Interior Design Conceptual Basis PDF
Interior Design Conceptual Basis PDF
Interior Design Conceptual Basis PDF
Interior
Design:
Conceptual
Basis
Interior Design: Conceptual Basis
Anthony Sully
13
Anthony Sully
Cambridgeshire
UK
v
vi Foreword
need to work collaboratively and this book will give useful insight into the process
to all involved in and around the design process, students, teachers, academics
and potential clients. Books on the theory of Interior Design are hard to find and
I welcome Anthony Sully’s latest addition.
There are two camps in the discipline of interior design which seem to me to be
drifting further apart: the profession on the one hand and the education and train-
ing on the other. The profession marches onwards, following technological inven-
tions, a proliferation of new products and paying lip service to the architectural
profession in a subordinate role. The continued dominance of the ‘Modernist’ tra-
dition is proving stifling, not only in teaching but in practice as well.
Professionally, we have the interior decorators, who work mainly in the domestic
field, and are in a completely different mode to the more commercial designers.
Interior Design is an activity that embraces construction, furnishing, building ser-
vices and decoration. The Interior Designer takes charge of all of this. He/she may
employ specialist craftspeople, contract furnishers, engineers and decorators. The
scope of work covers all sectors such as commercial, retail, residential, education,
sport, entertainment, travel stations, hospitality, medical civic and so on. The spe-
cialist decorators have taken on an independent consultancy role of their own call-
ing themselves Interior Decorators whilst concentrating mainly on residential only.
They do not usually get involved in construction.
We also have a breed of interior architects, a term that is more recognised in
Europe than in the UK, and whose title I have challenged in my last book ‘Interior
Design: Theory and Process’. Interior Design is the more common generic term
and is one that I shall continue to use. The professional work live in the field and
new developments/products arise out of the designer’s own exploratory research,
as well as manufacturers chasing the demands made by the consumer. All par-
ticipants in the design industry also acknowledge pressure from politicians and
‘Green Issues’ to act upon such signposts that indicate ways forward which will
benefit humanity and undo the wrongs of the past. Employers complain about
the inadequacy of many graduates coming out of university, saying that they are
not primed to work in the industry. They argue that the students’ studies are so
detached from reality that they do not sufficiently prepare them for professional
work. The university sector has a very difficult task confronting them. On the one
hand, they need experienced practitioners to teach and pass on the benefits of their
experience, and on the other hand, they need academics to stretch the students’
vii
viii Preface
minds and be exploratory and inventive. The full-time staff managing the courses
are usually the academics, and the part-time visiting staff provide the hands-on
professional approach because they are in practice.
There are also new branches of activity that have grown over recent years or
have yet to confirm a union that I consider to be a threat to the recognised pro-
fessional role of the designer. These new fields come under such titles as Design
Thinkers, Behavioural Scientists, Systems Analysts and Social Psychologists.
Whilst some valuable work is being done within these fields, they are beginning to
assert undue influence upon the design process in such a way that they are subju-
gating the role of the designer. I have read that they have been welcomed into the
industry because of criticisms of the way designers have spent too much time in
the past on aesthetics and less on the needs of the client or user. I cannot believe
that this is correct if my own education is anything to go by. I was taught about
how design integrates aesthetics, function and technology and how much the needs
of the user were of prime importance. Even new degree courses have sprung up
such as Service Design for which the following definition applies:
Service design is the activity of planning and organizing people, infrastructure,
communication and material components of a service in order to improve its quality
and the interaction between service provider and customers.
When the service industry is discussed, it usually refers to both public and pri-
vate sectors and covers such areas as transport, food catering, retail and hospital-
ity, in fact anything whereby a service is being provided to a paying customer. As
far as I can see, this work comes within the remit of the existing interior, product
or architectural designers already. My guess is that the client management of these
service providers has not been as good or sharp as they should have been in brief-
ing the designers adequately, and hence, this additional focus has appeared as a
move to improve the service. Whatever new developments are taking place within
the industry, the contents of this book should still apply and be useful.
The education and training of interior designers still varies greatly throughout
the world. Member organisations are listed in the Appendix. Higher education has
become big business throughout the world, with individual universities competing
for either more overseas student applicants, funding grants or creating partnerships
with foreign institutions. All of this is designed to boost the income of the instigat-
ing university, as well as help the less able ones to raise their game and become
HE global influencers in their own right. The logical outcome of this scenario, as
is already happening, is that the junior member of these partnerships will become
so strong and well equipped in their own right that they will not need the services
of these host universities in the future. Professor Sir Fergus Millar wrote a letter to
the Times in 2013 about what is happening to HE in the UK. I quote:
‘…it is not that funding is sought in order to carry out research, but that research
projects are formulated in order to get funding…the lecturer whose fulfilment
comes from teaching…now risks, at best, being publicly humiliated as “non-
research-active…and at worst being dismissed. The present system is profoundly
damaging, not only to teaching but to research itself.’
Preface ix
The last few years have been witness to a global recession, which has had rami-
fications on the educational system in the UK. Here is a quote from a paper deliv-
ered by Patrick Hannay1 at the Interiors Forum in Scotland in 2007:
Knowing as we all do, that staff-student ratios have risen dramatically, and that
while we may have tightened up on our delivery techniques, we all have witnessed,
if we are honest, at least in England and Wales, the erosion of content and sub-
stance through stretching too few tutors over too many students, while studio
space is cut from beneath our feet.
I have seen departmental budgets cut back over the years much to the detriment
of the education of students. What I find distressing is that the industry has huge
expectations on the quality of graduate that is required, but there does not seem to
be any reciprocal gesture of assisting towards the funding of our design courses.
No doubt there are exceptions to this and a shining example is the new campus of
Ravensbourne college built adjacent to the O2 Arena in south-east London. Apart
from the normal institutional funding sources the college manages to secure pri-
vate funding from the media industries that it serves. Art and Design in the UK
used to be taught in independent colleges of art and many of these were founded
in towns that had local industries that were able to support them; for example,
Staffordshire University’s art and design grew out of the potteries in Staffordshire;
Nottingham School of Art (now Nottingham Trent University) grew out of the tex-
tile and lace industry of Nottingham; Stourbridge, glass; Manchester, the cotton
industry; Leicester, hosiery; Birmingham, metalwork; High Wycombe School of
Art (now Buckinghamshire New University) grew out of the furniture industry
of High Wycombe; Kidderminster College for the carpet industry; Coventry for
transport design (car industry); and so on. Today, the scene has changed so much
with some of these industries in decline, whilst new ones due to the digital revolu-
tion are emerging.
Each chapter in this book deals with seven of the eight concepts mentioned in
the Introduction. The formation of these concepts is not bound by any dictatorial
ruling as that would be counterproductive to the essence of creativity, which is not
premeditated or controlled by any external force. This book is intended as a guide,
whilst at the same time I hope will be inspirational. How are concepts formed? I
need to emphasise that the design process is not strictly linear, but can jump about
according to varying conditions or extenuating circumstances. It is also unpredict-
able as it should be, for the outcome is not known, but is there to be discovered.
It is called innovation. This is the kernel of excitement about design: nothing is
predictable. If it was, and I suspect that much of the poorest quality of design falls
into this category, then it is probably the product of repetitive methods whose
main focus is to reap financial rewards at the expense of quality. Later in this
book I refer to the designer’s vision of what could be done, and this is the fuelled
1
Patrick Hannay, A Regulated Irregularity, Paper at Interiors Forum Scotland, 2007. Patrick was
formerly Course Director of the Interior Architecture Course at the University of Wales in Cardiff
and is now editor of Touchstone magazine.
x Preface
beginning that gives impetus to the design process. There could be many visions
covering the whole space, or the use of certain materials, or methods of access, or
colour and lighting and so on. These visions help to form each one of the concepts
in this book.
The book is written with definitions, suggestions, classifications and analysis.
I have used examples of products and interiors where they serve to illustrate the
point I am making, or the topic heading of that particular paragraph. Otherwise I
have drawn my own diagrams and drawings to help with clarification.
John Ruskin wrote ‘The Seven Lamps of Architecture’ in 1907 and I pondered
upon the relevance to my seven concepts loosely matching them as follows:
Ruskin’s seven lamps My seven concepts
SACRIFICE—about giving > Circulation—guiding people
TRUTH—being honest > Lighting—lighting the way
POWER—talent, responsibility > Planning—powerfully generative
BEAUTY > Colour
LIFE—about people, expression > Materials—we find and shape
MEMORY—history, habits > Construction—build on prior experience
OBEDIENCE—duty > 3 Dimensions—provision to the client
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Michael Spicer DipArch RIBA MAPM for providing me
with comment and feedback on selected passages of the book.
I would also like to thank all the contributors who have allowed me to use their
work to illustrate the various points I have made.
xi
Contents
1 Planning Concept . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
1.1 Context: Organisation of Space, Enclosure and Support
Systems—Keyword: Geometry. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1.2 Stage 1—Bubble Diagrams. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.3 Stage 2—Overall Planning Structure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.3.1 Plan Patterns. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
1.3.2 Interior Plan Examples. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
1.4 Stage 3—Interior Divisions/Support Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
1.4.1 Furniture/Support System Example. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
1.4.2 Division/Door Opening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
1.5 Drawing—The Starting off Point. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
1.5.1 Grids. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
1.6 Enclosure and Journey. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
1.7 Case Study 1—The Journey. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
1.8 Layers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
1.9 Placement of Object—Orientation and Positioning. . . . . . . . . . . . 22
1.10 Case Study 2—Ardmore Park. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
1.11 Case Study 3—China Steel Corporation HQ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
1.12 3D Planning—Includes Enclosing Forms
and Support Functions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
1.12.1 Major Conceptual 3D Planning Elements. . . . . . . . . . . . 29
1.13 Conceptual 3D Origins Within a Space. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
1.14 Case Study 4—Placebo Pharmacy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
2 Circulation Concept . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
2.1 Context—Circulation Options—Keyword: Routing Access. . . . . 38
2.2 Horizontal Circulation Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
2.2.1 Option 1—Well-Defined Route/s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
2.2.2 Option 2—Multi-directional . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
2.2.3 Option 3—Corridor-Type Directional. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
xiii
xiv Contents
3 Three-dimensional Concept. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
3.1 Context—Keyword: Modelling. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
3.2 Constituent Parts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
3.3 Realisation Sequence. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
3.3.1 On Entering a Space. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
3.4 Identity. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
3.5 Basic 3D Geometric Origins of Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
3.6 Family of Forms. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
3.6.1 The Square Family. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
3.6.2 The Circle Family . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
3.6.3 The Triangle Family. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
3.7 Junctions and Meeting of Surfaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
3.8 The Meeting of Planes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
3.9 The Intrusive Corner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
3.10 Growth of the Integrated Interior. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
3.10.1 Architectural Form. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
3.10.2 The Hazukashi House . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
3.10.3 Interior Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
3.11 Freeform. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
3.11.1 Case Study 5. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
3.11.2 Grotto Sauna. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
3.11.3 The Deconstructed Interior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
3.12 Is Minimalism the Disintegrated Interior?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
Conclusion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
Appendix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229
Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
Introduction
2
Joy Malnar and Frank Vodvarka, The Interior Dimension (New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold,
1992) p. 36.
3
Philip Plowright, Revealing Architectural Design (London, Routledge, 2014) p. 245.
xvii
xviii Introduction
The grand concept of a design scheme, which uses the above, has been com-
monly used, but that is a post-descriptive term to explain the final design. The
breakdown into different concepts in this book is an attempt to explain the deeper
workings of each one in order to strengthen the designer’s concentrated efforts in
the design process and confirm the full status of a design scheme.
In this book, I would like to expand this study to see if this helps to regularise
interior design into a manageable and effective discipline. I intend to focus upon
seven of the eight concepts that I listed in my last book that generate the main
concept of a scheme and explain how they can be formed and how they interrelate.
I am also in pursuance of a climate that is free of the strictures of style such as
Modernism.
As Salingaros says:
In architecture, the stark modernist interiors that came of age with Adolf Loos and
later with the Bauhaus have been very unsuccessful in eliciting the type of univer-
sal and visceral attraction and sense of comfort that more traditional interior envi-
ronments accomplish, as witnessed by what the majority of the population chooses
as their living interiors. People like to bring objects such as photographs, plants,
dolls, and objets d’art into their living space and workplace. This practice has
been condemned by a rather narrow design élite that continues to support the old
minimalist design ideology against overwhelming evidence of what makes people
most comfortable.4
My research has uncovered much discussion and expositions by writers who
are trying to explain what interior design is (definitions, discipline, profession),
where it has come from (history, which I have covered in my first book), exploring
the field of interior design (design research, philosophy), who uses interiors (the
users, behavioural studies), the importance of interior design (social contribution),
healthy interior design (responsibility, sustainability) and effects of interior design
(people responses). I intend to continue to redefine the core of what and how inte-
rior design is formulated.
So, I am still dealing with the conceptual growth of ideas as opposed to the
practical applications of material and construction technology, and the statutory
regulations that accompany such subjects. The two driving forces willing the birth
of a concept are inspiration and motivation. Sources of ideas exist in all aspects of
life from culture, industry, politics, philosophy and the community. Such sources
are considered to be outside the discipline of design, whereas those sources that
come from within the knowledge base of the discipline are considered to be
‘inside’ the discipline. This book is concentrating on the inside sources. A concept
is not to be confused with a ‘Style’, which usually refers to an established visual
theme both historical and modern that fits a certain social strata.
4
Nikos Salingaros, Fractal Art and Architecture Reduce Physiological Stress, Article 2012.
Introduction xix
While a style, so far, has been defined in terms of a few particular formal traits
common to a number of works of art, we should rather let ‘style’ imply the formal
probability structure of a symbol system.5 Christian Norberg-Schulz
Aside from dress, décor is the most immediate extension of the body; it constitutes
a language, a set of signs, a definite notion of the art of living at a particular
moment in time.6 François Baudot
Style implies a group of different products that belong to each other by com-
mon physical properties or linking devices, which produces a visual assemblage.
Their total assembly is unique and can be compared with other assemblies whose
products will have different properties, thus creating another ‘style’.
I do not aim to ponder on the wider social needs of society, gender issues or global
and market forces that help shape our future as such issues are well covered elsewhere.
In my professional experience, the design process has been led by an overarching con-
cept supported by subordinate elements that have been dictated to. For example, the
major concept for a cinema interior may be a combined historical, rich and comforta-
ble atmosphere. One of the subordinate elements would be lighting which constitutes a
huge range of fittings and effects. In order to plan and specify the lighting, the designer
needs to have a concept of it. This will define effect, control, duration, location and so
on. I have analysed these subordinate elements and concluded that their roles should
not be secondary to the main concept, but rather, they need to be raised on an equal
footing in order to sharpen and improve the interior designer’s skill base. Their con-
tribution will still help to form a dominant concept. These elements form the concepts
of this book for each chapter, and they will be described in terms of their content, their
boundaries of subject and their overlap with each other.
In addition, an overall conceptual position can make it easier to engage in synthe-
sis during the refinement stages of the design process as there is a clear set of
judgement criteria, fixed by the conceptual position to guide the formation of the
whole.7 Philip Plowright
Interior design has always proved to be a slippery field of work and study in
terms of defining what it is, so in order that the reader sees my book in context
here are some views by others as well as myself.
5
Christian Norberg-Schuiz, Intentions in Architecture (Massuchusetts, The MIT. Press 1965) p. 70.
6
Francois Baudot, Compendium of Interior Styles (New York, Assouline, 2005) p. 7.
7
Philip Plowright , Revealing Architectural Design (London, Routledge, 2014) p. 252.
xx Introduction
Interior Architecture
The use of the term interior architecture is viewed by some as yet another threat to
a profession that others would argue has constantly had to defend itself since the
title of interior design was adopted in the 1960s. It seems that we have not done as
adequate job of communicating exactly what it is that we do or the value that we
bring to the table.
So given our past history, the public perceptions of our profession and the seem-
ingly continual fear that interior design will be subsumed by architecture, what are
we to do when at times our future is being challenged and seems bleak? Allison
Carll White, Ph.D., University of Kentucky. Journal of Interior Design, IDEC 2009
8
Simon Unwin, Analysing Architecture (Routledge, London,2014) p. 4.
Introduction xxi
There is a fine line between architecture and interior design in this book. In terms
of the subject matter of interior environments, these disciplines become one and
the same: elements present in the design of interiors, whether architectural or dec-
orative, contribute to the qualities of the same place.9 Roberto Rengel, University
of Wisconsin-Madison
In terms of philosophy and practice interior, architecture is a discipline that is
heavily (although not exclusively) involved with the remodelling and repurposing
of existing buildings and so has an important role to play in the sustainable reuse
of the built environment.10 John Coles and Naomi House, Middlesex University
We may define interior architecture as the design of structurally created interiors,
for domestic, recreational and business usage, which apply some architectural
processes.11 Clive Edwards, Loughborough University
Some of the ideas that characterise Interior Architecture are strong three-dimen-
sional development, respect for the enclosing architecture, sensitivity to the human
experience, primal significance of light, wealth and energy of colour and furnish-
ings as an extension of the architecture.12 Kurtich and Eakin, The School of the
Art Institute of Chicago
Interior architecture is comprised of at least some elements of all three fields:
design, architecture and art.13 Ellen Klingenberg, Oslo National Academy of the
Arts
Art and Design have been converging towards each other at an ever increasing
rate over the past 30 years that this conjoined spirit is realised by leading art-
ists and designers. Interior Design has to be charged with a creative spirit that
seeks solutions which combines art and sculpture resulting in forms that work by
storing, displaying, that facilitate working and that supports the human form. A
designer works like an artist, and an artist works like a designer. Anthony Sully
2011
9
Roberto Rengel, Shaping Interior Space (New York, Fairchild Publications Inc. 2003) p. 10.
10
John Coles and Naomi House, The Fundamentals of Interior Architecture (Switzerland, Ava
Publishing 2007) p. 10.
11
Clive Edwards, Interior Design, a Critical Introduction (Oxford, Berg, 2011) p. 2.
12
John Kurtich and Garret Eakin, Interior Architecture (New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1996) p. vii.
13
Ellen Klingenberg, Interior Architecture—a body of knowledge and a field for research (paper
25.07.2009).
xxii Introduction
Interdisciplinary
…cross discipline work is too little encouraged in the art schools themselves. Fred
Scott—‘On Altering Architecture’ 2008
It is certainly true according to my own experience that each department tends
to build a wall around it for fear of outsiders affecting the controlled stability of
management and inflexible programming. Compared with 30 years ago, there is
certainly less of a sharing culture between academics who are striving to chase a
PhD., partly due to university pressure to improve its own research ranking, but
partly due to the academic’s own protectionist methods as though sharing would
devalue their efforts.
Interior design is an interdisciplinary practice that is concerned with the creation
of a range of interior environments that articulate identity and atmosphere,
through the manipulation of spatial volume, placement of specific elements and
furniture and treatment of surfaces.14 Brooker and Stone
Summary
From the above, it is clear that the problem of establishing what the identity of
interior design is has become a common topic for debate. The emergence of
‘Interior Architecture’ as a renamed version of ‘Interior Design’ does nothing to
clear the air or still the waters. After much research, I have come to the conclusion
that there is no difference between them. Existing buildings need people to alter
and adapt the existing structure and services right down to specifying furniture
and internal decoration. This is what interior designers (and I am one of them) do
already, so why invent another term? When it comes to interior design education,
it is the American organisations of CIDA, NCIDQ and IDEC that lead the way
with vast membership numbers and regulatory bodies.
From the previous list of authors, it is interesting to note Tiiu Poldma’s com-
ment about the disparity between theory (as taught and written about by aca-
demics) and practice as delivered by the professional designers. Geurin and
Martin refer to the schism between practical thinking and philosophical thinking.
Certainly in my experience, I have noticed that the height of academic research as
witnessed by certain conferences and written papers does tend to wallow in what
I call intellectual garbage. One term that has come out of this is the word ‘inte-
riority’, which for the life of me I fail to understand. As readers will know who
are familiar with my last book, I am a designer who regards writing as a creative
14
Brooker and Stone, From Organisation to Decoration (London, Middlesex University Press, 2013).
Introduction xxiii
This Book
15
Philip Plowright , Revealing Architectural Design (London, Routledge, 2014) p. 22.
16
Anthony Sully, Interior Design: Theory and Process (London, A&C Black, 2012) p58.
xxiv Introduction
Concept Circle—Introductory diagram of the question posed by each concept. The reader should
be able to match the above with each of the seven concepts listed
When looking at built interiors or the examples I provide in this book, some-
times it may not be easy to ‘see’ each one of these concepts clearly. I do not think
that the purpose of designing should facilitate that anyway. A person may compli-
ment an interior for the following common reasons:
• Good colour scheme
• Great lighting effects
• Great atmosphere
• Feels good working here
• Very comfortable
• Love the wood (or other materials for their dominating effect)
• It works very well
• Great place to meet people
• Great views
And conversely criticise the above for their negative aspects. The formation and
implementation of these concepts is to aid the designer in his/her professional task
of completing a major concept, which will emerge as the design proposal to the
client. Each chapter deals with how that particular concept is approached, analysed
and covered in order that a concept will emerge. There will not be an actual exam-
ple of a concept at the end of each chapter because that can only emerge through
a real design project. But I do provide an example in the appendix with a simple
shopfront design. I would suggest that those concepts that can be ‘seen’ or deter-
mined by the user in order of clarity are as follows:
xxvi Introduction
Colour must be the first impact and easily defined. The powerful and effect-mak-
ing concept dependent upon the choice of Materials, Construction and Lighting.
