier: ¡Oeuvre ¡Complete, ¡Willy ¡Boesiger ¡ Photo ¡credit: ¡Great ¡Buildings ¡

  13. 5. The Horizontal Window � The whole history of architecture revolves exclusively around the wall apertures. Through the use of the horizontal window, reinforced concrete suddenly provides the possibility of maximum illumination.” � - Le Corbusier Originally published in Almabach de l ʼ Achitecture � moderne, Paris 1926 � Redrawn ¡from ¡Le ¡Corbusier: ¡Oeuvre ¡Complete, ¡Willy ¡Boesiger ¡ ¡ Photo ¡credit: ¡Great ¡Buildings ¡

  14. Villa Savoye 
 Poissy, France � Photo ¡credit: ¡Valueyou, ¡Wikiepedia ¡

  15. Villa Savoye 
 Poissy, France � “It was Le Corbusier ʼ s Villa Savoye (1929–1931) that most succinctly summed up his five points of architecture that he had elucidated in the journal L'Esprit Nouveau and his book Vers un Architecture which he had been developing throughout the 1920s. First, Le Corbusier lifted the bulk of the structure off the ground, supporting it by pilotis – reinforced concrete stilts. These pilotis, in providing the structural support for the house, allowed him to elucidate his next two points: a free façade, meaning non-supporting walls that could be designed as the architect wished, and an open floor plan, meaning that the floor space was free to be configured into rooms without concern for supporting walls. The second floor of the Villa Savoye includes long strips of ribbon windows that allow unencumbered views of the large surrounding yard, and which constitute the fourth point of his system. The fifth point was the roof garden to compensate for the green area consumed by the building and replacing it on the roof. A ramp rising from ground level to the third floor roof terrace allows for an architectural promenade through the structure. The white tubular railing recalls the industrial "ocean-liner" aesthetic that Le Corbusier much admired. As if to put an exclamation mark after Le Corbusier's homage to modern industry, the driveway around the ground floor, with its semicircular path, measures the exact turning radius of a 1927 Citroen automobile.” � -­‑ ¡ Villa ¡Savoye ¡and ¡the ¡Five ¡Points ¡of ¡Architecture ¡– ¡Wikipedia ¡ �

  16. Villa Savoye 
 Poissy, France � Ground Floor � First Floor � Second Floor �

  17. The Swiss Pavilion 
 Paris, France ¡ � Ministry of Education � Kingston, Jamaica ¡

  18. ARCHITECTURE “Architecture is a thing of art, a phenomenon of the emotions, • lying outside questions of construction and beyond them. The purpose of construction is to make things hold together; of architecture TO MOVE US.” “Architecture is the masterly, correct and magnificent play of • masses brought together in light; Our eyes are made to see forms in light; Light and shade reveal these forms.” - Le Corbusier

  19. Recommendations for Reducing the Problems � Use a design with the ideal configuration when: � • The best seismic performance for the lowest cost is needed � � • The maximum predictability of seismic performance is desired � � • The most economical structural design and construction is needed, including design and analysis for code conformance, simplicity of seismic detailing, and repetition of structural component sizes and placement conditions � � - Christopher Arnold, “Seismic Issues in Architectural Design, Designing for Earthquakes, A Manual for Architects” � � �

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