Different types of architecture gives people different vibes. When you are in a classroom, you feel either ready to learn or overwhelmed to listen to the instructor, regardless of how beautiful the classroom is. When you are in your own room, you feel different, more like relaxed and lazy. How can architects build an environment where they can actually alter the people’s sensory feeling? How can we, as architect, make the feeling of space slower and give a sensory ideology of body and skin? Haptic architecture is a hard concept to understand, I must admit, but to think a space that goes slowly, and giving us a bodily experience, must be incredibly ineffable for the experiencer to
Different types of architecture gives people different vibes. When you are in a classroom, you feel either ready to learn or overwhelmed to listen to the instructor, regardless of how beautiful the classroom is. When you are in your own room, you feel different, more like relaxed and lazy. How can architects build an environment where they can actually alter the people’s sensory feeling? How can we, as architect, make the feeling of space slower and give a sensory ideology of body and skin? Haptic architecture is a hard concept to understand, I must admit, but to think a space that goes slowly, and giving us a bodily experience, must be incredibly ineffable for the experiencer to