Colour and shade help define the 3D form. Capable of repair and maintenance.
Materials will impact on the viewer as much as colour, whilst being dependent
upon Construction and homing in on the aesthetic and function of use. Competes
with Colour for consideration as the chicken and egg scenario. Capable of repair
and maintenance.
Lighting also runs parallel with the above two in visual recognition. Always the
‘after’ shows but undoubtedly brings everything to life. The only concept, apart
from Circulation, that shifts in time and use. Capable of repair and maintenance.
Three Dimensions require more knowledge of the ‘content’ of the interior
from every angle, which may not be possible. Taking off from the Planning and
Circulation but seen in 3D. Beginning of visual judgement of space and form.
Capable of readjustment.
Circulation can be experienced but only partially depending upon permissible
access. People access and use of the space. Can dictate Planning as well as follow-
ing. On a time and motion usage.
Construction much of this is unseen and therefore not able to be appreciated
fully. Absorbing the Planning and 3D concepts into the reality of fitting and instal-
lation. How things come together. Capable of repair and maintenance.
Planning definitely requires a ‘bird’s eye view’ which is hardly practicable. It
is the act of 2D positioning and placement relative to people access and mental
vision of 3D repercussions. The controlling fixed concept.
You could say that Planning and Three Dimensions are closely linked or that
Materials, Construction and Colour are closely linked and of course they are. The
purpose of this book is to prepare designers to focus on each concept indepen-
dently as much as possible as functional items, whilst acknowledging relative con-
nections without unwarranted influences of any one concept unfairly dictating a
major influence. The overlapping nature of working can make independent analy-
sis difficult. Here is Roberto Rengel’s17 suggestion of what a concept is:
A design concept aims to define appropriate responses that help generate a
specific approach to solve a design problem… First, it is useful to divide interior
design concepts into two broad categories: organizational concepts (the arrange-
ment of space) and character concepts (those related to style, image or theme).
His organisational group relates to my concepts of Planning, 3D and
Circulation, but he does not single them out in that way. His character concepts
could include my concepts of Colour, Materials and Lighting, but again, he does
not single them out. Construction is not mentioned.
A design concept is an expression of the key ideas with which the designer intends
to work in order to generate a scheme.18 John Coles and Naomi House
17
Roberto Rengel, Shaping Interior Space (New York, Fairchild Publications Inc. 2003) p. 122.
18
John Coles and Naomi House, The Fundamentals of Interior Architecture (Switzerland, Ava
Publishing 2007) p. 10.
Introduction xxvii
Designers should always be aware of changes and developments that take place
within the industry, which will have repercussions on the conceptual basis of
working. For example, within the field of office design (other names such as space
planning or office planning I consider to be superfluous), organisations are finding
that the working methods are more group focused than personalised, and flexible
workspaces are in demand. So designers are beginning to respond by designing
reconfigurable spaces using transformative furniture facilitating easily accessible
technology. This touches on my theory of ‘Mechanics of Operation’) MOO, of
which there are examples shown in Chap. 4. This is based upon my belief that
more moving parts are possible in interiors other than just doors and drawers.
This book is about that part of the design process called conceptual analysis. It
is assumed that the site, location, building and orientation, as well as the client’s
brief of activities and needs, have been digested and analysed to provide the data
upon which the design process can begin.
In this book, I refer occasionally to ‘support systems’ which covers anything
that provides support for the human figure such as seating, beds, working surfaces,
handrails as well as furniture storage and display forms.
Movement
Movement of light, of pattern, of form and of people all help us to see and ‘read’
interior spaces. It is therefore absorbed by all concepts and is experienced through
two ways:
1. As conceived and planned by the designer in the 3D rhythm of all constituent
interior elements as seen by the user.
2. When people move throughout an interior, its static quality becomes liberated
by the 3D motion of people movement and their awareness of the differentia-
tion between form and space.
Chapter 1
Planning Concept
Abstract This chapter explains how the act of planning begins with the organisation
of spatial areas linked by human circulation. Basic plan patterns are proposed together
with the poverty of traditional plans. A dining layout is used as an example of a
Support system, with tradition versus a more architectural solution. The act of drawing
is explained from a basic dot and line to the use of grids. Why a person enters a space
is answered and with suggested environmental aims. This is followed by relating the
enclosure to a person’s journey through the interior. Planning involves overlapping
layers of support systems, wall enclosures and lighting. The beginnings of placement
and positioning of objects are described. The major 3D planning elements are illus-
trated to acknowledge their role in planning.
1Le Corbusier, Towards a New Architecture, (London, The Architectural Press, 1923).
2Anthony Sully, Interior Design: Theory and Process (London, A & C Black, 2012).
1.2 Stage 1—Bubble Diagrams 3
See Fig. 1.1.
Fig. 1.1 Bubble diag
4 1 Planning Concept
The building system will affect the way in which he, as an organism, works system-
atically in so far as it leads to the stimulation of his various senses separately—
seeing, hearing, smell, heat and cold, kinaesthetic, equilibrium, and determines
his physical relationships with other people in terms of room size and shape, furni-
ture arrangements, circulation patterns and other means of communication.3
Geoffrey Broadbent, Design in Architecture 1973
The second stage in the planning process is to develop an overall strategy or
structure that all components of the plan hang on. It is very dangerous and
presumptive to impose a planning discipline before the details of stages two and
three have been given an airing. The important point to stress here is that the
design process is organic in the way that it grows from small bits of informa-
tion. Before I examine this stage, let me describe one of the collective thoughts
that a designer is always conscious of: people entering and using the spaces to be
designed either on a prescribed pathway or a pathway of choice (Fig. 1.2).
If you want to foresee from a plan some of the things that might eventually occur
in a built environment, you must be able to imagine how different people using it
will react to its various parts.4 John Zeisel
Fig. 1.2 User’s intentions
and environmental response
3Geoffrey Broadbent, Design in Architecture, (London, John Wiley & Sons, 1973) p. 386.
4John Zeisel, Inquiry by Design, (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1981) p. 222.
1.3 Stage 2—Overall Planning Structure 5
Of course there are many more countless reasons for entering a space and these
will be governed by the function of the interior and the building. This example may
seem simple and obvious but I suggest to any designer to write down such statements
on a current project and see if this enlightens you or your approach to your project.
User’s intentions: There are multitude reasons why people use interiors, and
this is an example of an imagined approach that the user may have. It acts as a
guide to making design decisions.
Environment: This stands for the interior that you are designing and can act as a
reminder of the purpose of the project.
1.3.1 Plan Patterns
The following are generic and will be extended or varied according to a specific
interior.
Needs of the user Environment/Enclosure provision
Decisions and choices have to be made—where to Good access
go, what to do and how to get there Building services and IT
Clarity of vision Telecommunications
Good lighting in order to accomplish task Good lighting
Easy and unobstructed circulation Good fenestration
Horizontal surfaces of required size Appropriate finishes
Vertical surfaces for possible communications Health and safety measures
Adequate storage Provision of toilet and kitchen as required
Comfort Good acoustics
Adequate support systems Appropriate spatial divisions
An interior that uplifts the soul Appropriate space for circulation
An interior that gives satisfaction Appropriate space for carrying out tasks
An interior that is welcoming Appropriate support systems
An interior that works according to the brief
The following plan patterns are the beginning of establishing an individual circula-
tion structure using the information gathered from the table above. Although circulation,
which is the flow of people performing their various tasks, is a concept to be developed
in Chap. 2, it is part of planning as an overlap of concepts, which was explained in the
Introduction. On the one hand, the needs of the user are determined and these will sug-
gest formal solutions for planning which will begin with describing the area required for
the activities to take place. This is carried out in each area, which will confirm relation-
ships of these areas. This is followed by a more detailed search for solutions regard-
ing support systems and building components for dividing space. I repeat what I said
in my last book that planning is not totally a two-dimensional exercise, as the designer
is thinking in three dimensions whilst planning. Three-dimensional sketches should be
drawn at the same time simply to confirm the thought processes and for reassurance.
The following diagrams are simple starting examples (Figs. 1.3 and 1.4).
6 1 Planning Concept
From Bubble Diagrams, we move to a building to ascertain how these can fit into
the spaces provided. If we look at two typical plans in Fig. 1.6, one of an office
and one of a lounge, we can see how limited these plans are in terms of any sort of
imaginative input with regard to a pattern of structure. They are traditional and yet
are very common to see in many installations. To the trained designer, the furniture
forms shown below are so familiar that they do not need labelling, which in itself
is a sad reflection on how conventional schemes can be. Both of these plans when
realised in built form could have hundreds of different decorative schemes and fur-
niture from different manufacturers, never mind the variations in lighting. So, even
though the plans are traditional, the finished interiors can provoke a pleasurable
response from the clients, and this is the point I am making: is a plan that does not
generate any energy or give any clue as to the finished interior, a substandard one?
One problem is that these plans denote the components of the building and furni-
ture by well used symbols that have become recognised such as a door opening, a
chair, etc., and subsequently fail to communicate any design intensity or originality.
Now if we look at the plan of this house in Fig. 1.7, we can see how organic
and responsive to the site the design is. Each space has a purposeful form rather
than being swamped by the over-riding rectilinear grid of the examples above.
5Geoffrey Broadbent, Design in Architecture (London, John Wiley & Sons, 1973) p. 394.
1.3 Stage 2—Overall Planning Structure 9
First Floor
Figure 1.8 shows a conventional formal domestic layout of a dining table and
loose chairs for 8 people, which, whilst it is so common and acceptable, has no
architectural integrity with a building but is a stand-alone setting. A circular table
for eight people (shown in red) would make each person of equal status but it
occupies more space in one dimension and hence is less common.
If we examine further this traditional layout for 8 people in Fig. 1.9, it is inter-
esting to see the imbalance of each sitting position. The rectangular table is the
most common form that is used. The red line confirms all places (600 × 400 mm)
are equidistant each other so no unevenness there. The end places denoted by 4 are
usually the ‘top table’ hosts of the evening but have limited conversational con-
tact with the two nearest places (2 × 3 or 2 × 1). Place No. 1 has contact with
four places, and place No. 2 has contact with five places. Social mores being what
they are, the kind of people sitting (hosts already established) would be the most
entertaining seated at 2, the most boring at 1 and 3. This is of course very mean
and unkind of me but there is a grain of truth in what I say. Alternatively, the hosts
may position potential mating singles opposite each other (side by side no good
for flirting!) as in 1 or 3. The point I am making is that the relationship of people
with each other is an important consideration in all interiors. The design problem
here is not just to design a dinner table and 8 chairs by exploring materials, col-
ours, textures and structure. It is to understand human relationships and these can
be extracted from the brief of the particular location concerned.
I have drawn the plan in Fig. 1.10 and a 3D sketch in Fig. 1.11 of an uncon-
ventional dining situation, which is more of an architectural solution because all
components bind together in a spatial relatedness. Bear in mind that, as I said in
the beginning of this book, all ideas discussed are independent from any building
unless otherwise stated.
structure
chairs
table
Fig. 1.11 3D sketch of unconventional dining layout in Fig. 1.10. The black columns, whilst
supporting the table surface, are sharing the enclosing structure function with the white frames.
They could both support lighting. Drawings by the author
1.4.2 Division/Door Opening
The top plan drawing in Fig. 1.12 illustrates a basic door access within a partition
and the operational action involved. The upper plan drawing in Fig. 1.13 explains
how a straight partition can be conceived as being made up of modular units even
though they may not be expressed visually. The lower plan shows how the modu-
lar units can be expressed with a radical staggering of each unit with an open-
ing providing access. The plan in Fig. 1.14 of the Vortex Centre shows how the
external walls and internal partitions are not only curved but also they are stag-
gered to achieve a tapering of the whole plan. The elevation in Fig. 1.15 shows this
clearly but flattens the 3D view. We are so used to seeing or expecting an eleva-
tion to show a flat wall at 90° to the viewpoint simply because the majority of
buildings that exist are of a rectilinear format. Today, we are confronted by excep-
tional examples of a fluid geometry and hence the elevations will seem slightly
odd because of the flattening rule of elevational drawing.
1.4 Stage 3—Interior Divisions/Support Systems 13
Fig. 1.12 Door opening
Fig. 1.13 Modularised partition
14 1 Planning Concept
Fig. 1.14 Plan drawing of the Vortex Centre of the Gippsland Water Factory, Victoria, Australia.
Designed by DesignInc of Melbourne, 2010
Planning involves the organisation of space, enclosure and support systems from a
set of briefing requirements that will suggest location. The starting off point begins
with the pencil drawing from a dot to a line and positioning. The first few marks
made on paper are quite daunting. Faced with a blank canvas, a start has to be
made somewhere. As indicated in Figs. 1.16 and 1.17, do you start from the cen-
tre or the edge? The lines drawn will either represent additional internal divisions
(partitions) or support systems of furniture and generally floor-mounted products.
But, apart from the planning of items, the plan drawing can act as a visual note-
book which are shown as examples in Figs. 1.18 and 1.19.
1.5 Drawing—The Starting off Point 15
Fig. 1.17 Planning from an
edge
16 1 Planning Concept
Fig. 1.18 House plan notations to be interadapted (see Chap. 4, Sect. 4.3). Red arrows indicate
daylight entry and blue arrows indicate key circulation routes. Drawn by author
Fig. 1.19 Showing the decisions having to be made regarding position of divisions and support
systems which are leading subjects, and colour, which we will come to in Chap. 6, can also influ-
ence planning decisions
1.5 Drawing—The Starting off Point 17
1.5.1 Grids
The grid is an essential means of planning building and furniture support systems.
It is never dictatorial but rather affords the designer the control necessary to be able
to position components in respect of human circulation and user requirements. Here
are some examples in Fig. 1.20 using the square, diagonal and circle.
Fig. 1.20 Grids
18 1 Planning Concept
The journey is the pathway or route that follows a particular direction towards a
destination (Fig. 1.21). The Porsch Pavilion in Case Study 1 shows the main spaces
of Entrance, Threshold which is the inbetween stage, Reception where visitors are
greeted and Main Activity where the display and messages are made (Fig. 1.22).
While it is entirely possible for a pathway to be a clear and easily comprehensible
totality, it is more usual for it to be experienced sequentially, marked by distinct
focal points.6 Malnar and Vodvarka
6Malnar and Vodvarka, The Interior Dimension (New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1992) p. 246.
1.7 Case Study 1—The Journey 19
Remarkably, how these recliners would suit the Porsche Pavilion’s lake. See
Sect. 1.9 for planning of loose items (Fig. 1.23).
20 1 Planning Concept
Fig. 1.23 Recliners designed by EOOS from Austria and made in the Philippines by Dedon
2012. The frame is of powder-coated aluminium tube, and the weave is ‘Dedon Fibre’ a synthetic
high density extruded polyethylene
1.8 Layers
Fig. 1.24 Diagram of layers
1.8 Layers 21
Just as plan and section should be considered together, both the fundamental plan-
ning considerations we have discussed—the determination of limits and the
accommodation of physical and psychological function—should occupy the
designer’s mind simultaneously, for they are two coexistent problems that demand
a single solution. It is best that the size, shape and character of a plan not be
determined serially, with practical limits first dictating size and shape, and with
subjective responses to imagined function later dictating character, but that all be
determined together, for character is not separable from physical form but is gov-
erned by it.7 Stanley Abercrombie
The act of drawing whilst planning is not a two-dimensional activity. It may
appear to be so because the paper (or screen) is two-dimensional but the draw-
ing being created represents a three-dimensional object. It is normal practice on
a drawing board (or computer screen) to draw the floor/structural plane first and
place layers of tracing paper over to work out the other two planes of furniture
and ceiling elements. Other layers can be drawn to represent circulation of people
and consideration of services. These layers also exist on the computer screen. Of
course when the scheme is finalised, horizontal cross sections can be drawn which
show all components of the object, and these are very different from the energising
diagrammatic layers illustrated above.
The whole planning process can be complicated because of the overlapping nature
of these layers and other factors. Therefore, a certain amount of discipline has to be
employed by the designer in order to maintain a clear understanding of the problem.
It is rather like cooking whereby various ingredients are selected, accumulated and
prepared separately before being mixed together to produce the final dish. As demon-
strated in my last book, a dimensional grid is essential for positioning and placement.
7Stanley Abercrombie, A Philosophy of Interior Design (New York, Harper and Row, 1990) p. 26.
22 1 Planning Concept
Fig. 1.25 Placement of object
1.10 Case Study 2—Ardmore Park 23
Fig. 1.26 Object layouts
soulless and has no link with the energy or character of the exterior. If you study
the plan in Fig. 1.28, you can see the core in the centre with the two apartments on
the left and right. Apart from the curved ends of each apartment, the central spaces
are rectangular and subsequently detached from the spirit of the exterior (Fig. 1.27).
Fig. 1.27 Ardmore Park, Singapore. Architect Ben van Berkel of UNStudio, 2013. Photograph
by Iwan Baan. Courtesy © Pontiac Land Group. Exterior view
Fig. 1.32 Exterior of building
Fig. 1.33 Typical plan cropped by author to reveal the dominance of the rectangular grid
28 1 Planning Concept
Fig. 1.35 Headfort House, Kells, Ireland, by Robert Adam. Eating Parlour elevational analysis.
1771. Courtesy Yale Center for British Art
Fig. 1.37 Tamina Thermal Baths, Grand Resort Bad Ragaz. Designed by Smolenicky and Part-
ner, 2013. Photograph by Roland Bernath
Fig. 1.39 Glendower House
chapel conversion 2002,
Monmouth, UK. Designed
by Anthony Sully
The most difficult challenge facing any designer is to be able to throw off the
shackles of convention in order to be liberated and handle the spatial needs of the
client without prejudice or primed responses. The baggage that a designer brings
to every project is made up of his/her own predilections, current trends and client’s
preferences. In order to begin the design process, the designer should be neutral-
ised and unbiased. The drawing in Fig. 1.43 is intended to show how all of the
interior elements can be conceived as growing out of the enclosure, even though
they may be moveable, because nothing is suspended in mid-air and it shows the
strongest connection the forms have with the enclosure. The column in the draw-
ing, whilst it is immovable and structural, can still contribute to the space by offer-
ing certain support facilities. From these early conceptual notions, more specific
shapes, materials and textures will be developed in line with the growing demands
of the brief and insightful research.
Figure 1.44 shows how I perceive the design of the chair grew conceptually
from a box to sit on, to the need for an arm rest and to the need for a backrest. The
simplified drawing progression squares everything as a starting point, from which
the designer runs through a variety of choices and aims concluding with the solu-
tion of one continuous flat element that is seemingly bent and formed. It is a par-
ticularly satisfying design because of its innovative approach.
Fig. 1.43 Conceptual 3D origins
34 1 Planning Concept
Fig. 1.44 Concept progression to Aleaf chair designed by Michele Franzina and Venezia Home-
design Team of Designyouedit, Padua, Italy, 2013
The plan in Fig. 1.45 has several ‘skins’ of structure, beginning with the exterior
circle, wrapping around an octagonal enclosure followed by columns also form-
ing an octagon. The circle returns as a central hub with various support systems
concentric to that centre. Note the shelving units fanning out as radii from the cen-
tre. Travelling north/south within this building on the first floor is additional staff
facility with wavy walls. It should be easy to see from Fig. 1.46 how important
it is when planning, to have a grasp of the 3-dimensional qualities of the forms
created. Structure and support systems have equal ranking during the planning
conception. The traditional approach is to plan a building structure then fill it with
the contents, which interior designers have had to suffer for most of the time. The
correct and ideal way of designing a new building is an integrated approach dove-
tailing the structural form with the support systems.
Chapter 2
Circulation Concept
Abstract This chapter is intended to show how more thought is required by the
designer in considering how people access and use our spaces. Horizontal circula-
tion is explained by the various routes that exist, which depends upon the function
of the spaces. Vertical circulation requires more effort either through the use of
stairs, elevators or escalators. Circulation does not just follow the planning of solid
elements, but should be considered in equal weight.
Circulation systems control the way you move around the building or facility. To a
great extent, your impressions of a particular interior environment will depend on your
experience whilst moving from place to place through the circulation system.1 Roberto
Rengel
2.1 Context—Circulation Options—Keyword:
Routing Access
1Roberto Rengel, Shaping Interior Space (New York, Fairchild Publications, 2003) p. 43.
2.1 Context—Circulation Options—Keyword: Routing Access 39
Fig. 2.1 Plan of an empty office floor showing structure and grid lines. Drawn by author
projections into the space. Similar analysis should be undertaken for the ceiling
plan and for all elevations. It is open to each designer to read and interpret what
significance the existing building’s structural details will affect the design pro-
gression, and these interpretations may vary from one designer to another. The
designer may choose to use these geometric forces as an influence upon the shap-
ing of the building form and people circulation routes or he/she may choose to
override them. These details form a reference or starting off point, whether it is
radiating lines as shown or straight line projections.
Figure 2.3 shows the same plan but with a layout of an office that follows the
rectangular grid of the building. The main circulation route is shown feeding the
main spaces starting from the entrance, then through reception, to various office
desking positions. There are only two fully enclosed areas: one for the managing
director and one for the conference room.
Figure 2.4 is a plan of the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in
Bentonville, Arkansas. It shows an organic layout, which snakes around causing
people to follow the curved route experiencing open and enclosed spaces, as well
as bridges over the water.
New non-structural
columns and glass
partitions to help
articulate the space
Fig. 2.3 Plan showing one office layout plus main circulation route through
2.1 Context—Circulation Options—Keyword: Routing Access 41
Fig. 2.4 Crystal Bridges Museum designed by Moshe Safdie (Moshe Safdie, b, 1938 in Haifa,
Israel. He is an Israeli/Canadian architect, urban designer, educator, theorist and author) in 2011
42 2 Circulation Concept
The leading factors controlling the design of an interior are deploying areas of
activity with associated support systems. The people walking through the spaces
and using the facilities also have to be considered by the designer, whilst acknowl-
edging their feelings, emotions and proclivities. Of course these are not controlled
by the design, but rather are affected by the design. So Fig. 2.5 attempts to show
some of the likely horizontal spatial experiences, in an abstract sense that a person
may encounter such as welcome, interrupt, choice of direction, seduction, confron-
tation and persuasion. As soon as the plan and circulation concepts come together,
the designer will begin to visualise the spaces in use and the finishes, materials,
lighting and colours begin to emerge.
Fig. 2.5 Circulation options
2.2 Horizontal Circulation Options 43
Fig. 2.6 Ground floor plan of the converted chapel Glendower House (Anthony Sully, Glen-
dower House Chapel conversion, Monmouth, 2002) Monmouth, showing main circulation routes
both horizontally and vertical access to the first floor
44 2 Circulation Concept
2.2.2 Option 2—Multi-directional
Fig. 2.7 HQ Offices for Surfrider Foundation Europe in Biarritz, France, 2012, designed by
Gardera-D, Stéphane Bauche with acoustic consultants Point d’orgue, Damien Dupouy
2.2 Horizontal Circulation Options 45
…stairways are often areas given the least thought and yet can make a building
more or less easy and joyful to use depending on their design.2 Peter Rich and
Yvonne Dean
Please see Sect. 4.5.6 in Chap. 4 for straight stair types, otherwise other stair
forms are as follows:
• Dog-leg. At least two flights, not necessarily of equal length, and a half landing.
• Open well. With two more flights and with a generous horizontal space between
flights.
• Geometric. Helical, circular or elliptical form rotating from a centre with
tapered treads (see Fig. 2.14).
Figure 2.11 shows two possible directions for ascending from one floor to another,
namely:
B
A
2Peter Rich and Yvonne Dean, Principles of Element Design (Oxford, Butterworth-Heinemann,
1977) p. 129.
48 2 Circulation Concept
2.3.1 A—Incline
Static straight or dog-leg staircase for a person to climb from step to step, or a
ramp if the incline is about 1:12 ratio.
Common usage in homes, flats, firescapes, and any building of less than four
storeys (Fig. 2.12).
2.3.3 A2—Escalator
Fig. 2.13 Escalator in
Bentalls Shopping Centre,
Kingston, Surrey, UK.
Designed by BDP architects
in 1994. Photograph by Andy
Borzyskowski
2.3.4 B—Vertical
2.3.5 B1—Helical Staircase
Helical staircase, as shown in Fig. 2.14, which repeats the same action as A1 but
on a concentrated circular route, hence taking up less floor area.
It can be a second option to A1 where space is at a premium, or it is designed to
be a feature. Hence used in hotels and cinemas but on a larger scale.
2.3.6 B2—Elevator
Fig. 2.14 Helical staircase in
a domestic residence by Fine
Iron, Wales, UK
When two or more floors are involved, the positioning of vertical circulation
becomes regarded as a service area of the building, including means of escape in
case of fire. So rather than being an area designated for any particular activity, it is
a means of getting from one level to another. However, this does not relegate it to a
lower order space in which minimal design effort is required. On the contrary, it
can provide a focus of great design energy, with sculptural forms and, in the case
of elevators, transparent cars. Inclusive Access and designing for the disabled are
now vitally important to the design of circulation.3 Figure 2.15 shows an elevator
placed on the outside of the building, thus saving internal floor space as well as
providing a visual attraction.
Apart from voids, lightwells and atrium spaces, which provide visual connec-
tions between floors in multi-storey buildings, the means of vertical circulation
provide the necessary physical access points. Two aspects to this that designers
should consider are as follows:
• The means and purpose for ascending
• The means and purpose for descending.
3Selwyn Goldsmith, Designing for the Disabled (Abingdon, Oxon, Routledge, 1997).
2.3 Vertical Circulation Options 51
Fig. 2.15 External elevator with transparent car. Channel 4 Office, Victoria, London. By Richard
Rogers Partnership, 1994. Photograph by author
Abstract This chapter deals with perhaps the most difficult task of conceptual-
ising 3D form and space. First, I examine the constituent parts of 3D form, and
then I unfold what a person registers in sequence when entering a space. Light
defines how a space is seen, by reflecting off surfaces and form. Design is about
expression of identity and 3D form will play a major role in this. 3D interior form
is put into three starter groups: the square, circle and triangle families. The chap-
ter continues with illustrations of how junctions and the meeting of surfaces need
close consideration and the intrusive corner concept expanded into possible solu-
tions. The early growth of the ‘integrated’ interior is explained with illustrations,
culminating with examples of ‘Freeform’ architecture. I finally question what is
Deconstructed interior as well as Disintegrated interior?
We require a measure of possession and surrounding to feel the impact and the
beauty of a building. The feeling of buildings and our sense of dwelling within
them are more fundamental to our architectural experience than the information
they give us.1 Bloomer and Moore
3.1 Context—Keyword: Modelling
Three dimensions, within the field of interior design, are defined as being formed
by actual physical shapes of building structure and support systems. The plan-
ning of interiors involves the handling and manipulation of these elements in order
to achieve the amount of space and facilities required. This is achieved through
dimensional spatial control and adjustment. The concept will thus be formed as
something that will eventually be translated into a material reality. There are two
distinct actions that are being made:
1. Enclosing and wrapping space—containment
2. Provision of support systems, objects, furniture—contents
3.2 Constituent Parts
These were explained in this chapter on planning, and we now have to look at
these actions in terms of a feel for the three-dimensional character and forms being
used. There is always a danger that an existing building or a new building being
designed by an architect will impose a structural discipline that distances itself
away from the interior support systems. The designer is then confronted with the
task of FILLING the empty spaces and planning under the constraints of the build-
ing structure. My last book outlined the various conceptual ways that a building
is fitted out, and whatever approach is taken it is important that the resulting inte-
rior demonstrates an harmonious relationship with the building, that it BELONGS,
and feels right to the user and visitor. Looking at the three-dimensional field that
has to be formed means that the designer has to have a good feeling for the space
between these physical elements and must perceive the space nude of any adorn-
ment. Figure 3.1 is summarising possible 3D tasks apart from the floor.
The act of shaping the space and moulding the forms that enclose and occupy means
that a series of decisions have to be made with regard to orientation of the human fig-
ure, and the direction and distance that the enclosing forms spring from ranging from
the vertical to the horizontal. Figure 3.2 is attempting to show what options of surround-
ing forms to a human figure or central feature can be considered by the designer. The
1Kent C Bloomer and Charles W Moore, Body, Memory, and Architecture (New Haven and
Fig. 3.1 Showing whatever 3D options there are for the provision of enclosure and facilities the
floor plane has to be flat, sloped or stepped
Fig. 3.2 3D generation drawing showing orientation and direction from one viewpoint, and
some of the choices of form that will pass through the designer’s mind
shapes are indicating the beginning of options of form, which can expand to many per-
mutations. All interiors have major vistas or viewpoints from key positions. These are
usually the prime movers that the designer uses in designing the interior.
The important point to emphasise here is that the figure, or the pivotal view
within an interior, can rotate 360°, which means careful consideration has to be
56 3 Three-dimensional Concept
made as to what angle or curvature the form will take. The chapter on Planning
advises on what major axis of human circulation will be adopted, and the axis
drawn here will also link to the major planning axis.
All support systems are included within this form-making exercise, but the fol-
lowing needs noting: on many occasions, furniture items will be sourced from
manufacturers and selected on the basis of their fitting in with the 3D concept of
the interior. But they can also be purpose made to the designer’s detailed designs
either by a manufacturer or a craftsperson. The same can be said for many interior
components, which can be specified ‘off the shelf’ or if nothing on the market is
deemed suitable by the designer, then the designer will pursue various options in
order to arrange for a ‘special one off’ product to be installed.
3.3 Realisation Sequence
Figure 3.4 presents the extreme artificial lighting conditions of an interior from
total blackness to total whiteness. They do not of course represent a normal inte-
rior but merely demonstrate both extremes of the light spectrum. It is within these
extreme points that a 3D concept can be formulated simply because light helps
define form. Figure 3.5a, b shows the beginning of light in a dark space and the
defined form through more light before we move back to the Realisation Sequence.
The Chapel of St Albert the Great is a modern extension to a chapel of the
Dominican Order. The Realisation Sequence is labelled in the photograph
(Fig. 3.6). Here are the architect’s notes for the design:
The vaulted roof is formed and shaped by two parallel engineered timber (Kerto S)
beams which run the full length of the chapel. This method of structure can be consid-
ered as the skeleton of the building which provides its unique form. Timber provides a
lightweight solution that provides a seamless link to the timber interior finishes.
The foyer of the chapel is formed by a series of simple but finely crafted oak
frames. The pattern created is consistent with recurring themes within chapel as a
series of entrances that lead to the altar. The joints are simple mortise and tenoned
joints. The oak is untreated and colours are therefore encouraged to gradually change.
Fig. 3.6 Interior of The Chapel of St Albert the Great, George Sq, Edinburgh, Scotland. Archi-
tects Simpson and Brown, 2012. Photograph by Chris Humphreys. Showing the realisation
sequence
The 3D concept of this chapel is comprised of a vertical ribbed wall and ribbed
curved ceiling, a smooth stone wall with apertures, vaulted columns and rows of
support system seating. Through the visual register of this envelope and its con-
tents, the 3D impact is understood. The vaulted columns are worthy of further
examination because they are a diagonal cruciform shape on plan each with a
combination of a two long curved arches and two radially curved arches. Viewed
together, they combine to make a unique stand-alone structure that is reminiscent
of the Gothic arch. The fact that it connects to the building structure with such
delicate nodal points adds to the feeling of lightness in its engineering function.
3.4 Identity
The Bilbao Arena and Sports Centre in Fig. 3.7 is a striking building with a simple 3D
concept that is transmuted into elevational treatment and structure. The concept is based
upon natural form, which relates to the activities of the sports centre as far as healthy
outdoor pursuits are concerned, hence the derivation of form from trees (Fig. 3.8).
Readers familiar with my last book may remember on page 125 my explanation
of the growth of form using a tree as an example: from trunk to branch to twig to
leaf. In the Sports Arena, the columns represent the trunks of trees and the façade
its branches and leaves.
60 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Fig. 3.7 Bilbao Arena and Sports Centre, Spain, 2010. Architects ACXT/Javier Pérez Uribarriy
Nicolás Espinosa Barrientos
It is essential that the student of design understands the basic geometry that is the
beginning of all design thoughts. My last book explained historical sources and
influences, and here I wish to analyse further the beginnings of 3D form as it
relates to a defining concept for interior design. All forms and shapes can be bro-
ken down and analysed in terms of its constituent parts. Let us analyse in Fig. 3.9,
the three basic 2D shapes that are the prime movers of all 3D shapes and forms:
the square, the circle and the equilateral triangle.2
Each illustration shows the complete shape before it is broken down into the
linear and enclosed component parts that are suggested by its inherent underly-
ing symmetrical structure. Each shape is shown with its major axes that either
bisect the shape from the perimeter with coordinates that pass through the cen-
tre, or that are concentric from the centre reproducing the original shape. In
linear terms, the square has four corner parts, four side parts or two large cor-
ner parts. The triangle has three corners and three sides. Because the circle has
no defining perimeter point, its central coordinate divisions are endless. We can
therefore present an example of two and four parts. There are of course endless
permutations for composing more enclosed component parts. It is possible to
divide all shapes into two equal halves using one axis down the centre.
The next series of drawings are matched with appropriate projects and are
showing those families of forms that have a basic relationship together with inte-
riors that fall within that category. This is the beginning of linking those parts of
an interior that constitute a 3D concept such as wall enclosure, low enclosure,
support system and decoration. The drawings are simply illustrative of character
initially, with more complex relationships possible as the interior examples show.
2These are the constituent overlapping shapes that symbolise the Oriental religion of Zen Buddhism.
62 3 Three-dimensional Concept
3.6 Family of Forms
See Fig. 3.10.
The project is for a small not-for-profit office company in Manhattan that needed
their office space to be as flexible as possible for a constantly fluctuating workforce
and a relatively confining office space. Taylor and Miller’s solution was to utilise
the mechanics of an existing collapsible filing system to create office partitions that
actually move to allow for reconfiguration of the offices. They can be configured to
allow for up to seven workstations when fully separated and fully unfolded. They
can also be configured to collapse completely, allowing precious space for events
and larger team-centric workspaces. At a detail level, when occupying the space
between two partitions, one can see that the inward faces of each has been excavated
with the same shape. In other words, what is a storage box protruding on one side is
a recessed storage cubby hole on the other. In this manner, the partitions are bound
together spatially; the relationship between them becoming stronger and stronger as
they are compressed together… until finally they are collapsed completely conceal-
ing the carved space within (Figs. 3.11 and 3.12).
A statement from the architects of the Medical Centre in Fig. 3.14: ‘The way in
which the geometry circulates and unfolds not only promotes an atmosphere of
calm, rest and relaxation but in severe circumstances, also prevents children from
harming themselves on corners: where this space is concerned, right angles are
most definitely the wrong angles’.
64 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Fig. 3.14 Edgecliff Medical Centre, Edgecliff, New South Wales, Australia, designed by Brett
Boardman, 2012
See Fig. 3.15.
It has to be said that it is unusual for any interior to be planned whereby a corner
of two walls meeting would be less than 90°. The use of the equilateral triangle
with internal angles of 60° is not intended to demonstrate interior planning but
merely shows how angular characteristics form a family.
SkyHouse in Fig. 3.16a–c is a residence constructed within a previously unoc-
cupied penthouse structure at the summit of one of the earliest surviving sky-
scrapers in New York City. With its steep hipped roof of projecting dormers and
chimneys set over a base of enormous arched windows, the exterior of the pent-
house gives the impression of an ornate Beaux-Art mansion suspended midway
within the iconic vertical cityscape of Lower Manhattan. But this exterior shell
was essentially an ornament for the skyline; inside was a raw space with only the
original riveted steel structure—amongst the earliest steel frame of any surviv-
ing tower in New York—providing evidence of the late nineteenth century when
the building was built. The angular interior is a complex series of angled planes
reflecting the existing building’s structure.
Fig. 3.16 a, b Skyhouse penthouse, New York, designed by David Hotson architect and interior
designed by Ghislaine Viñas, 2013. c Skyhouse, 3D model
66 3 Three-dimensional Concept
I am well aware that design is not stereotypically trapped inside these categories,
for any 3D concept can be formed from a combination of all of these, because the
language of design is free and open. The classification serves as an example of how
design can begin with some sort of discipline before all hell breaks loose, and the client
throws a fit, or you suddenly shout ‘Eureka’ and madness descends upon the scheme!
Figures 3.17 and 3.18 show a complete breakaway from the standard hotel dou-
ble bedroom and how exciting is this! This brave conceptual thinking involves
integrating a bed, wardrobe storage, a bath up the stairs, shower and washbasin
into one island structure. The angular forms are mirrored in the wall decoration
and even the rug.
Fig. 3.17 Edmund Room in Volshotel, Amsterdam, designed by Jos Blom and Jasper Eustace, 2014
Fig. 3.18 Plan of room
3.7 Junctions and Meeting of Surfaces 67
In the chapter on planning, I dealt with positioning and orientation of objects in rela-
tion to space and the enclosure. The relationship of all 3D forms is not just a question
of massing. It is a question of detail that embraces the form of enclosure, support sys-
tems, colour and texture. The enclosure is usually composed of walls, floor and ceil-
ing. Their relationship and consequent construction and finish are dependent upon the
function of the space. The 3D concept of such a space is determined by this detailed
specification. Space and form should be in harmony; the positive (3D form) and the
negative (space). It is very easy for designers to be persuaded by the common appli-
cation of materials from historical derivation to these enclosing elements in such a
way that a floor could be thought of as being stone, the walls wood and the ceiling
plaster. If these materials enter the designer’s mind in the formative stages of a 3D
concept prior to it being fully resolved, then this prejudices the growth of the concept.
If we examine the empty Victorian interior in Fig. 3.19, we can see how the
plaster cornice provides a way of wall and ceiling to meet. The wooden skirting
provides a way for the wall and floor to meet. The window, door and fireplace
interrupt the wall surfaces but are provided with a frame that connects them to
the walls; such as the doorway has wooden architraves and a pediment over; the
Fig. 3.20 The single cube room, architect John Webb, Wilton House, Wiltshire, England, seven-
teenth century. Photograph by Will Pryce. Copyright Country Life
window has wooden architraves and a sill; the fireplace, which is the main focus
of the room, has a decorative frame, frieze and mantelpiece which can be wood
or marble. There is a decorative frame above the mantelpiece, which could be
reserved for a mirror or painting. Figure 3.20 shows a seventeenth century interior
whereby the furniture has similar decorative features to the rest of the room creat-
ing a very integrated interior. My analysis of the classical orders on page 154 of
my last book explains the kind of reasoning behind the connectivity of these ele-
ments. They are what I will describe as being ‘integrated’.
The seventeenth century interior in Fig. 3.20 shows how the furniture replicates
some of the decorative detail of the walls thus presenting a fully integrated design
(See Sect. 3.10).
Figure 3.21 explains how the enclosure of a simple box interior can be formulated.
The Plain Box interior is probably more of a statement of where interior design is
in the current climate with minimalism and simplicity being the key. The Meeting
of Planes is presenting this as a design consideration, which I believe has been lost
3.8 The Meeting of Planes 69
(a) (b)
(c) (d)
Fig. 3.21 Formulation of the enclosure. a Plain box. b The meeting of planes. c Frames or bor-
ders of each wall and ceiling plane. d Dropped ceiling
in the current milieu of technological wizardry and object and material inventions. I
am suggesting that designers do not ask the conceptual question of ‘How do walls
meet?’ as other controlling factors governing their meeting, such as structure and
materials, have over-ridden such consideration. Frames is emphasising the perimeter
of each planar surface and echoes the earlier period interiors. The Dropped (or sus-
pended) Ceiling in Fig. 3.22 is a means of adding another layer beyond the structure
and emphasising its isolation or separateness from the remaining enclosure. It has
also become a means of defining one part of the space from another.
70 3 Three-dimensional Concept
This follows on from my last book as one of many ideas for destroying the ‘box’
as Frank Lloyd Wright had done by also waging war on the ‘box’ or ‘breaking the
box’ as he preferred to call it. This reaction is caused over the years by the unques-
tioning assumption that interiors have walls, floors and ceilings at right angles to
each other as a starting premise for any design. The intrusive corner attempts to
break the box by providing something that offers far more as I will explain.
The intrusive corner concept (Figs. 3.23 and 3.24) is a direction that I think is
worth exploring for the following reasons:
(a) The Plain Box is cold and unwelcoming, whereas the intrusive corner seeks
to embrace people and the space by its supportive and directed gesture. The
lower support in Fig. 3.23 can provide seating or storage or even display
depending on height control.
(b) The upper intrusion is a comfort/containment gesture that aids intimacy but
can also provide storage or lighting.
The top drawing of Fig. 3.24 shows how cold and detached the rectangular enclo-
sure is, and yet it is used constantly by designers because of custom and ease of
building. The lower drawing shows how the intrusive corner begins to echo our
primeval cave-like enclosure.
I AM PROPOSING THAT THE INTRUSIVE CORNER CONCEPT BECOMES
A STANDARD PROVISION OR STARTING POINT IN ALL INTERIORS AS
OPPOSED TO THE SIMPLE BOX BEING THE STARTING POINT. I THINK IT
IS BETTER TO BE CONFRONTED WITH THE PROSPECT OF REDUCING A
GIVEN PROVISION AS OPPOSED TO PROVIDING SOMETHING THAT HAS
HAD NO THOUGHT FOR THOUSANDS OF YEARS, BUT MERELY REFLECTS
UPON A GIVEN BUILDING PROCESS.
By reducing I mean that by starting with the intrusive corner, and the particular
function of a given space demands a 90° corner, then a reductive gesture is made.
To continue with this theme from my last book, I show a standard 3-bedroom
house plan from the UK, as shown in Fig. 3.25, which will be adapted by my pro-
posal using the intrusive corner (Fig. 3.26).
The standard house building technique in the UK has been centred around build-
ing walls of brick, block or timber frame. Building services are an ‘add-on’ and gen-
erally result in extra ductwork being applied. Support systems such as storage have
been woefully neglected and REDUCED over the years. The demise of the British
Parker Morris Standards, which laid down the minimal space-use guide for housing,
72 3 Three-dimensional Concept
has not helped the situation. The house will have bare walls with the expectation that
the occupant will provide all support systems in terms of loose furniture. In Victorian
times, many houses were built with cellars, albeit mainly for storing coal, which was
delivered through a manhole cover in the pavement outside the front of the house.
Most houses had a loft, which was used for storage. Now, many lofts, or roof spaces,
are converted to provide extra accommodation thus forsaking the storage space. Even
new house designs provide such accommodation in the so-called loft space with dor-
mer windows! As I write, there is much public outcry about house-builders produc-
ing ‘rabbit hutch’ designs and without using an architect. Many houses do not have
garages and this compounds the problem. Garages that are provided are used for stor-
age and workshop activities but certainly not for cars! To give you an example, I have
visited a few new houses recently and this is what I find is lacking:
1. An understairs cupboard (or just an open space) is the only general storage
provision.
2. There is no space for shoes and wellies (back or front of house).
3. There is no hanging space for coats.
4. There is no decent linen storage space apart from a small shelf in the airing
cupboard.
5. There is no decent space for ironing, even if a utility room is provided.
3.9 The Intrusive Corner 73
A wide range of family activities are becoming more personal and individual. At
the present time, if someone wanted to carry out an individual task, they would
probably use the dining room table, or a kitchen work surface. There is more need
for individual cells for working and special provision needs to be made. These
areas need not be personalised but open for anyone in the family to use.
Figure 3.26 shows a grid using the intrusive corner as a channel or zone that
provides structure as well as providing space for enclosure, storage, work sur-
face, seating, window positioning and door access. This can be achieved by using
hinged, sliding and folding panels, with adjustable shelving. This provision, whilst
it may take up more floor area than standard houses, will obviate the need for
many standard furniture items and allows for flexibility of choice for the occupier.
It will also enable spaces to be divided up around the perimeter creating smaller
cells of activity that more truly reflect the demands of modern living, than the
larger mixed use spaces we are familiar with.
74 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Figures 3.27 and 3.28 show an elevation and perspective of a basic modular
ordering system offering permutation of layout and not a finished design solution.
Imagine the sales slogan: NO FURNITURE REQUIRED! Also the basic foot-
print of the house could be smaller as all storage/work surfaces are perimeter based.
If parts of a wall were required to be free of any shelving or storage, then that can
be part of the option system. The worktop cell could be replicated and positioned in
any room to cater for each member of the family. It does absorb the fairly common
storage wall concept that mainly exists in more expensive houses and commercial
premises. The standard domestic house mainly consists of a box of plain walls with
no other provision of facilities, and now that the ubiquitous picture rail has disap-
peared there is only the skirting board left to demonstrate a token provision of a
facility of wall protection from cleaning equipment and loose furniture.
Let us examine how this impoverished situation, as described in the last paragraph,
has come about from early architecture to the present day:
3.10.1 Architectural Form
Fig. 3.29 Section through the Byzantine church of Hagia Sophia, Istanbul, 532–537 A.D. From
Wilhelm Lübke/Max Semrau: Grundriß der Kunstgeschichte. 14. Auflage. Paul Neff Verlag,
Esslingen, 1908; German Wikipedia, original upload 28. Aug 2004 by Rainer Zenz
Mahal.
5The origins of this mosque lie in the eighth century, but it burnt down and was rebuilt again in the
eleventh century and went through remodelling many times. As a result it has rooms built in different
architectural styles, so now the mosque represents a condensed history of the Iranian Architecture.
76 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Fig. 3.30 Cross section
through Chartres mediaeval
Cathedral, France. Drawn by
author
interiors, their external roofs were pitched as Fig. 3.30 of Chartres Cathedral illus-
trates and therefor not as integrated. Some simple English village churches do
echo the pitch internally but they will expose the trusses in a decorative manner.
Scanning through the rest of history since the Middle Ages, it would appear that
the style of all major buildings is reliant upon their facades and interiors but the roofs
have no connection whatsoever (except domed structures) in that they are merely
pitched. I cannot find any example of a major building whose exterior roof form is an
integrated visual form of the interior, apart from buildings in the Middle East whose
flat roofs were built due to the climatic conditions and lack of rainfall—UNTIL the
birth of Modernism6 and the ‘Flat Roof’ of buildings designed by Louis Sullivan7 and
Frank Lloyd Wright. The flat roof is of course an integral part of the ‘boxy’ architec-
ture that is so common these days. Other examples of integrated architecture were the
great industrial ‘sheds’ using cast iron such as railway stations and the Exchange
Building in Amsterdam of 1897 designed by H.P. Berlage.8 The next phase of inte-
grated architecture produces projects, which CAD has enabled with such work of
Zaha Hadid and Frank Gehry, for example. The ‘parametric’ interiors are also visibly
expressed on the outside. This is what I call ‘Freeform’ (see Sect. 3.11).
decoration. It began at the turn of the twentieth century with efforts to reconcile the principles underly-
ing architectural design with rapid technological advancement and the modernisation of society.
7Louis Henry Sullivan (1856–1924) was an American architect and has been called the ‘father of
The Hazukashi House which was completed in 2014 in Kyoto, Japan, presents a
very modern Integrated architectural and interior design solution. The pitched roof
form is seen in the interior, but the angular shape of this roof is also replicated
in terms of doorway openings, spatial wall divisions and even display recesses
(Figs. 3.31, 3.32 and 3.33).
Fig. 3.31 Interior of the Hazukashi House. Architects: Alts Design Office, Japan, 2014
78 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Fig. 3.32 Plan
3.10.3 Interior Form
The development of the integrated interior began with simple decoration and items
of furniture:
1. Wall decoration was a human gesture of showing an attachment to the space.
And walls, as well as ceilings and to a lesser extent floors, have continued to be
a source of important decoration and function.
2. Sophistication appeared from mediaeval times with wall hangings, paintings
and wall sculptures.
3.10 Growth of the Integrated Interior 79
Fig. 3.34 An Aumbry
from St Matthew’s Church,
Langford, Oxfordshire
England. Thirteenth century.
Owner Motacilla, Wikipedia
Commons, 2010
Fig. 3.35 Library of Mellerstain House, Scotland by William and Robert Adam from 1725.
Drawn by author
Fig. 3.36 Kitchen
in Burghley House,
Stamford, England,
sixteenth century.
Courtesy Burghley
House
3.10 Growth of the Integrated Interior 81
Fig. 3.37 The Dining room from the Library, Sir John Soane’s Museum, London, 1812. Cour-
tesy the Trustees of the Sir John Soane’s Museum
6. Sir John Soane’s Museum was a breakthrough in interior design and gave
Soane the opportunity to develop ideas that he would apply in later commis-
sions. The design was very complex dealing with space and light in a quite
extraordinary way. He could be described as being one of the first modern inte-
rior designers. The dining room in Fig. 3.37 demonstrates how he divides space
by curved screen canopies coming down from the ceiling and glazed shelving
display fixtures integrated into the walls.
Figures 3.38, 3.39 and 3.40 show how storage has been integrated into the struc-
ture of the building. The predominance of wood is reminiscent of Tudor times
and was very much part of the Arts and Crafts movement whose purpose was to
emphasise connections with natural materials. The beauty of wood is that it can
be expressed as structure in terms of columns and beams, as well as smaller solid
sections and veneered panels for joinery items. There is really not another material
that has that kind of versatility in construction and acceptability in function.
82 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Fig. 3.39 Shows the main forces of form that help define the 3D concept. Courtesy Blackwell.
The Arts and Crafts House. © Lakeland Arts
The notion of built-in implies that it is not moveable. This window seat in
Fig. 3.41 is very much part of the architecture of the building and under the seat
was sometimes used for storage. Typical modern storage solutions that are built-
in and combine functions or are linked to other functions are ‘Under stairs’,
‘Bedroom units’, ‘Kitchen units’, ‘Lounge units’ and ‘Bathroom units’.
Figure 3.42 shows how the combined function approach integrates open-shelf
display with an electric fire and a desk. The streamlined aesthetic followed the Art
Deco lines of the period. The more recent design of a staircase in Fig. 3.43 is as
far removed from the traditional concept as possible, acknowledging that it would
3.10 Growth of the Integrated Interior 83
Fig. 3.40 Main Hall at Blackwell House. Courtesy Blackwell. The Arts and Crafts House. ©
Lakeland Arts. Photograph by Nick Wood
Fig. 3.41 Window seat in Blackwell House. Courtesy Blackwell. The Arts and Crafts House. ©
Lakeland Arts
84 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Fig. 3.43 Suspended stair, storage and desk system designed by Studio Mieke Meijer from
Eindhoven, 2014
3.10 Growth of the Integrated Interior 85
not pass safety regulations in the UK. The design is also questionable from the
point of view of its function. For example:
1. Why separate the stair into two halves, with the suspended half being so close
to connection to the lower half which would reduce the structural strain of
suspension?
2. Access to displayed objects at higher level difficult.
3. To work at a desk in such a situation would be stressful to say the least.
4. Having seen my previous images of integrated interiors, this example shows
how things go wrong when a multiple functioned design has no relationship
with the interior.
Figure 3.44 is such a charming and caring solution towards a household’s pet. The
‘Dog-house Sofa’ unites a dog seat with a person seat in an integrated way that
separates whilst at the same time providing a table/armrest. Visual and physical
contact with the pet can be made under this surface.
Figure 3.45 shows a living room with open shelving, glass doors to shelves and
drawer units all combining as one entity. My one criticism is that the TV is far too
high for viewing from a seated position, and yet it appears to be a popular position
in many homes. The TV screen should be at eye level as the early bulky models on
stands used to be (see left-hand diagram in Fig. 3.46), but since the introduction
of the flat screen in LCD or plasma, the ability to hang these on the wall became a
reality (see right-hand diagram).
Fig. 3.45 Domestically fitted display and storage units along one wall with a TV screen as cen-
tral focus. By No.29 Design, Christina Katos, Boston, USA, 2012
The fact that the flat screen has created more floor space has influenced people
to purchase huge screens to help create a cinematic effect in the room.
Figure 3.47 shows the foyer of the Millennium Theatre in Cardiff which is a sad
indictment of the state of modern public interior design. It is the opposite of an inte-
grated interior, with no focus, no cohesive geometry, and upper levels and stairs appear-
ing to have no relation with the wall opposite. The people seem lost and uncatered for.
The Camper Shoe Store in Fig. 3.48 is a superb example of an integrated interior.
It is part of the Square Family with a rectangular enclosure, rectangular support sys-
tems, such as the central white display table almost mimicking a dinner setting, and
the red service counteracting as a powerful focus. The beauty of this 3D design is how
the shoe was the starting concept as a small component of the interior to be displayed
3.10 Growth of the Integrated Interior 87
Fig. 3.48 Camper Shoe Store, New York, 2014. Designed by Oki Sato of Nendo, Tokyo, Japan.
Photograph by Daici Ano
88 3 Three-dimensional Concept
and subsequently sold. It is replicated by hundreds of white resin dummy shoe dis-
plays which are replaced by an actual shoe when it suits the store. The wall layout
is not just a simple vertical square grid but a diagonal square grid that increases the
attachment of the displays. This dotted aesthetic is repeated in the rows of spotlights.
3.11 Freeform
In addition to the previous three families of form, I have described there is one
more that reflects the computer age we live in, namely Freeform. There are many
examples of 3D geometry that defy symmetry and the traditional rectilinear shapes
that we are most familiar with. A common label of this work is Deconstructivism9
(see p. 92). On the one hand, there is the work of Frank Gehry10 and Daniel
Libeskind11 and on the other is the highly fluid architecture of Zaha Hadid.12
3.11.1 Case Study 5
Angeles, USA.
11Daniel Libeskind is an American architect, artist and set designer of Polish Jewish descent.
12Dame Zaha Mohammad Hadid, DBE, is an Iraqi-British architect. She received the Pritzker
Architecture Prize in 2004—the first woman to do so—and the Stirling Prize in 2010 and 2011.
13The Azeri culture of Azerbaijan has developed under influence of Islamic and European cul-
tures, Iranian and Turkish heritage as well as Russian influences due to its former status as a
Soviet republic.
3.11 Freeform 89
Fig. 3.50 The interior reveals a new type of enclosure where floor, wall and ceiling are a con-
tinuous surface. Photograph by Hufton and Crow
90 3 Three-dimensional Concept
3.11.2 Grotto Sauna
Perched at the north-west edge of a private island near Toronto, Canada, the Grotto
Sauna in Fig. 3.52 is a sculpted space, a sensual experience, and a sophisticated
exercise in building science.
14Bauhaus, was a school in Germany that combined crafts and the fine arts, and was famous for
the approach to design that it publicised and taught. It was founded by Walter Gropius in Weimar,
Germany from 1919 to 1933.
3.11 Freeform 91
The site is a prehistoric large-scale rock formation, and the concept prescribed
a solid, simple presence on the exterior, whilst the interior follows dynamic air
movements in curvature forms. Challenging the standards of current practices in
the construction industry, the architects worked directly with a millwork and steel
fabrication partner on every detail. They developed a new process of fabrication—
utilising state-of-the-art 3D technology to scan, model and build the Grotto.
92 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Using timber in such a fluid and organic way demands far more complex work-
ing than using it in panel or member form. The end result is a comforting womb-
like container that is far more relaxing than the normal sauna box solution.
deconstructivism.
16Peter Eisenman is an American architect and academic.
17Jacques Derrida, (1930–2004) was a French philosopher, born in French Algeria. Derrida is
best known for developing a form of semiotic analysis known as deconstruction. He is one of the
major figures associated with post-structuralism and postmodern philosophy.
18Remment Lucas ‘Rem’ Koolhaas is a Dutch architect, architectural theorist, urbanist and
Professor in Practice of Architecture and Urban Design at the Graduate School of Design at
Harvard University.
19Bernard Tschumi, Architecture and Disjunction (Cambridge, Massachusetts, and London, MIT
press) p. 259.
3.11 Freeform 93
buildings just did not work. Gehry has often been criticised for producing wasteful
‘Functionless Forms’.
My sketch in Fig. 3.53 illustrates very simply the basic effect such forms can
have on people and whilst I am advising caution I do accept that some projects
have appropriate justifications: the left-hand image represents the normality of the
vertical as a stabilising influence (both sides) that creates a certain security, and
this cannot be ignored by designers. The middle image demonstrates (one sided)
the instability created by forms that appear threatening rather than inviting. The
final image is a kind of reversal of the middle (one sided) but would create some
degree of emotional release from the severity of the vertical. It is curious that all
forms of building since primitive times have been preoccupied with the first two
illustrations only, according to my own experiences. The third illustration does
exist in the form of the hull of boat interiors, albeit curved (Fig. 3.54).
Fig. 3.54 Section through
small boat
94 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Fig. 3.55 a 1992–1997 NEMO (National Center for Science and Technology) Amsterdam,
The Netherlands, Renzo Piano Building Workshop, architects, Ph. Michel Denancé (courtesy
Fondazione Renzo Piano). b 1992–1997 NEMO (National Center for Science and Technology)
Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Renzo Piano Building Workshop, architects, section (Courtesy
Fondazione Renzo Piano)
But curiously this womb-shaped, cocooned and cosy enclosing form has not
been employed to any great degree in building interiors. The form of the boat is
following its function of being capable of floating, which is not a function associ-
ated with buildings. Even so, when trying to adopt such a curve to a building poses
some design issues as to practicalities of use in the interior and a possibly unwel-
come approach from the exterior. The Renzo Piano Building Workshop’s design
for the NEMO (National Centre for Science and Technology) in Fig. 3.55a, b built
on the port of Amsterdam comes close to such a concept as it is definitely inspired
by the hull of a boat. Consultants: Ove Arup & Partners, D3BN (structure); Ove
Arup & Partners, Huisman & Van Muijen B.V. (services); Peutz (acoustics); and
Bureau voor Bouwkunde (local support).
3.11 Freeform 95
Another project that comes close to this theme is the National Museum Café
in Canberra. In Fig. 3.56, the exterior is unwelcoming and threatening according
to my second sketch in Fig. 3.53, but it would appear that people do not have to
approach these angled exterior walls for entry. Also, the angled fins help to allevi-
ate the hostility of a continuous surface. The interior view certainly invokes the
feelings displayed in my third sketch in Fig. 3.46, of relaxation and calm, both
on the window side and the server side. The pitched ceiling in Fig. 3.57 is less
oppressive than a horizontal one and hence is supportive of calm.
The Metropolis Recording Studios in Fig. 3.58 was a tour de force in applying
similar principles of disintegration but these were measured, mixed and controlled
to not only satisfy the user but also to acknowledge, as Powell-Tuck states: Its an
interior with the ghost of what went before. The ‘ghost’ referring to the building’s
original use as a power station designed in 1901. The interior consists of wall parts
in angled layered panels (referring to the acoustic panels in the recording studios)
and plans of room shapes at disjointed angles.
The Birkbeck Centre in Fig. 3.59 is another example of not only defying stable
geometry in favour of unnerving angles, but also delivering an onslaught of colour that
is such an uncommon experience for people, compared with the muted tones of white,
greys, browns and pastel colours that are more of a common experience. The scheme
would appear to match the dynamics of the image making industry of the user.
This house in Kyoto is part of the Triangle family and the interiors are beauti-
fully triangulated. The excellent perspective shows a structural skeletal framework
within which the triangulated panels interconnect (Figs. 3.60 and 3.61).
96 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Fig. 3.58 Metropolis Recording Studios, London, UK, by Powell-Tuck, Connor and Orefelt, 1990
3.11 Freeform 97
Fig. 3.59 Birkbeck Centre for Film and Visual Media Research, London University, London,
UK. Designed by Surface Architects, 2007
However, pure Minimalism and the imposition of strict order and regulation is a
limited taste.20 Clive Edwards
Minimalism grew out of the early modernist aims of the ‘cleansing’ of the
excesses of Victorian design with its highly decorative content, culminating in the
20Clive Edwards, Interior design, A Critical Introduction (Oxford, Berg, 2011) p. 48.
3.12 Is Minimalism the Disintegrated Interior? 99
‘Bauhaus’ school of design. Its purpose was to aim for a purification of space and
form using materials without any adornment. When applied religiously, it can pro-
duce a sense of calm because the human eye is not faced with a clash of issues
nor a visual onslaught that could be construed as disturbing. Deconstructivism has
passed it by as the main rules appear to follow the horizontal and vertical with
unparalleled zeal. On the one hand, this environment was considered to be a sign
of high status and still many clients believe this to true. On the other hand, it can
result in such a clinical atmosphere that the human soul is starved of warmth and
comforting gestures, and this concurs with my own view. Associations with harsh
environments such as prisons, hospitals, factories and warehouses can be made.
My main criticism of this style is that it represents a denial of human expression
whereby the human senses are robbed of the physical variations of stop, pause,
flutter, rollover, jump, bang and slide that affect our emotions.
This domestic interior in Fig. 3.62 is so bland, cold and clinical. This is because
the designers have pursued the modernist and minimalist principles to the extreme,
forgetting that a home is not necessarily a homage to the designer. Now, the client
Fig. 3.62 Weinheim
House interior,
designed by Architekten
Wannenmacher + Möeller,
Weinheim, Germany, 2014
100 3 Three-dimensional Concept
Fig. 3.63 Green Edge House, Fujieda, Japan, 2013. Designed by mA-style Architects. Photo-
graph by Makoto Yasuda
may also be at fault here in that it answers the brief, but the client is not the pro-
fessional, who is charged with interpreting the needs and wants into a receptive
human environment. The purist will defend this type of solution, but I cannot see
any sign of embellishment which beckons or is inviting.
This house in Fig. 3.63 is one of the most extreme examples of non-architecture
that I have ever seen, in that it has no beginning or end; contextually it is ignoring
its neighbours. It is apparently floating and gives the impression that it is ready for
some advertising hoarding. It is also vulnerable to graffiti. This solution is very
one dimensional, negative, and unwelcoming. It says more about the architect’s
ego than anything else. I would say that in this example, design has been disinte-
grated into almost nothing; a blank canvas waiting for something to happen.
Chapter 4
Construction Concept
Abstract Construction and concept are not natural bedfellows so I explain basic
construction principles and relationships of components. It is about how things
come together. I propose a new word ‘Interadapt’ which is about what interior
design does to a building. I describe two basic fixing relationships: fixing to struc-
ture and object to object. This involves structure to support systems, from doors to
furniture, and shelving and stairs. I ask the question of what is expressed simply to
emphasise how important a contribution construction makes towards defining the
character and concept of the final interior. I provide examples including the tricky
element of glass, which deals with the notion of transparency.
4.1 Context—Keyword: Making
This chapter is not about construction in detail but the conceptual thinking
behind the construction. In many students’ minds, construction detailing or
working drawings are something that are done towards the end of a project,
but this is a misguided notion. Before final drawings are executed to show
and specify precise connections and assembly, the principle of how materials
come together conceptually must be worked out first. The process of design-
ing is a two-way process in that whilst the first thoughts may be about the form
and aesthetics, the means of making (construction) can inform back to the
design to help with decision-making. In order for a concept to be developed,
the designer must be fully acquainted with all forms of building construction.
Conventionally, it is this knowledge that can be a hindrance to conceptual think-
ing. I will explain.
The normal accepted full internal division of different spaces within a build-
ing is usually achieved by drawing 100–150 mm thick ‘walls’. Immediately, going
through the designers mind will be the following two limiting thoughts:
• The wall will be drawn on plan as being a vertical flat surface.
• Construction will be either a softwood/metal stud partition or brick and plaster.
It is as though any support system is a separate issue to spatial divisions, and
they are usually added as loose items or fixed to these walls or enclosure as being
‘built-in’. To properly consider the 3D quality of form and space as a response to
the brief, there should be no such artificial demarcation of structure as has been
commonly used for decades.
Figure 4.1 shows a 3D drawing of a hypothetical double-height partition that
is cranked on plan with a work surface crossing diagonally from one space to the
other. Convention would probably indicate first thoughts of a straight partition
with a table either side. This example is not a habit-forming solution, but rather an
indication of breaking free from traditional constraints and exploring more notions
of vertical division and horizontal surface.
1Roland Ashcroft, Constriction for Interior Designers, (Harlow, Longman Group Ltd., 1985)
p. 1.
4.2 How Things Come Together 103
2Charles Rennie Mackintosh (1868–1928) was a Scottish architect, designer, water colourist and
artist. He was a designer in the post-impressionist movement and also the main representative of
Art Nouveau in the UK.
3Arne Emil Jacobsen, Hon. FAIA (1902–1971) was a Danish architect and designer. He is
remembered for his contribution to architectural functionalism as well as for the worldwide suc-
cess he enjoyed with simple but effective chair designs.
104 4 Construction Concept
the various ‘makers’ of interiors and an indicative list of the materials that belong
within their general sphere of production:
Builders—dealing with primary and secondary structures using brick, concrete,
plaster, timber or steel;
Engineers—employed if needed for structural alterations and building services.
Shopfitters—support systems of internal assembly of joinery, partitions, doors,
ceilings, flooring and general finishes.
Contract Furnishers and Decorators—surface finishes, soft furnishing, hard
furnishing, kitchens and bathrooms, lighting.
Craftspeople—special commissions of objects in a variety of materials.
Plus of course the rising importance of computers and IT and communications.
The sequence could be:
WHAT HOW WHO
CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS CHOICE ALSO GOVERNED BY WHO
CONCEPT FIXINGS BUILDS
ASSEMBLY
INSTALLATION
4Anthony Sully, Interior Design: Theory and Process, (London, A and C Black, 2012), p. 172.
4.3 Interadapt—New Word! 105
4.3 Interadapt—New Word!
This is my proposed word for describing the physical work done to a building as
a result of an interior design project being implemented. It is derived from two
words: ‘Interior’, which covers the subject matter in hand, and ‘Adapt’, which
sums up what we are doing to a building through the design process. We are adapt-
ing it to suit the new use or new client. Just in the same way that humankind has
adapted the planet to suit our needs.
The reason for this proposal is that there is a gap in the English vocabulary
to summarily describe the essence of what interior design does to a building.
Architects design buildings, which are built. ‘Built’ being a derivative from the
word ‘building’. You could say interior designers design interiors that are built, but
it is just repeating what architects do and does not define what interior design-
ers totally do to a building. There are other words such as convert, or ‘fit-out’,
which usually refers to an office interior. ‘Space planning’ again belongs to the
office design arena. ‘Refurbish’ is about improving the existing interiors. ‘Restore’
and ‘Renovate’ are about restoring the building back to its original state and style
(Restoration). ‘Remodel’ is borrowed from modelling and is not really appro-
priate. ‘Rehabilitate’ is the same as restore. ‘Assemble’ strictly refers to a range
of products that fit to each other to create a partition, or staircase, or other join-
ery work. ‘Decorate’ refers to only the finishing stages of an interior project.
‘Furnishing’ only refers to the furniture and décor. ‘Environmental design’ is a
loose woolly term and mainly covers environmental engineering. ‘Installation’
covers particular goods rather than those activities carried by trades and craft-
speople. So we can say furniture and partitions are installed, plaster and paint are
applied, walls are clad with panels, carpet is fitted and tiles are laid. In the UK, we
describe the stages of fitting out in terms of ‘1st Fix’ which covers all preparatory
106 4 Construction Concept
work such as concrete, plaster, carpentry framework and preliminary building ser-
vices work and 2nd Fix which is all the finishing work. At the present time, the
following applies.
The designers will say:
I have just completed a conversion.
I have just completed a refurbishment.
I have interior-designed this property.
I have designed the interior.
The ‘makers’ can say:
I have built this interior.
I have installed this interior.
I have fitted out this interior.
I have decorated this interior (only part of the work).
I have furnished this interior.
Now if you use my proposed term, it includes all of the above:
I have just interadapted this building. Meaning that you have designed and super-
vised the building and installation of an interior. The building has been interadapted.
More terms:
The interiors have undergone an interadaption—noun.
The next stage is to interadapt this space—verb.
We are interadapting this building—present participle.
Let us examine the stages or different methods of building an interior (or intera-
dapt) to the structure of a given building shell:
1. Adding to the structure in terms of the enclosure (walls, floors, ceilings) refer
Sect. 4.2.
2. Application of liquid coatings such as plaster and paint, and linings direct not
only onto structure but also onto cladding panels.
3. Application of flexible membranes such as wallpaper, PVC and leather.
4. Cladding of rigid materials such as panels, ceramic tiles, marble and ceiling
systems.
5. Fixing of a framework to which panels may be fixed (Figs. 4.3 and 4.4).
The enclosure is described in simple terms as being comprised of walls, floor and
ceiling. The relationship of any independent fixtures to these elements can be
described in terms of being:
WALLS—fixed direct or cantilevered )
FLOOR—free standing/fixing )
CEILING—suspended ) INTERADAPT
BETWEEN FLOOR AND CEILING—wedged )
FROM WALL TO WALL—spanning )
Fig. 4.4 Framework
4.4 Construction Choices
There may be instances when some component parts of the interior will require
moving, repositioning or adjusting according to client’s requirements. So when
fixings are considered, they will either be made to be permanent or capable of
being unfixed for adjustment.
4.4.1 Fixing to Structure
The primary structure may be concrete, brick, block, steel or timber (plus coatings
or cladding as specified), and each material demands special fixing devices which
are many and complex. New work may also use same as existing structural materi-
als. The following illustrates a few of these.
4.4.2 Fixings
The facing object can sometimes be fixed direct to the ground dependent upon
materials used. But usually, there is a supporting intermediary between the
ground and facing object as Fig. 4.6 illustrates. If the fastening of the facing
4.4 Construction Choices 109
object was not to be seen, then it can be concealed through a secret fixing device.
Alternatively, there are several methods of expressing the screw fixing as a coun-
tersunk head in a sunken cup washer or a domed screw head as used to fix mirrors.
Examples of fastenings:
The first two items above are inserted into a pre-drilled hole in plaster or
brickwork ready to receive a screw. When the screw is inserted, the main body
110 4 Construction Concept
of the plug expands and hence grips the wall of the hole providing a firm fixing.
The screw is of course already through an object such as a timber batten, metal
bracket and so on, which is the main purpose of this fixing. The cavity wall fixing
is used to fix an item to a panel such as plasterboard. The plasterboard is already
fixed to a wall on battens which leaves a cavity between it and the structural wall.
The cavity fixing bolt shown with the wings closed up is pushed through the item
(wall bracket, for example) and a pre-drilled hole in the plasterboard. Whereupon
the wings fly open on a spring and when the bolt (with washer) is tightened, the
washer and wings clamp the bracket to the plasterboard.
All fixings below are doing similar jobs but for tougher materials and structure.
The eyes and hook are for attaching cables. The wire hanger is for use with sus-
pended ceilings which hang on wires or metal straps (Fig. 4.7).
The drawing in Fig. 4.8 is showing a wall pre-drilled to accept two rawlplugs,
and a batten pre-drilled to accept two screws which will pass through to bite on the
plugs and when tightened will secure the batten to the wall. Battens are usually
hidden from the interior because they are facilitating future product fixings and
therefore are basic carpentry softwood.5 When screws are screwed into the batten,
washers or cups can be used to prevent the screw biting into the batten and reduc-
ing the depth of wood being gripped.
Concrete eye bolt Roofing bolt with sq nut Masonry anchor bolt
5For timber construction see: John Eastwick-Field and John Stillman, The Design and Practice of
Joinery, (London, The Architectural Press, 1958).
4.4 Construction Choices 111
This wall hung desk unit does not appear to have any visible means of support
or fixing. The designers obviously wanted to provide a clean bond between desk
and wall. The wall appears to be clad in a dark-stained wood panel, which in turn
would be fixed either to framework or to the structure of the building. The con-
struction concept here is to hide the joining of materials rather than express them.
Note the discreet recessed spotlights (Fig. 4.9).
4.4.4 Blockwork Partitions
The blockwork partitions in Fig. 4.10 are the same built around existing cast-iron
columns in a square layout as Fig. 4.11 shows. The design proposed a semicircular
niche which was achieved by fixing curved softwood formers on to the blockwork.
The plasterboard was scored as Fig. 4.12 shows to enable it to be curved onto the
formers. The applied skim of plaster followed a true curve. The skirting was steam
bent oak to follow the same radius.
Examples chosen are those I consider to be the most common in interior design
and exclude the many decorative items that exist:
A. Door to partition—fixing required (access provision)
B. Worktop to supporting framework—fixing required (working surface)
C. A table—loose support system (multifunctional surface)
D. A chair—loose support system (seating)
E. Shelf to supporting framework—fixing required (display and storage)
F. Stair tread to supporting elements—fixing required (vertical circulation plus E)
The combination of shelving and framework can produce many items of furniture
such as wardrobes and storage cupboards of all kinds. There are also many smaller
independent objects such as light fittings and mirrors plus a plethora of other objects
which are not included in this conceptual focus of the broad subjects listed above.
I expand on more support systems in Chap. 5 when I focus on the materials
used. Of course, many design solutions could merge any of the above and overlaps
can occur.
4.5.1 Door to Partition
One of the greatest departures from the conventional door in recent times
must be the evolution door designed by the Austrian artist Klemens Torggler
(Figs. 4.13, 4.14, 4.15, 4.16, 4.17 and 4.18). The evolution door (made 2013, sized
1300 mm × 2600 mm × 36 mm) is made out of wood, MDF, lacquer, cellular rubber
and steel (hinges and mechanics). There are a few variations on this door, one with the
origami-esque triangles that fold out to help the door move and another system with
rods that rotate two square panels. The beauty of this idea is that it has re-examined
the function of doorway access. The mechanisms that we are used to in the past are
either a hinged single panel or a hinged folding panel, or a sliding panel. This product
comes under the category of ‘Mechanics of Operation’ (MOO) as discussed in my last
book on page 138. Let us examine the stages Torggler might have gone through:
1. He divided the opening into two separate square panels, which are just larger than
the opening, as shown in Fig. 4.13. All photographs were taken by Akos Vincze.
2. He then decided against the common practice of sliding the door horizontally
in this position but conceived of two fixed pivot points, one at the head and one
at the base, to rotate the two panels as shown in Fig. 4.14.
3. But in order for the square panels to effect a rotation, they each had to fold along
the diagonal but also pivoting on one corner only, the other corner being unat-
tached, as shown in Figs. 4.15 and 4.16. They fold outwards away from the wall,
which means the door takes up part of the room territory as shown in Fig. 4.17.
4. This enabled the final action of closure to be achieved as shown in Fig. 4.18.
4.5 Object-to-Object Fixing/Support Systems 115
Fig. 4.13 Evolution door 1
Fig. 4.14 Evolution door 2
116 4 Construction Concept
Fig. 4.15 Evolution door 3
Fig. 4.16 Evolution door 4
4.5 Object-to-Object Fixing/Support Systems 117
Fig. 4.17 Evolution door 5
Fig. 4.18 Evolution door 6
118 4 Construction Concept
Fig. 4.19 Worktops down
for use. Arts Council
Regional Office, West
Midlands, England,
2012. Architects Moxon.
Photograph by Simon
Kennedy
Fig. 4.20 Worktops begin to
be raised off the floor
4.5 Object-to-Object Fixing/Support Systems 119
The table has a locating device to hold it in the floor, and it is hinged to the wall as
shown in Fig. 4.19. The supporting plane has a mitred hinged joint meeting the work-
top. A cable winches the table up to the vertical position as seen in Figs. 4.20 and 4.21.
Another example in Figs. 4.22 and 4.23 is of a MOO design for a Didomestic
apartment in Madrid designed by Elii Architects: Uriel Fogué, Eva Gil, Carlos
Palacios. This is their project description:
120 4 Construction Concept
The challenge was to create a design that makes optimal use of the reduced space by
creating flexible rooms that can be adapted for different activities throughout the day.
Four sliding panels allow the ground floor to be either opened up or divided into
a series of smaller spaces, allowing the space to adapt to fulfil various needs, such
as adding an extra room for a guest, separating the kitchen from the living room
area or opening the whole floor for a party. The moving panels, which are inte-
grated into the central core and run along guide rails, have transparent sections so
the natural lighting coming through the mansard roof can reach the entire space.
Other features reveal wardrobes built into one of the walls and a picnic table
and bench that lower down from the kitchen ceiling. A rotating handle on the wall
controls the pulleys needed to lower this furniture from the ceiling, while other
handles can be used to create an auxiliary kitchen table and shelves.
All these elements are integrated within the floor and the ceiling, and they
appear and disappear at the user’s whim. The secret trap doors and the sliding
panels complement the basic configuration, fit the needs of the moment and pro-
vide different home layout combinations.
My last example of a MOO design as shown in Figs. 4.24 and 4.25 is one
which signals great changes in the workplace culture as mentioned in my
Introduction. The following is a statement by the designers:
We wanted to create a space that allowed us to take on multiple characters, a
space that will allow us to flex—to be big and small, to rove from solo, to team, to
crowd. We wanted to create a space which could be broken down without losing
the sense of generosity and openness. We wanted to create a space with embedded
opportunity, an infrastructure for work, creating and making.
4.5 Object-to-Object Fixing/Support Systems 121
Inspired by the micro living units in Hong Kong, the space is populated with
a series of track mounted plywood bookcases which serve as storage, display
units and also as dividers. When filled, they form an eclectic and vibrant backdrop
to the activity they enclose. Custom desk panels have been design to nestle into
rebates in the shelves, creating capacity for increased desk capacity during peak
project load periods.
122 4 Construction Concept
4.5.3 A Table
+table (Figs. 4.26 and 4.27) was developed from Fraaiheid’s working experience
in Dutch construction and their desire to make innovative products which easily
appeal to a public and that can be put together in 3 min. All the pieces are made
Fig. 4.26 +table is designed by Fraaiheid Dutch architects: Daniel Aw, Sjoerd Schaapveld and
Rikjan Scholten, 2013
Fig. 4.27 +table is designed by Fraaiheid Dutch architects: Daniel Aw, Sjoerd Schaapveld and
Rikjan Scholten, 2013
4.5 Object-to-Object Fixing/Support Systems 123
out of one sheet of plywood finished in laminate as Fig. 4.28 shows. All of the
table parts slot into each other without the aid of any tools or fixing devices. The
cross-shaped joint provides the designers with the name +table. Compared with
many modern designs that lack integrity of form and poor reasoning, this design
expresses how it is made (Fig. 4.29).
4.5.4 A Chair
Fig. 4.30 Uncino chair
designed by Ronan and
Erwan of Paris, 2014.
Photograph by © Gerhardt
Kellerman
4.5 Object-to-Object Fixing/Support Systems 125
Fig. 4.31 Uncino chair
designed by Ronan and
Erwan of Paris, 2014.
Photograph by © Gerhardt
Kellerman
the connectivity of materials. The fabrication and installation of the bulk of inte-
rior components come from factories rather than craft workshops. The remainder
of work executed on site will come under ‘forming/making’ techniques that can
only be done in situ, such as concrete, brickwork, plaster, carpentry framing and of
course applied decoration.
Another chair example that fits my MOO category (Fig. 4.32a–f) is the beauti-
ful Exocet folding piece that supports the human figure in many ways, designed by
Canadian Stephane Leathead of Designarium. Reminiscent of an egg slicer with
dovetailed wooden members pivoting from a central hub. The genius behind its
success is due to the gentle curved sweep that is in scale and receives the human
form. The way these ‘arms’ rest on the floor reminds me of Mies van der Rohe’s
Barcelona chair.6 The materials are Baltic Birch and aluminium.
6Anthony Sully, Interior Design: Theory and Process, (London, A&C Black, 2012) p. 102.
126 4 Construction Concept
There are many conditions and types of form and structure that shelving is used
for, either storage or display. One factor that can be applied as suits the location
is that shelving can be fixed in position or be adjustable in height position. Shelf
products that allow adjustability of length or of depth have not appeared on the
market to my knowledge, but the fact that I have the idea of that being offered
poses an interesting situation. This idea arrives because of considering flexibility
and adjustment, and not in answer to a need. And this is an important point in the
whole design process: usually, a design problem is defined as arising from an anal-
ysis of the needs and activities of the client. How are these needs collated? This is
what other writers have said:
4.5 Object-to-Object Fixing/Support Systems 127
The shelving in the lounge in Fig. 4.33 is absorbed into the joinery structure of
‘storage balustrades’, so called because they form a barrier to a void to the ground
floor. The exposed shelving supports a TV and sound system, as well as books and
other objects that may serve a particular space. Built-in cupboards also conceal
shelving.
4.5.5.2 Wall Mounted
See Fig. 4.34.
4.5.5.3 Free-Standing
Figure 4.35 shows a free-standing shelving unit whereby the shelving is not
adjustable and the whole unit is moveable. Its ease of mobility being dependent
upon the weight of goods on the shelves. As with all free-standing products, the
7Tiiu Poldma, Taking up Space, (New York, Fairchild Books, 2009) p. 69.
8John Pile, Interior Design, (New York, Prentice Hall, 1995) pp. 131, 189.
128 4 Construction Concept
Fig. 4.34 These shelves would be supported on cantilevered brackets fixed to the uprights and
they would be adjustable. The uprights are screwed to the wall
4.5 Object-to-Object Fixing/Support Systems 129
mobility can be eased by the addition of castors, glides or anything else that is
considered to satisfy the brief.
The following illustrations are designed to show the basic elements surround-
ing the design of a straight staircase. There are many other types of staircase such
as dogleg and helical stairs (spiral is the more common name, but this is of course
geometrically incorrect as explained in the following diagram). One thing is for
certain, whilst the riser may disappear and the tread will always exist.
The helical form, which is contained within a cylinder, is on the left, and
the spiral form, which is contained within a cone, is on the right in Fig. 4.37.
Figure 4.38 is an example of a helical stair made of satin finish stainless steel and
oak treads and landing. Note that the balustrading is another variation of the ones
illustrated in that they are parallel to the handrail.
Figure 4.39 shows some of the basic concepts of the straight stair.
4.5 Object-to-Object Fixing/Support Systems 131
Fig. 4.40 Staircase made of continuous sheet steel in Window House in Kyoto, Japan, designed
by Alphaville Architects, 2013
Fig. 4.42 Archery Hall
and Boxing Club, Tokyo,
Japan, 2013. Designed
by FT Architects/Katsuya
Fukushima, Hiroko Tominag.
Photograph by Shigeo
Ogawa
The delicate lattice frames of the Boxing Club are composed of slender ties, beams
and posts and are clearly expressed as being a strong visual property of the interior.
The decision of what is to be seen and expressed arrives very early on in the
planning stages of the project. The designer will have a vision, or a series of
visions, as to the kind of interior that will be interadapted. From Roman and Greek
times, the common material for building was stone and marble because that was a
natural resource in both Greece and Italy. Because the buildings of that time were
homogeneous throughout, those materials were seen both externally and internally.
Timber structures grew out of countries that wood was a natural resource. It was
not until the industrial revolution from 1760 that iron and steel began to influence
the design of industrial buildings and bridges. The Crystal Palace9 in London
designed by Joseph Paxton10 to commemorate the 1851 Great Exhibition was the
first building of its kind to use prefabricated glass and cast iron as exposed struc-
ture. It was indeed a building form expressive of its function (Fig. 4.43).
Fig. 4.43 Crystal Palace, London, 1851. Designed by Jospeh Paxton. Illustration originally from
Tallis’ history and criticism of the Crystal Palace, 1852. Wikipedia commons
This was an example of integrated architecture, whereby what you see on the out-
side is what you see on the inside. The effect of this new transparent architecture was
tremendous, and whilst its main purpose was to display exhibits from around the
world, there was no doubt that people were captivated by this extraordinary building.
The remainder of the ninetieth century was dominated by the Victorian period
running into Art Nouveau11 and Arts and Crafts.12 These years were dominated by
revivalist architecture and design combined with the earthy goodness of A and C
and the Romanticism of AN. It was not until the German Bauhaus came along in
1919 that the philosophy of exposing building structure for its own sake began to
appear. The leading exponent of this honesty of expression was Mies van der
Rohe.13 His Farnsworth House in Fig. 4.44, built in 1951, was such an example.
Inspired by the work of Mies, Alison and Peter Smithson, English architects
from the UK, designed a school in Hunstanton, (Fig. 4.45) Norfolk, England,
which came to be known as an example of ‘Brutalist Architecture’, because of
the way the structure was expressed unadorned by any applied finishes. The steel
structure was left exposed, whereas in conventional building, they would have
been shrouded in concrete or had cladding applied.
11Art Nouveau is considered a ‘total’ art style, embracing architecture, graphic art, interior design
and most of the decorative arts including jewellery, furniture, textiles, household silver and other
utensils and lighting, as well as the fine arts.
12The Arts and Crafts Movement was an international design movement that flourished between
1860 and 1910, especially in the second half of that period, continuing its influence until the 1930s.
13Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886–1969) was a German-American architect who taught at the
Bauhaus.
136 4 Construction Concept
Fig. 4.44 Farnsworth House, 1951, Plano, Illinois by Mies van der Rohe. Author Tinyfroglet.
Wikimedia commons
Fig. 4.45 Hunstanton School, Norfolk, UK, 1954. Architects Alison and Peter Smithson. ©
Archant. By permission of Eastern Daily Press
Figure 4.46 shows a view of the exterior glass wall of the recently completed
Asia Museum of Modern Art in Taiwan by Tadao Ando. Whilst the building has
many redeeming features architecturally, this view shows how diametrically
opposed the diagonal steel structure has with the horizontal and vertical window
framing. This relationship between structure and cladding has become popular
with so many architects over the past few years, as could also be seen in the China
Steel Corporation’s building in Chap. 1 as shown in Fig. 1.32.
4.6 What is Expressed or Seen? 137
Fig. 4.46 Asia Museum of Modern Art in Taiwan by Tadao Ando, 2013. Drawn by author
Whilst the architect’s intention was to express the diagonal structure, it has
been done at the expense of integrating it with the façade.
Glass is a very complex material. It comes in a variety of colours, textures and trans-
lucency. It has an associate named ‘mirror’. It can be invisible. Qualities of transpar-
ency, solar resistance and reflection determine its specification for situations that require
such qualities. Initially, its main use was to provide windows, enabling weather protec-
tion as well as views to the outside. It is not commonly a structural material (it has been
used in special occasions), but rather a very weak and dangerous material. Glass walls,
whether external or internal, present feelings of insecurity and a lack of privacy. They are
acoustically weak unless double or triple glazed. Their use in corporate offices is based
upon the designers and clients chasing an upbeat image of professional sleekness at the
expense of human needs. How do you redecorate internal glass walls? How do you fit
shelving to glass walls? Answer: you cannot. If the users get fed up with leading a ‘trans-
parent life’, they will have to rip out the glass and put in solid or semisolid partitions.
Figure 4.47 shows building as the architectural host discipline. Interior is the sup-
portive facilitator for all activities. Product denotes all support systems.
138 4 Construction Concept
Fig. 4.47 Building, interior,
product diagram
Chapter 5
Material Concept
Thus, any material intended to assume a specialised form must first be conceived
in its final image by the designer and then translated into the terminology used by
specific product technologies.1 Malnar and Vodvarka
5.1 Context—Keyword: Finish
Materials exist throughout the physical being of the interior, from structure to con-
struction, finishes and support systems. An existing building shell and its prolifera-
tion of detail will provide the designer with a starting off point, as to whether to
use, alter or masque the embedded materials. A new building being interadapted
will again provide the designer with an imagined beginning, and the kind of con-
tract will determine at what stage the interior designer begins to work on the inte-
riors. In my own personal experience, I once had the opportunity of working with
engineers and architects on a hotel project at a time early in the planning stage. As
I was working from the inside out, I wanted to change the dimensions of the struc-
tural grid to suit the interior geometric concept that I was developing. All agreed
with my proposal, which was a good example of intercollaborative working of
architects, engineers and interior designers.
Suggested categories for location of materials:
ENCLOSURE—meaning walls, floors and ceilings that surround a space.
STRUCTURE—what holds the building up.
SURFACE FINISHES—what we see
SUPPORT SYSTEMS—elements that support the body as well as storage and
display.
(Built-in or free standing)
I acknowledge that each of these categories may share the same material, but their
location is determined by their function. A concept of materials is emotionally
charged and defined by their function, properties and characteristics.
Just as in every building, there will be a hierarchy of spaces from the most impor-
tant to the lowliest; so, within each space a hierarchy of forms, surfaces and
effects will serve to give identity and meaning to that space.2 John Coles and
Naomi House
There is a difficulty of isolating each of the concepts in this book simply because the
visions of the designer can embrace all aspects of an interior and overlaps can occur
1Malnar and Vodvarka, The Interior Dimension (New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1992) p. 255.
2John Coles and Naomi House, The Fundamentals of Interior Architecture (Lausanne,
Switzerland, AVA Publishing, 2007) p. 88.
5.2 What Governs Selection? 141
5.3 Natural
Natural—wood from trees, stone and marble quarried from rock, bamboo and
cork from trees, ceramics using clay from the earth but adding chemical prod-
ucts extend its use. (ceramic tiles would be the result of an industrial process).
Figure 5.1 shows the interior of a sawmill where timber sections are cut from logs.
The journey of production of wood is remarkable: from tree to wood in raw
state, to timber for use in section for carpentry and joinery, to decorative non-
structural solid panels, to veneers and to wood chip for producing solid panels
with resin or as loose insulation. In addition to this list, there are many new mate-
rial by-products of wood being invented by combination and chemistry.
3Victoria Bell and Patrick Rand, Materials for Architectural Design 2 (London, Laurence King,
2014) p. 12.
142 5 Material Concept
Fig. 5.2 Castings being
made from pouring molten
metal. Vanguard Foundry
Ltd, West Midlands, UK
Fig. 5.3 Umami bowl
designed by Ar. Rajat Sodhi
of University of Michigan,
2014
Examples are iron and steel from ore, glass from silica, plaster from rock, concrete
using cement from crushed rock and other additives, cotton from plant and wool
from sheep. Iron ore exists in rock forms, and the iron is extracted in a huge con-
tainer called a blast furnace as seen in Fig. 5.2.
There are some interesting experiments currently being explored at the
University of Michigan, USA, in the engineering of micro- and nanostructured
surfaces with anisotropic geometries and properties of polymers, metals and
ceramics. The bowl in Fig. 5.3 is made from 0.5-mm-thick steel sheet and is in the
form of a lattice structure.
5.4 Artificial
Examples of artificial materials are plastics to make furniture, laminates, cast resin
products such as Corian, and textiles. One of the earliest injection-moulded poly-
propylene stacking chairs was produced by S. Hille & Co in 1963 designed by
Robin Day.4 The seat and back were the injection-moulded one piece, and the legs
4Robin Day 1915–2010 was a British chartered industrial and furniture designer.
5.4 Artificial 143
were tubular steel. This Plana chair in Fig. 5.4 changes that combination by injec-
tion-moulded polypropylene of the whole chair including the legs, as one item.
Formica laminate, one of the first laminates to be produced, now refers primar-
ily to the decorative product composed of several layers of kraft paper impreg-
nated with melamine thermosetting resin and topped with a decorative layer
protected by a clear melamine and then compressed and cured with heat to make
a hard, durable surface. See Fig. 5.5. The decorative layer produced was initially
in plain colours, but this was expanded to include patterns, graphics, photo images
and the ghastly wood imitations. Worktops can also be produced with post-formed
curved edges, concave for adjoining walls or convex for a leading edge.
Fig. 5.4 The Italian Kristalia Plana stacking chair 2014 from Nest. Co. UK. Designed by Lucidi
Pevere studio
The subsequent inventiveness in the plastic industry over the years has pro-
duced some more unwelcome imitations of materials such as wood, metals and
fabrics. The worst example I have come across was in the refurbishment of a pub-
lic house, whereby the old oak panelling had been replaced by new. The landlord
proudly showed me the walls, and my initial reaction was favourable. As soon as
he told me it was plastic throughout, I felt I had been deceived. The product was
so cleverly made with wood grain in relief and even some woodworm holes to try
and achieve an ageing look, as well as being so much cheaper than the real thing.
Imitation of any kind is rather sad, and whilst the low production cost has its sup-
porters, I have to say that there must be a better way. The solid oak wall panelling
is reflective of a bygone age, and we should not expect to replicate the same in a
new age of reduced budgets and economic downturns. It is the duty of designers
to be aware of what is affordable and to ensure that design proposals are realistic
to current social needs and the economic climate. Clients and owners searching
for the ‘wealth aesthetic’ of dazzle sometimes created by exotic finishes of gold,
leather and other bejewelled materials can on many occasions create the opposite
effect on a visitor who will label the work as being vulgar and ostentatious.
The acceptable inventions that have been made are in the field of quartz-
based agglomerates such as the ThinQ engineered stone series produced by Santa
Margherita of Italy. Another more famous name is Corian made by Dupont, com-
posed of acrylic polymer and alumina trihydrate, and is now described as a ‘solid
surface’, which sounds contradictory for a surface as such, that has no great thick-
ness. But Corian can be produced up to 19 mm thick so why is it not called an
acrylic panel? It deserves special mention for enabling a work surface to embrace
a sink bowl all made out of this material for the very first time, which of course
means that a panel form is not entirely an accurate description of its capability.
Let us now examine the physical location of these materials as listed in Sect. 5.1.
5.5 Enclosure
Typically, this will consist of floors, walls and ceilings and will form the major
determinants of the kind of interior being designed. Advanced technology of mate-
rials and CAD systems have enabled designers to merge the forms of walls into
floors or ceilings in such a way that definition becomes difficult, as with the par-
ametric interior of the Heydar Aliyev Center in Sect. 3.11.1. Figure 5.6 shows a
hemispherical space, almost akin to being inside an igloo, which merges the ceiling
with the walls and is on a semicircular plan. Such enclosures demand great 3D geo-
metric skills, but these possibilities due to the wonders of CAD still have to answer
the c lient’s brief ergonomically and provide the best solution possible. Such forms
demand new technology of materials and construction.
The enclosure will contain the structure of the building, as well as degrees of
internal space divisions, cladding and finishes dependent upon whether the space
divisions are load-bearing or non-load-bearing.
5.5 Enclosure 145
ings, including the work for Norman Foster and Richard Rogers.
8Eva Jiřičná CBE RA (born 1939) is a renowned Czech architect and designer, active in London
and Prague.
9Carlo Scarpa (1906–1978) was an Italian architect, influenced by the materials, landscape, and
5.5.1 First Inclinations
Materials, as selected for their visual and performance characteristics, are interde-
pendent. They are not mixed except in the case of liquid forms. The form of their
availability depends upon how they are sourced and what works need to be done
for them to be ready for use. The three main routes are as follows:
Source…………………………………….installed on site (rock, stone)
Source……………….factory…………….installed on site (doors, staircases, etc.)
Source……………….factory…………….worked on site……………final instal-
lation (concrete, plaster)
And many variations of the above depending upon the material.
Let us examine a summarised growth and development of the curved building
form (Fig. 5.7):
This survey is just one example of research into the evolution of a form through
the use of various materials. Designers should know a little about the history of
materials11 in order to appreciate the present status of them. We begin with the
bent branch of a tree from primitive times. These would vary from stout members,
providing the main structure, to woven smaller members to provide a skin enclo-
sure. Clay or mud would have been added to complete a protective shelter.
Concrete was used from Roman times to provide flooring, walls and arches. Stone
and brick are still popular materials for creating arches. Sheet metal was used in
curved beaten form for body armour in the middle ages, as was wrought iron strip
for weaponry and decorative elements to buildings such as railings. It was not until
the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries that copper and iron sheet were used for
roofing. From the mid-nineteenth century, sinusoidal corrugated sheet was used in
building and it had the facility to be curved. In the late nineteenth century, tubular
steel was born. Plywood was developed from the early- to mid-nineteenth century,
and the twentieth century heralded the arrival of plastics.
11J.E. Gordon, The New Science of Strong Materials (Harmondsworth, Middlx, 1968); Yvonne
Figure 5.8 shows the reception space of the interadapted Serpentine Gallery, which
is dominated by the nineteenth-century brick wall behind the desk. Zaha Hadid’s
signature flowing forms of the illuminated columns of tapered steel clad with GRP
(glass-reinforced plastic) provides an agreeable contrast with the most basic and
traditional of wall constructions.
Figure 5.9 shows the huge interior space of Terminal 3 at Shenzhen Bao’an
International Airport, with a 1.5-km-long (1 mile) white roof punctuated by hon-
eycomb openings that allow sunlight to filter into the expansive spaces. A moiré
effect is created which is also reflected in the marble floor. The columns almost
pale into insignificance because of their white finish and slender proportions. Some
people may question whether the optical dazzle is restful for such a busy place.
An example of GRP can be seen in Fig. 5.8. Concrete was invented by the Romans
so the use of this material has long been tested in various ways. It is composed of
Fig. 5.8 Reception space of
the interadapted Serpentine
Sackler Gallery, London, by
Zaha Hadid Architects, 2013.
Photograph by Luke Hayes
148 5 Material Concept
Fig. 5.9 Interior of terminal
3 at Shenzhen Bao’an Inter-
national Airport, Guangdong,
China. Designed by architects
Massimiliano and Doriana
Fuksas, 2013
water, a coarse granular material embedded in cement that fills the space amongst
the aggregate particles and glues them together. It can be cast with or without rein-
forcement depending upon its structural role, into block walls, floors or columns.
Its versatility combined with technological advances has extended its application
as a decorative self-finished product as well as a sometimes hidden structure. It
can be polished, coloured with added pigment or hammered with post-cast tools to
achieve different textures. It can also be cast within textured sheet materials such
as rough sawn timber to reflect that texture on the concrete finish.
Figure 5.10 shows that Japanese architect Tadao Ando has added The Teatrino,
a third phase of this interadaption of the Palazzo Grassi—a contemporary arts
Fig. 5.10 Teatrino interior
of the interadapted Palazzo
Grassi, Venice, Italy, 2013.
Designed by Tadao Ando.
Drawn by author
5.5 Enclosure 149
5.6 Structure
Pennsylvania, USA. He was a professor of architecture at the School of Design at the University
of Pennsylvania. He was awarded the AIA Gold Medal and the RIBA Gold Medal.
13Roland Ashcroft, Construction for Interior Designers (Harlow, Longman Group Ltd, 1985) p. 1.
150 5 Material Concept
Apart from the function of the structure, the material is selected for possible
exposure if it suits the interior materials concept of what is to be seen.
One example of a given structure is shown in Fig. 5.11. These are industrial sheds
before interadapted into the Surfrider HQ as seen in Chap. 2 to provide exhibi-
tion, offices, meeting rooms and cafeteria. To understand the designers’ approach
to their rehabilitation, here is a mission statement by the designers (Fig. 5.12):
Each project is studied and developed with a high degree of specificity, with an over-
all approach oriented toward a particular attention drawn to the building “quality of
use” and the search of an optimum in the relationship between site and architecture.
Each of the projects developed in the office are moved by a voluntary “common
sense” approach to the notion of “environmental quality”, the good knowledge
of local geographical constraints, the comprehension and assimilation of current
materials and construction techniques.
Here is the designers’ statement explaining their design approach to these skeletal
buildings, which involve the following responses where materials are concerned:
existing sheds roofs which are acoustically treated for absorption. The under face
of the waves, beneath which long table elements are plugged, is entirely treated as
a sound “absorbing” surface, thus providing a particularly comfortable zone for
working. By “slicing” the existing volume in two different parts, using a long fur-
niture element clearly identifiable as a “WAVE”, SURFRIDER FOUNDATION
users can thus refer to a strong identity-maker element whose technical capacities
also permits to profit from the generous pre-existing volume rather than clearly
separate it into two different isolated entities.
5.6.2 Pallotta Teamworks
Fig. 5.13 Pallotta
Teamworks New
Headquarters ‘main street’,
Los Angeles, California,
USA. Architects Clive
Wilkinson, 2002. Photograph
by Benny Chan—Fotoworks
5.6 Structure 153
map, a projection showing the continents as one continuous land mass, accu-
rately reflecting their true surface areas, showing no boundaries or states. From
this area, a dark blue open-ended shipping container forms a portal to the main
volume of the building and onto the main street, leading on to the square with its
executive tower, a 3-high six-pack of orange containers.
The refreshing adaptation of the shipping containers involves softening their
metallic quality by the addition of timber cells which project into the ‘street’,
hence providing more visual connections with the volume of the space. Furniture
and softer floor coverings add to the comfort of usability.
5.6.3 Rockstar Villa
Fig. 5.14 Rockstar Villa,
Majorca, by Alberto Rubio,
2013. Interior designed by
Judith Paul and team from
Pesch Wohnen, Cologne.
Photograph by Oliver Mallah
from England and Don
Murray from Canada
The plan of this villa in Fig. 5.14 can be seen in Fig. 1.7 of Chap. 1. The struc-
ture is made of steel columns and beams combining with concrete and timber. The
walls are painted plaster, and the floors are finished in polyester and polyurethane
coating. The open organic design reflects the climate of the Balearic Islands with
white being the dominant colour, which is the norm in hot climates as it allows the
colours of vegetation and clothing to stand out.
Concrete or brickwork left untreated will expose an ‘integral’ finish. If the same
materials are coated or clad with something else that finish is described as being
‘applied’. There are many hundreds of materials to choose from, but the sequence
of choice decisions could be as follows: (As I stated in the Introduction, I am
assuming client’s needs and aspirations have been taken into account)
154 5 Material Concept
Materials can be selected for their harmonisation with the building structure in
supporting its historical, aesthetic or material substance. Or they can be selected
for their effective concealment of the structure.
5.7.2 Location
A material can be selected because of its intended dominance within the interior
so that the majority of the structure, enclosure and support systems will be finished
in the same material.
Or it can be selected for its punctuated effect or visual emphasis.
5.7.3 Apportionment of Area—Quantity
Repeat specification due to either large spaces or economy of cost and installation.
Another major factor is availability of size. Tiles, whatever the material, will have a grid
of lines, which is the joint between each tile, and this is a powerful aesthetic considera-
tion. The selection should not be based on surface appeal without the grid characteristic.
Although having said that, the nature of ceramic is that it can be deliberately
broken up into smaller pieces and installed as a crazy paving layout denying its
grid like origins. Figure 5.15 shows the staircase egg-like form covered with
such crazy tiling. It may appear to be a perverse action to take having gone to the
lengths of careful manufacturing of a modular tile only to break it up into smaller
pieces, but then faced with the prospect of covering such an egg-like surface with
a rectangular grid would be insurmountable. The form asks for an applied liquid
coating because of its multi-directional parametric quality. But as the designer
wanted to have the ceramic finish, then this solution becomes acceptable. Of
course, the crazy aesthetic needs to fit in with the overall concept of the interior,
and viewed in that context, the final effect is of a muted textured surface.
Figure 5.16 shows a recently produced collection of smooth tiles that follow
a grid and were on display in London’s Clerkenwell Design Week 2014. English
designers Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby created the collection for Domus,
working with Italian ceramics brand Mutina, which produces the tiles industrially
from glazed porcelain stoneware. The designers say:
‘The collection has been inspired by London, the city where we live and work, its
great variety of textures, such as aged bricks and wooden floors, and its irregular
patterns made by imperfect geometric modules’,
The range of colours has delightful names such as chalk, fog, pigeon, lead, ink
and soot, and they each come in 15 different tones.
The size of a solid material for finishing purposes stems from the source as
well as the production requirements for building purposes. The use of a material
5.7 Surface Finishes—Applied or Integral 155
Fig. 5.15 Exterior of
staircase in the Gyeongju Arts
Center in Gyeongsangbuk-do,
South Korea. Designed
by Samoo Architects &
Engineers, 2013
Fig. 5.16 Mews by Mutina.
Homogenous porcelain
stoneware tiles designed
by Edward Barber and Jay
Osgerby, 2014
5.7.5 Soft or Hard
5.7.6 Reflectivity
This is a property more associated with mirror or surfaces that provide a sheen
such as gloss paint, PVD or melamine. All materials specified could be traced
back to our natural primeval roots, whereby those environments are embedded into
our genes and culture. The need for reflective surfaces may relate to our affinity
with the water of seas, rivers, lakes and ponds.
I LOVE thee, lakes, and all thy glorious world,
Blue, wrinkled, mist-encircled ’neath the sky.
And far unto thy realm of waves impearled
My heart, bird-like, doth fly.14 William Wilfred Campbell
Chapter 6 will examine the conceptual basis for colour, but here, I would like to
summarise its consideration via the desired surface finish. As far as integral fin-
ishes are concerned, the colour is inherent within the material and should assist the
designer in its selection. If wood is the favoured material for doing a particular job,
it must be accepted that it is available in a variety of integral browns, plus black if
ebony as well as its wood grain. So it is no use the designer thinking of wood and
purple for example. The exception to this is that wood can be stained with certain
colours but that has to be handled very carefully to avoid negative reactions.
Applied finishes, as listed under ‘Type of Skin’, have a greater range of col-
ours and textures available. This makes the process of thinking easier in that col-
our can be the leading influence, knowing that finding the right finish will not be
too daunting.
14William Wilfred Campbell, Invocation to the Lakes, © St. John: J.&A. McMillan, 1889.
5.7 Surface Finishes—Applied or Integral 157
When we choose a colour which is not determined by the building material itself,
our choice will usually fall on one that is natural to some other material with
which we are familiar.15 Steen Eiler Rasmussen
Textures, patterns and graphics come into this category because whatever the
composition or design of the surface, decisions have to be made on actual material
selection. New coatings such as the Italian Ecomalta is a material made of dif-
ferent quartz sizes (thin, medium, maxi) according to the technical characteristics
required and according to its use: floor, high traffic area or walls. In addition, the
binding element is vinyl-acrylic polymer and water and it is applied by hand with
a spatula like stucco for example.
Textiles embrace fabrics usually in the form of curtains and drapes, and uphol-
stery for furniture. The process of selection of a fabric for a designer should be
through the stages of needs such as
1 Softness, tactile quality
2 Adjustability and fixing
3 Texture
4 Colour/pattern
5 Fire retardant—if relevant
Graphic design elements are the illustrative part of interior design talking. Its com-
bination of line, shape and colour is traditionally contained within the borders of
the material or surface concerned. In some cases, as in the Google office on page
97b of my last book, the graphic design can be conceived of being in 3D. But it
could also be an integrated part of the 3D concept of the interior in that the lines
expressed by the enclosure or support systems could be connected and be part of
the graphic content of the scheme.
We have so far determined that selection of a material within the context of this
book is based upon appropriateness and its colour and texture, but an impor-
tant consideration, which can affect the aesthetic result, is the fixing/installation
method. How often has an interadaption been ruined by unconsidered exposed
fixings, almost as though the designer forgot about them, and their existence is a
visual intrusion. There can be options of having concealed fixings, which is com-
monly favoured and easily achieved.
15Steen Eiler Rasmussen, Experiencing Architecture (London, Chapman and Hall, 1959) p. 217.
158 5 Material Concept
5.8 Support Systems
Furniture types can be free standing or built-in as an integral part of the building.
It may even be difficult to distinguish the furniture from the building. Some units
are so well integrated into the architectural design that they become a dominant
design element as well as functional pieces.16 Kilmer and Kilmer
Support systems cover furniture, handrails and any product loose or built-in
that provides support for the human body in whatever posture and containment
of associated objects. The loose items have to be designed or specified as to the
degree of mobility regarding weight and ease of handling. The term ‘furnishing’
usually refers to a combination of ‘hard’ furniture including ornaments and light-
ing, as well as ‘soft’ furnishing covering carpets, upholstery and textiles. In many
cases, these items may coexist with other items listed depending upon the project
needs. I am unravelling this traditional grouping for the purposes of the conceptual
analysis contained in this book. What is classified as furniture can be highly com-
plex in that it covers a whole range of products which we can group as follows:
(These headings suggest the controlling function as well an indication of location/
use, and there can be overlaps of use such as a chest that can be used to sit on. The
examples illustrated have been chosen because they are non-traditional solutions.)
5.8.1 Seating
16Rosemary Kilmer and W. Otie Kilmer, Designing Interiors (Fort Worth, USA, Harcourt Brace
Fig. 5.17 The Snug
designed by Kumeko from
Berlin, Germany, 2014
From soft to hard, Fig. 5.18 shows the ‘1/2’ stool made of half of a tree trunk.
The unique character of wood is contrasted with the technical, laser cut metal ele-
ments. The stool is very stable and durable. Thanks to the application of a protec-
tive sealing technique to the wood and metal the stool can inhabit both inside and
outside. It can also be used as a side table. The beauty of the design is that the
metal sides, although they meet at a certain point, are almost following a radius
from the centre of the trunk of the tree. The bite taken out of the trunk allows some
degree of harmonisation between metal and wood.
160 5 Material Concept
Fig. 5.19 Mac PC hybrid
desk
5.8.2 Desking
5.8.3 Tables
5.8.4 Workbenches/Counters
5.8.5 Shelving—Open
Fig. 5.22 Fusillo multifunctional shelf made up of small wood sections which each rotate on a
central axis. Designers and viceversa, London, Fabrizio Cazzulo and Simone Nunziato. Made in
Italy, 2014
162 5 Material Concept
Fig. 5.23 Curved cupboards ash veneered MDF board. Glendower House. Designed by author
5.8.6 Cupboards—Enclosed Shelving
5.8.7 Chests
Storage
Material considerations: access, structure, extra use as seat and security
Fig. 5.24 Onda range by
Casabella Co. Fine Italian
Furniture, Italy. Originally
designed by Giovanni
Costantini, M.D. Casabella
Co. www.casabellaonline.biz
5.8.9 Beds
5.8.10 Wardrobes
5.8.11 Storage Units
Fig. 5.27 Staircase
in Abedian School of
Architecture, Australia,
designed by Cook Robotham
Architectural Bureau
(CRAB), 2014. Photograph
by Rix Ryan
5.8.13 Bathroom/Sanitary Equipment
Fig. 5.28 Symbiosis bath
designed by Desnahemisfera,
Ljubljana Slovenia,
2014. Photograph by N.
Picogna/Ikon Picogna/Ikon
Fig. 5.29 Wave washbasin
made by Artceram of Civita
Castellana, Italy, 2014.
Designed by Meneghello
Paolelli Association (www.m
eneghellopaolelli.com)
minerals. It is sturdy, hygienic, static proof and resistant to staining. The beauty
of this design is the concept of the flow of water and its liquidity, as well as merg-
ing support, basin and mirrored cabinet into one form. On behalf of correct termi-
nology, I am taking the opportunity of emphasising that ‘basins’ are in bathrooms
and ‘sinks’ are in kitchens, simply because I have become depressed by how many
people refer to sinks in bathrooms.
5.8.14 Other Specialist
Coat/hat stand, grandfather clock, display sign or panel. This category will contain
items special to a particular job.
Kitchens are usually lumped together with bathrooms for trading purposes in the
residential sector, even though the activities in both areas are distinctly differ-
ent. The main connection is being the supply of water and facilitating drainage.
Kitchens contain much of what has been listed above with the addition of special-
ist equipment such as cooker, fridge/freezer and sink. They have also changed in
concept from being a small concentrated one room workspace to become a shared
space with the general living space and hence have undergone an image change to
one that hardly betrays any work being done whatsoever.
All of the above can be free standing or built in. Mobility is dependent upon
how light or heavy an item is and whether services dictate permanent placement.
For example, a lightweight chair can be moved by one person. The remainder can
be designed to be moved by two people, sometimes with the help of wheels, cast-
ers or floor guides. Or they can be designed to be concealed, and by using moving
parts, an item such as bed could be made available for use. The need for conceal-
ment can be due to shortage of space or the space concerned has a multi-function.
Material specification will be guided by the function and the use of the prod-
ucts concerned. Surfaces range from contact (work surface) to no-contact (side of
a cupboard). Structure will range from framework, to framework and cladding, to
panel carcase or box type. The overlapping concepts here will be 3D, construction
and colour.
Chapter 6
Colour Concept
Abstract Colour can be discussed and used in so many situations that its ease
of use can dangerously monopolise a designer’s thoughts. This chapter begins
by looking at the landscape of choice before asking the question of what governs
selection. Colour can exist through a solid material or a coating. Colour is ana-
lysed in terms of how it can appear within an interior. The reader will learn that it
is possible to determine the shape, composition, location and proportional judge-
ment as a precursor to deciding on the colour.
6.1 Context—Keyword: Effect
1Robert Clay, beautiful thing, an introduction to design (Oxford, Berg, 2009) p. 137.
2Kilmer and Kilmer, Designing Interiors (Fort Worth, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College Pub.
1992) p. 144.
3Malnar and Vodvarka, The Interior Dimension (New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1992) p. 63.
6.1 Context—Keyword: Effect 171
CAD of the facility to present an interior perspective view with an almost life-
like effect of the lighting and material textures is a great improvement on mood
boards.
Whilst there are various sectors in interior design such as domestic, retail,
office and so on, I feel it is dangerous to assign certain colours to these sectors
as some books have tried to do. To me, design is an open book, which should
allow the designer to approach each project afresh and to dip into the palette of
colours in order to blend in with the other concepts being formed. The same tactic
should apply to all concepts in order to avoid anything, which smells of conven-
tion and recommendation. In corporate interiors, a company will have an image
and house style which will understandably be applied to all branch locations for
reasons of continuity and, more importantly, marketing reminders to the buyers of
their image. But in the free world, designers must have full and open choice of all
things so that their solutions are not tied to convention.
The three primary colours are red, yellow and blue supported by black and white,
which produces the spectrum of greys between black and white. All colours are
seen in terms of their Hue, Value and Chroma. From this basis, colours have been
developed in industry as follows (as recorded in 1972):
1 million colours—available to the human eye
27,580—ICI Colour atlas
11,037—Munsell colour atlas
943—Ostwald system
850—ICI Fibres atlas
589—DIN 6164 1960
237—British Standard (BS) 5252 colour range
101—BS 2660 commonly available range for paint industry
20–30—Textile colours
2–3—Product colours
1—Post Office corporate identity (in UK)
Instruction in Fig. 6.1b could be ‘Paint the wall blue’. This assumes that the
wall has edges defined by the surrounding enclosure as in Fig. 6.1a, but this is
conservatively presumptive when considering applying the colour blue. The aim is
to apply blue to the wall, but the concept of shape, location and area of that colour
172 6 Colour Concept
begins with a dot and then grows to whatever is decided relative to the overall inte-
rior as one example shown in Fig. 6.1b. So colour is either seen as:
INTEGRAL
• the materials used in construction
• products and support systems (furnishing)
Or
APPLIED
• coatings and finishes
Integral colours follow the specification of materials and products, which will dic-
tate the contour, area and shape. These colours also have a strong bond with the
structure and form of the building and hence have a higher degree of permanence.
Applied finishes will present to the designer more scope of creating a geometry
of shape that does not necessarily follow the contours of the enclosure or system
of construction. But its relationship to the structure and form of the building is
weaker than integral colours and is more easily replaceable. This not to belittle the
status of applied finishes, but it is necessary to make clear to designers that this
apparent freedom can lead to an ill-disciplined concept of colour. In other words,
the more textures, finishes and colours available that fall into the wrong hands can
lead to a disastrous array of content that amounts to visual confusion.
The pub interior in Fig. 6.2 is an example of simply filling a space of an old
building with furnishing and finishes that supposedly fit in with the age of the
building, but the end result is a mishmash of form and content dominated by the
colour brown and a floor finish which says ‘I am dirty anyway so a dark grey will
conceal that’. Unfortunately, the pub trade in the UK in general have improved
their eighteenth and nineteenth century premises by trying to match or enhance the
original character of the building with stylistic reproductions that harm the con-
nection with the past. The better examples provide a contrast by inserting the new
that complements the existing, rather than aping it.
The Pint Shop pub in Fig. 6.3 is an example of how to successfully intera-
dapt an old building (used to be a solicitors office) into a public house. The clean
6.2 The Landscape of Choice 173
Fig. 6.3 The Pint Shop pub in Cambridge, UK. Architects Macaulay and Sinclair, 2013
uncluttered atmosphere echoes link with the past but also has a modernistic feel.
The old-fashioned industrial-type pendant lamps with exposed cabling tie in with
the simple yet effective ribbed wooden wall battens and the Windsor-type chairs.
The white wall radiator unabashedly exposed even complements the vertical linear
quality of the aforementioned. The main success of the interior is the colour of the
applied finish of a light green/grey paint on the walls and the light oak floor fin-
ish. There are many shades of grey, but the designers have chosen one that is light
enough to have the ‘clean and fresh’ look, as well as being a modern colour.
174 6 Colour Concept
Perhaps the most distorted topic that tends to dominate the interior designer’s role
is the use of colour. How many times have I heard that when it comes to colour,
the interior designer is the master of all, as though we have some magic pow-
ers. The words ‘colour scheme’ come to mind as the most controlling feature of
a designer’s job. I hope that by now the reader will understand that the evolution
of the grand concept is dependent upon so many factors and that the colour is a
small part of it. The inflated importance of its status is because it can be visually
dominant and is perhaps the first impression given to a viewer. Colour selection is
dependent upon the following:
Single colour dominance
Compositional emphasis
Blend of colours
Location
Proportional judgement
Shape.
A single colour would be visually predominant, and to gauge, this would depend
upon calculations of quantity and location. There are recognised interiors, which
are known for their single colour dominance such as:
• swimming pools—white/blue
• public houses—brown
• hospitals—white
• law courts—brown
• little girl’s bedroom—pink
• nightclubs—black
Figure 6.4 is an example of the Baroque style which, whilst it is terribly ornate,
rich and complex, the colour gold is predominant to the human eye. The interior
is a large space and is a place of worship where the design is meant to show how
glorious a house of God can be, whilst making people feel humble in the presence
of such a deity. The house interior in Fig. 6.5, however, is a simpler small space to
digest, and despite some interesting angular geometry, is predominantly white in
colour. In a strange reversal of emotional discharge, the minimalist house interior
can also engender a feeling of calm and peace.
The simple application of colour has the power to reinforce or destroy architec-
tural volumes, emphasise or balance objects in space and create tension or calm
immediately in a room … The perception of colour, which is thus governed to a
large degree by the material characteristics of a given object, is an important
6.3 What Governs Selection? 175
Fig. 6.4 Interior of the
Baroque Church and Convent
of San Francisco, Salvador,
Brazil. 18 Cent. Photograph
by Fernando DallAcqua
Fig. 6.5 Interior of folded
house in Osaka, Japan.
Architects Alphaville.
Struct Engineer Mitsuda.
Photograph by Kai
Nakamura, 2011
design tool for the designer. Sensitivity to the effect of one kind of material versus
another of the same colour demands skill, familiarity, and experience with a range
of materials as well as the lighting conditions that would illuminate them.4 John
Kurtich and Garret Eakin
4John Kurtich and Garret Eakin, Interior Architecture (New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1996)
The following examples show the basic variations of space and how the impact
of the predominant colour of red changes according to the size of the space:
The colour red is mostly predominant in Fig. 6.6 simply because the large vol-
ume multiplies the visual experience through 360°. There is more for the eye to
see in perspective because the cone of vision allows it. Figure 6.7 with its low ceil-
ing compresses the previous experience, and the threat of a heavy weight above
reduces the impact of red. Figure 6.8 represents a confined small space which is
always the most difficult task for a designer because of restricted viewing and a
claustrophobic tendency. The closeness of the enclosure can increase possible tac-
tile pleasure, but the reduced surface area minimises impact of colour. Colour in
itself of course has no tactile properties, but when there are strong associations
with certain materials, then one’s memory makes the connection.
Fig. 6.6 Large space
Fig. 6.8 Corridor space
6.3 What Governs Selection? 177
The analytical examples in Fig. 6.9 summarise some of the main visual composi-
tions that designers have in mind when forming the concept of colour. There are of
course endless variations to these ranging from simple to complex.
FRAME is some kind of border.
FOCUS implies that there is a visual focus such a fireplace or throne, or altar.
VERTICAL emphasis is made through strips of material wall cladding or applied
coatings and could link with column structures.
HORIZONTAL emphasis can be the same as Vertical but is a landscaping visually
relating to the floor and ceiling.
DIRECTIONAL is leading the person towards a particular place within the
interior.
REPEAT MOTIF refers to some element that is small in area, but whose strength
is in its repetition, such as a geometric or natural shape in textiles and wallpaper,
or in a chair form in a theatre. DIAGONAL is less common than the Horizontal
and Vertical because of its dynamically charged instability. It has now become a
common element in Deconstructivist architecture.
DENSE DECORATION may have some Repeat Motifs within the design, but its
main characteristic is in its proliferation of colours and complex shapes.
The following interiors demonstrate these groupings.
The Café in Fig. 6.10 (Directional) is such an example due to the floor pattern
emphasising where a person walks and which also defines the borders of seating.
The colour scheme here is basically black and white and was inspired by the work
of graphic designer Saul Bass.
6.3.3 Blend of Colours
Fig. 6.11 Matisse Beach Club in Perth, Australia. Designed by Jenlin Chia of Oldfield Knott
Architects. 2014. A series of ‘Frames’, ‘Diagonal’ and ‘Repeat Motif’
6.3 What Governs Selection? 179
emphasis is that these colours reflect in the pool, which softens and blurs the
hard edge of the cubicle form. The concept of multicoloured lighting can invoke
a feeling of a ‘clubby’ or trashy place, but in this case, I think the architects have
achieved a place of quality and excitement.
6.3.4 Location
A designer has to be careful about placement of colours to ensure that they can
be received and enjoyed by the user. For example, chairs and other seating forms
come in all kinds of designs and materials and they usually occupy a space from
the waist downwards.
Let us look at cinema design and focus on one aspect of the auditorium design,
namely the subject of seating as shown in Figs. 6.12 and 6.13. Knowing that the
solution will be a repeat of one chair design, the designer could begin by thinking
of the rows of seating and the form of ripple that the back of each chair could pro-
duce. Then, the designer would think about the colour and how the repeat pattern
will affect the space. All of this is ‘below waist’ area.
The designer should now merge the two considerations in Figs. 6.12 and 6.13
by searching for auditoria seating that satisfies both properties, as well as consid-
ering all the other aspects of auditoria design. But this approach is hardly adopted.
Designers will search for the whole chair and how that fits the brief instead of
looking at the landscape effect of the repeat pattern of one part of the chair, such
as the contour and shape of the back. This failing is common with open-plan office
design where designers look for ranges of furniture in terms of what one person
Fig. 6.12 Ripple of form of
chair backs
Fig. 6.13 Colour of seating
180 6 Colour Concept
workspace looks like, and the planning of a whole floor of an office. A perspec-
tive view of the whole office broken down analytically to see the repeat of chair
structures, desk supports, desk surfaces and so on will not take place, as decision-
making will be governed on the previous sentence. This task of breaking elements
down into their unit parts is fundamental to the conceptual thinking I am promot-
ing in this book.
The cinema in Fig. 6.14 (Frame and Focus) is made up of the colours red for
the seating and screen, and black and white for the enclosure. What is so striking
is that the black strips delineate where the seating is fixed, whereas the white is the
spacer. The chairs’ structure and upholstery are the same red finish. The black and
white strips are a continuous band wrapping the width of the cinema floor, walls
and ceiling. This of course echoes the framing of the screen.
The neutrality of the colour Grey is used here in this interesting seating/lying
form to blend in with the floor.
It is called ‘Floorscape’ which is, as the title suggests, a floor-based support
system as seen in Fig. 6.15 (Blend). The system comprises of a set of different
modular triangulated forms which can be rearranged in a number to suit. The
underframe is made of black-powder-coated aluminium with faceted black leather
cushions. Each unit just butts up to the other without any connectors. The design
has that scaly crocodile look that suggests the whole thing could crawl and slither
away. It is something that, because of its low lying position, invites a person to
walk onto it and of course that is the designer’s intention.
Germany’s Walter Knoll Furniture exhibited their recent range of upholstered
furniture shown in Fig. 6.16 (Repeat Motif) which is very colourful and made
more so by the black/grey solid bases. ‘Seating Stones’ are an attempt to provide
a natural landscape within interiors. The new seating designed by Ben van Berkel
is body foam-moulded with steel subframe. They are designed to be independent
or can form a close knit formation. Usually, upholstered sofas and armchairs are
6.3.5 Proportional Judgement
This is about deciding on the respective amounts of each colour within a scheme.
Colour can sometimes be taken as a follower of the other concepts in this book,
in that the designer’s sequence of thought could begin with the instigator concept
of 3D form, followed by the selection of Materials, which in turn come in cer-
tain colours. These would be ‘integral’ colours as opposed to applied colours. The
quantity of integral colours embodied in Fig. 6.17 (Structure, flooring for example)
is tightly controlled in terms of proportional quantities, whereas applied colours
present the designer with a little more flexibility in quantities used. Figure 6.17
(Vertical and Horizontal) shows the Pallotta Teamworks’ office, which is using an
industrial shed and shipping containers as the core idea of space use. The form
of these containers delineate a surface and edge within which a colour is applied,
namely a minority of blue and a majority use of yellow.
Here is a statement by the architects:
Color Inspiration:
Color on the project was very deliberately used to choreograph views and dis-
tinguish more public and neighborhood zones. A dark blue open ended shipping
container creates a deliberate transitional experience from the bright entry into
the interior landscape beyond, framing ones initial view into the dramatic white
tent landscape. Set against the crisp white of the tents is a palette of varying blues
used at the four corners of each neighborhood. The palette was developed to
subtly vary the views and enhance the sense of depth and composition of neigh-
borhood forms without confusing the clarity of the tents. The café container and
‘tower on the square’, the most public zones, ‘speak out’ strongly in this sea of
white and blue painted in a brilliant orange. Gloss paint is used for all these forms
to enhance the effect of the bright colors. Set against this saturated palette is a
variety of more muted earthy tones used on the floor of the tent neighborhoods. In
Fig. 6.17 Pallotta
Teamworks New
Headquarters, Exec Offices,
Los Angeles, California,
USA. Architects Clive
Wilkinson, 2002. Photograph
by Benny Chan—Fotoworks
6.3 What Governs Selection? 183
combination with the exposed concrete in the circulation zone, this ground plane
is reminiscent of the actual ground present in the mobile tent cities that the charity
creates.
Terms are used which describe the emotional effect intended such as choreo-
graph, transitional, bright, dramatic, palette, depth, composition, clarity and muted
earthy tones. The spaces have been designed with colour in mind and not simply
as an ‘add on’.
6.3.6 Shape
Fig. 6.18 Birkbeck Visual
Media Research Centre,
London, 2007. Designed by
Surface Architects, London
5Andy Warhol (1928–1987) was an American artist who was a leading figure in the visual art
Fig. 6.20 The Rayen
Restaurant in Madrid.
Designed by Fos, 2013
Abstract This chapter divides the topic into two major groups: artificial which
looks at typical lighting installations, and natural, which looks at how daylight
enters our buildings. Artificial light can be controlled by on/off switches but also at
source in terms of the colour and light intensity. Natural light cannot be controlled
at source but there are various ways of adjusting the amount of daylight entering
the building. Location and orientation of the building are fundamentally important
to the designer for these adjustments to be designed.
7.1 Context—Keyword: Mood
Light brings interiors to life and is important to our activities and perception of
the world around us. By controlling and designing with natural and artificial light,
the interior designer can create striking design concepts in interior spaces and
provide for the visual needs of user activities.1 Kilmer and Kilmer
Intelligent interior design recognises lighting’s ability to influence the way in
which occupants see a space and considers lighting a primary means of giving a
space special character.2 John Pile
This chapter is focussing upon how the concept of light, using both artificial
and natural, is formed assuming that the designer is equipped with the technical
and theoretical knowledge of optics, how we see, available lamps and their effects,
regulations IEE (UK), IEC (International),3 required illumination levels and fit-
tings available both built-in and free standing. The point about light in a building
is the creation of a duality of light and shade. The light is intended to illuminate a
space, surface or object. The surrounding area is in shadow. But this is not to be
ignored because of the lack of illumination. On the contrary, beams of light
bounce off their intended target and reflect into the shaded spaces. Therefore, there
is a gradient effect of light intensity. Lighting is perhaps unique by comparison
with the other concepts listed in this book because its planning (see Chap. 3,
pp. 57, 58) and formulation fall into two distinct areas that is open to change in
effect and distribution.
7.1.1 Artificial Light
Installed fittings that depend on an off/on switch or other programmed controls can
produce a variety of effects for a variety of functions. There are conditions where
lighting control is dependent upon sensors such as in office buildings, for example
where a gradient of lighting control is applied according to the amount of daylight
entering each floor. The perimeter work areas may have no lighting on as opposed to
those spaces nearer the central core of the building. Other sensors can aim at energy
efficiency, dimming controls, movement and colour changes. All artificial lighting is
designed and planned assuming total darkness. Any lighting scheme, however dark
and low the level of illumination is, will have additional lighting for two reasons: (1)
Emergency lights strategically placed if the main lighting fails. These will run on
independent generators. (2) Lighting for maintenance and cleaning.
1Rosemary Kilmer and W. Otie Kilmer, Designing Interiors, (Fort Worth, USA, Harcourt Brace
7.1.2 Natural Light
Is the amount of daylight entering the building through various openings, usu-
ally through glass, during the course of the day and this is known as the ‘Daylight
Factor’. This is based upon three paths along which light can reach a point inside a
room through a glazed window, rooflight, or aperture as follows:
• Direct light from a patch of sky visible at the point considered, known as the
sky component.
• Light reflected from an exterior surface and then reaching the point considered,
known as the externally reflected component.
• Light entering through the window but reaching the point only after reflection
from an internal surface, known as the internally reflected component.
The sum of the three components gives the luminance level (lux) at the point or
surface to be considered. All of this is dependent upon changing external climate
conditions, which is beyond the control of the designer. Daylight enters the build-
ing at pre-defined locations as far as the interior designer is concerned, simply
because the work is normally carried out on a given building. However, it may be
possible for designers to adjust existing openings or create new ones depending
upon the constraints of the particular project.
The development of a lighting concept must utilise both of these conditions
where they affect the interior. There are many interiors that are totally enclosed
without any daylight possible such as certain nightclubs, theatres and cinemas.
As mentioned in Chap. 3 on p. 57, light enables us to see what we are doing
and where we are going. When we look at wild life, we observe that moths are
attracted to any light that lights up the dark, which is to do with phototaxis; an
organism’s automatic movement towards or away from light. On the other hand,
we have creatures who hide from daylight by sleeping and only come out of their
habitat at night. These are called ‘nocturnal’ such as the bat, owl, hedgehog and
badger. Human beings generally do not like being in dark spaces and will be
attracted to any light source, just as they prefer to be close to daylight if the oppor-
tunity arises. These are fundamental needs that designers cannot ignore.
7.2 Artificial Light
Artificial light can, of course, be used very effectively, especially when it is altered
by the use of reflective or translucent materials. In this manner, light can be used
to obscure as well as reveal, to dissolve detail as well as enhance it.4 Malnar and
Vodvarka
4Malnar and Vodvarka, The Interior Dimension, (New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1992) p.
251.
188 7 Lighting Concept
Built-in lighting ranges from very practical task lighting to decorative light-
ing in fittings that are either suspended (pendant), surface mounted, recessed, free
standing or concealed, so we need to examine this range in more detail:
General or ambient lighting
Task lighting
Accent lighting
Decorative lighting
Illuminated objects
For light to be coloured, it must be noted that the light source can also be a col-
oured lamp or the white light is passed through coloured filters. Light is experi-
enced from either the source or the resultant surface or object that receives the
beam of light. Generally speaking, the beam is not seen unless for theatrical effect
or through laser beams. A concept of light will either be formed initially in rela-
tion to the designed space and enclosing elements of the interior, or it will be
formed as a leading concept, which may dictate or influence the 3D massing of the
interior. Whatever is decided, the two malleable dictates for light will be effect and
source/location. These will then fall into the categories listed above.
Fig. 7.3 Laboratory interior
of the Vortex Centre of the
Gippsland Water Factory,
Victoria, Australia. Designed
by DesignInc. of Melbourne,
2010
190 7 Lighting Concept
within the ceiling grid of elongated hexagonal openings. With large amounts of
daylight entering the external envelope and white being the dominant colour, the
effect is very bright indeed. This is compounded by a reflective floor surface,
which adds to the general illumination.
Figure 7.3 shows a laboratory which requires as much overall illumination as
possible simply because the nature of laboratory work is moving from one place
to another for work or access. The fluorescent tubing is in fittings that diffuse the
light downward but at the same time reflect off the curved white ceiling to provide
the desired result. Figure 7.4 by contrast is a cultural centre and therefore is not
such a small intense space. The atmosphere is serene and smooth with fluorescent
lighting built into the ceiling fabric in an organic pattern that does not follow any
logistic placement yet still achieves a uniform spread of light.
Fig. 7.4 Heydar Aliyev
Center designed by Zaha
Hadid Architects, 2012.
Photograph by Iwan Baan
7.2 Artificial Light 191
7.2.2 Task Lighting
This is light to enable a particular task or activity to take place, ranging from sim-
ple domestic to industrial and commercial. The light source C in Fig. 7.5 is usu-
ally placed close to the working surface, not only to enable the task to be carried
out but also for the operator to control the power or adjust the fitting in any way.
The main aim is to usually project a beam of light onto the work area and the per-
son maybe sitting or standing at a work surface or a piece of machinery. Before
computers entered the office arena, the desk would commonly have a desk lamp
to illuminate the working surface. Now that the computer/laptop screen is used,
this traditional form of lighting has to be handled carefully to avoid beaming onto
or reflecting into the screen. Figure 7.5 shows the two other common locations of
task lighting.
Fig. 7.5 Task lighting
diagram
192 7 Lighting Concept
are no task lights to be seen because the lux level on the work surface is adequate
for the tasks in hand. Caution must be taken; however, if the overall illumination is
so bright, people can begin to complain of headaches.
Figure 7.8 shows a general meeting/workspace in Bond University’s Soheil
Abedian School of Architecture in Australia. Apart from a refreshing series of
organic spaces punctuated by bursts of colour, the activities are carried out under
ceiling pendants that provide the light necessary at the working plane. This informal
layout contrasts sharply with the mechanical, almost robotic interiors in Fig. 7.7a, b.
7.2 Artificial Light 193
Fig. 7.8 Lighting for a
general meeting/workspace
in the Abedian School of
Architecture, Australia.
Designed by Cook Robotham
Architectural Bureau
(CRAB), 2014. Photograph
by Rix Ryan
7.2.3 Accent Lighting
Accent lighting is about directing light onto an object or part of the interior. This
can be for special installations such as museums, galleries, exhibitions, retail and
events where display and communication is the medium. Otherwise, the purposes
are for dramatic emphasis such as in hotels, restaurants, bars, theatres and cinemas.
The diagram in Fig. 7.9 shows the following:
D. Wallwasher from floor level
E. Narrow beam spotlight onto object
F. Wallwasher from ceiling
Fig. 7.10 Dafen Oil Painting Village art gallery exhibition hall interior. Author Aihofanz, 2010
Fig. 7.12 Bar counter with RGB controller for changing LED lighting colours through translu-
cent top and front. Courtesy of Myyour, Gazzo, Italy
196 7 Lighting Concept
Fig. 7.13 Penthouse bar in ME Hotel, London. Designed by Foster and Partners, 2013. Photo-
graph by author
7.2.4 Decorative Lighting
This is a rather sweeping category because it can cover so many different types of
installations, made even more difficult when, as I wrote in my last book, there are 18
sectors in the interior design industry. This form of lighting suggests that it is not the
main lighting that facilitates work, circulation or display, but rather it is an additional
form that richly enhances the space by its shape, content and effect. If it is the main
illuminating source, then the designers obviously intend to emphasise its presence.
The left-hand side of Fig. 7.15 is intended to sum up the essence of ‘decorative’
in that it may be quite complex and contain patterns and colours on surfaces or
as objects. The table lamp on the right combines new technology with traditional
craftsmanship and is a sculptural object. It is characterised by a virtual fusion
between marble and hand-blown glass. The materials are put together in combi-
nation with a precision only possible thanks to high-level digital technology. The
glass part and the marble part are separate pieces but one is nothing without the
other. They fit together through gravity alone. The glass is produced by the Venini
furnace in Murano (IT) and the marble by Testi in Verona (IT).
The excellent Sunset Point House (Fig. 7.16) has a very natural, organic feel
to the interior by combining browns and greys with natural materials and a steel
structure. The range of lighting covers a floor standard lamp, recessed spotlights,
surface mounted spotlights, and adjustable spotlights on a suspended track, as well
as decorative pendant lamps over the dining table and the kitchen worktop.
Figure 7.18 consists mainly of decorative lighting ranging from pendants, wall-
mounted and table-mounted fittings. The impression given to the shopper is of a
congested display with each fitting competing with others making it difficult to
focus on the effect of each one.
Fig. 7.16 Sunset Point House, San Juan Island, Washington. Designed by David Vandervort
Architects of Seattle, 2013. Photograph by Michael Shopenn
Fig. 7.18 Typical retail sales area for all kinds of domestic lighting. Courtesy John Lewis. Pho-
tograph by author
Fig. 7.19 Artichoke pendant
light. Designed by the Dane
Poul Henningsen in 1958
200 7 Lighting Concept
Fig. 7.20 Flame pendant
200 cm high designed by
American sculptor Bathsheba
Grossman, 2014
also shield the light source, redirecting and reflecting the light onto the underlying
leaves. The result is a luminous glow (Fig. 7.20).
This beautiful Flame pendant is the product of a sculptor who originally studied
mathematics, which obviously equipped her with the skills necessary to conceive
of such a design. It almost conveys the movement of dance. The materials used are
as follows: the twisted shade elements: polyamide (nylon); and the mounting cup:
stainless steel/chrome finish. The lamp is halogen 12 V GY6.35—Max 20 W. Here
is what the designer has to say:
The inspiration behind the flame pendant lamp came from a sculpture, made from
a slab of clay and cut into a cube. Four corners were twisted clockwise whilst the
other four were twisted counterclockwise. The flame lamp is designed with this
symmetry in mind, but on a much more intricate scale.
The interesting facets of light and shadow are made possible by Materialise’s rapid
prototyping technique. Instead of using paper and ink, digital designs are ‘printed’
with a laser, adding layer upon layer until a beautifully complex object is formed.
Figure 7.21 shows a suspension luminaire providing diffused lighting that
almost simulates the street lamp. Its asymmetrical composition is invigorating.
The use of an internally half-silvered lamp reflects the light onto the glass shades
which in turn softens the reflected light into the space. The central body is die-cast
aluminium with 10 blown glass cones of different sizes and a polycarbonate rose.
7.2 Artificial Light 201
Fig. 7.21 Nebula by Flos.
Designed by Joris Laarman,
2007. Aluminium and glass
Fig. 7.22 CIRC pendant
by Solera Corp. Image by
Eunice Rivera
CIRC-O available from 24″ (610 mm) to 60″ (1524 mm) diameter. The internal
lens frame is built with high-quality extruded aluminium with high-quality seam-
less continuous welding. The outer diffusive lenses are jointed together with a
minimal seam, and all external hardware is stainless steel.
7.2.5 Illuminated Objects
We have already seen some fittings that could be described as objects in the pre-
ceding three figures, but my category here is concentrating on those objects that
are designed for a prime function, which is not necessarily lighting. In these cases,
the designers have extended the function to include lighting. It is a combination of
sculpture and lighting as the prime function (Fig. 7.23).
The lighting sculpture in Fig. 7.24 changes colour throughout the year; the
branches and leaves change colour to reflect the passing seasons—from the pinks
and yellows of summer to the browns and reds of autumn. It is a wonderful celebra-
tion of nature and the name of the restaurant. It combines the disciplined arching of
the steel tubular branches with the haphazard disposition of the illuminated leaves.
Figure 7.25 shows a chair that is lit up which is most unusual in that again it
combines two functions of sitting and giving light. Here is a quote from the web-
site of Studio Thesia Progetti:
Switch it on and your room will suddenly come alive with diffused uniform light-
ing. The scenographic effect has enormous impact; the same applies to the vis-
ual sensation perceived when friends or family members sit-down cosily on these
highly unusual armchairs. They will look as though they are floating or hovering
on a cloud of light. Available in two versions, with or without the light fittings;
the Natevo armchair is produced with elastic mesh and available in three colors:
white, black and natural with a steel structure. Light and easy to manage, this
armchair comes alive with integrated light from a floor-level luminous panel; it
has been tested 200,000 times.
Fig. 7.23 Illuminated object
diagram
7.2 Artificial Light 203
Fig. 7.24 Light sculpture
for Wondertrees Restaurant
in Terminal 2 Heathrow
Airport, London. Designed
by Cinimod Studio, 2014
Fig. 7.25 Lounge chair
Nuvola di Luce by Studio
Thesia Progetti, 2013
7.3 Natural Light
One of the delights of natural light are the changes in direction, strength and col-
our that occur through the day and as a result of seasonal weather patterns.5 John
Coles and Naomi House
In this sense, the designer has enormous power to influence not only visual per-
ception, but also the emotional and physical experience of the built environment.
To be able to do this intentionally, we need to understand the patterns and quali-
ties of light.6 Malcolm Innes
Natural light, or daylight, is so much different to artificial light in that its
source is the sun and therefore out of the control of the designer. How much day-
light enters a building is within the power of the architect rather than the interior
designer. However, the adaptation of a building does give the designer the scope,
depending upon the constraints of the building, to alter and change those openings
and access points, which will in turn affect the daylight entry to the building. So
in my examination of this topic, I will attempt to cover those major architectural
sources of daylight that designers have to acknowledge. The planning of activities
involves the consideration of daylight cycle during the day and the seasons, and
the orientation of the building. It is a two-way situation of daylight entry, shadows
cast, and the people inside the building being able to see out. It is also a means of
natural ventilation. As explained in my last book, the evolution of building began
with a total solid enclosure with no daylight to a totally transparent enclosure
whereby walls and roof could be glass (Fig. 7.28).
The extreme transparent box is rare, but the increased sophisticated technology
of glass has persuaded designers to use it extensively. I shall examine the more
5John Coles and Naomi House, The Fundamentals of Interior Architecture (Lausanne,
common daylight entrances that designers will face, which is generally dealing
with existing old building stock in terms of refurbishment and reuse:
Windows,
Glazed walls,
Rooflights,
Clerestory and
Entrances/exits.
All of the above adjustment and control of the amount of daylight and direct sun-
light entering the building is desirable, as well as observing possible needs of pri-
vacy of the occupants as illustrated in Fig. 7.29.
7.3 Natural Light 207
7.3.1 Windows
The history of windows (using glass) begins with the stained glass windows of
medieval cathedrals. From the fifteenth century, only small leaded clear glass
about 14 × 8 cm could be produced and these were held together by cames, which
were grooved bars of lead known as leaded windows. These were wired to iron
standards (vertical rods) and staybars (horizontal rods) which were set, at inter-
vals, into the window surround. Also popular were square-shaped glass panes set
on the diagonal as shown in Fig. 7.31.
Gradually over the years, glass production became more sophisticated so that the
panes of glass were getting bigger. The first advances in automating glass manufac-
turing were patented in 1848 by Henry Bessemer,7 an English engineer, which ena-
bled plate glass to be produced which eventually led to the production of float glass of
the twentieth century. This method was invented in the 1950s by Ken Bickerstaff and
Fig. 7.30 Window diagram
7Sir Henry Bessemer (1813–1898) was an English engineer, inventor and businessman. Bessemer’s
name is chiefly known in connection with the Bessemer process for the manufacture of steel.
208 7 Lighting Concept
Sir Alastair Pilkington.8 Eventually, the panes of a window divided by glazing bars
disappeared, making way for large windows without any divisions. The technology of
increasing the size and thickness produced glass of such strength that a window
became the size of an external wall as well as internal partitions from floor to ceiling.
Other developments in glass technology are prevention of solar gain, reflective glass,
toughened glass, wired glass and coloured or tinted glass. For example, a great way to
reduce glare is to use glass with light diffusion properties. Acid-etched glass signifi-
cantly scatters natural light into a much larger area of the interior space.
Design considerations for a window that designers should take on board are as
follows:
• Planning, positioning,
• Relationship with artificial lighting,
• Size of opening,
• Depth of frame/reveal,
• View,
• Ventilation if required,
• Solar gain,
• Daylight adjustment—blinds, shutters, curtains,
8Sir Alastair Pilkington, (1920–1995) and his associate Kenneth Bickerstaff, both of Great
Britain, developed the world's first commercially successful manufacture of high-quality flat
glass using their float glass process.
7.3 Natural Light 209
Fig. 7.32 Georgian windows
and folding internal shutters
in an interior of Hill House,
Wickwar, Gloucestershire,
UK. Courtesy Stormwindows
7.3.2 Glazed Walls
The house by architect Mario Botta9 in Figs. 7.33 and 7.34 has two sliding glass
walls with diagonal framing that occupies the circular opening. They slide back
completely into the thickness of the external brick walls. This exposes the internal
living space to the outside in such a way that the existence of the window is
9Mario Botta (born 1943) is a Swiss architect. His designs tend to include a strong sense of
geometry, often being based on very simple shapes, yet creating unique volumes of space.
210 7 Lighting Concept
Fig. 7.34 Casa a Massagno with glazed wall open on left and closed on right. Photograph by
Alo Zanetta
7.3 Natural Light 211
Fig. 7.35 Exterior of The Chapel of St. Albert, the Great showing the front entrance, George
Sq, Edinburgh, Scotland. Architects Simpson and Brown, 2012. Photograph by Chris Humphreys
Fig. 7.36 The interadapted Serpentine Sackler Gallery exterior, London, by Zaha Hadid Archi-
tects, 2013
212 7 Lighting Concept
Fig. 7.37 First floor bedroom of Belvedere House, Florida, USA, by Shulman and Associates,
2010. Photograph by Robin Hill ©
7.3.3 Rooflights
Rooflights are designed to provide daylight into a space from the ceiling/roof level.
The Great Court in Fig. 7.38 is a superb space that used to be an open wasteland
between the circular reading room and the main building of the museum. This
infill has created one of the most magnificent urban renewal types of space I have
ever witnessed. Having walked through the neoclassical building with its fine dis-
plays of antiquity, you suddenly feel this amazing glow of natural light through
one of the many new introductory stone-framed entrances around the perime-
ter of the Court. Then, bursting into the main arena is a totally uplifting experi-
ence mainly because it is so inviting, but secondly, it takes your breath away for
7.3 Natural Light 213
Fig. 7.38 Great Court,
British Museum, London.
Architect Foster and Partners,
2002. Photograph by author
its surprise factor. The unique geometry of the roof forms both the primary struc-
ture and the framing for the glazing, which is designed to reduce solar gain and is
about 100 mm thick. The fine steel lattice is constructed from custom-made steel
box beams joined at six-way nodes. The roof’s toroidal framing was defined using
a customised form-generating computer programme. The roof shape is curved to
a tight radius of approximately 165 ft (50 m), which means it can act much like
a dome, whilst imposing minimal loads onto the existing surrounding structures.
The new roof over the Court was designed by Foster and Partners, architects, and
Buro Happold, engineers, and was fabricated and erected by Waagner Biro. It is
composed of 3312 individual panels of glass, each one a unique triangle. The 3312
panels of glass are screen printed with small dots on 50 % of their surface—a tech-
nique called ‘fritting’. The fritting filters ultraviolet rays and reduces solar gain.
The Great Court is a most unusual example in that it is an architectural master-
piece, which is more than can be said for many buildings that have rooflights. Many
common installations are an eyesore when viewed externally, but in many cases, this
view may be obscured and because the effect of the daylight entering the interior
214 7 Lighting Concept
Fig. 7.39 Interior of the Pantheon, Rome, Italy, showing the coffered concrete dome. 126 AD.
Photograph by Richijheath of Wikimedia Commons
space is so delightful for the owners/users they accept it. Interior designers can be
faced with a project that demands either existing rooflights that may need altering
or improving or that rooflights are a totally new addition to the building’s struc-
ture. Having been given a building with a solid roof that was not designed to have
rooflights, the idea of inserting them requires great ingenuity and sensitivity to the
existing building’s character. How many times have we witnessed existing roofs and
rooflines botched by the insertion of rooflights, dormer windows and currently, solar
panels for heating water? Building elevations are easily seen by people, but roofs are
only seen fully by people in aeroplanes or neighbouring high-rise buildings.
The most famous early rooflight (or skylight as is sometimes called) in his-
tory must be the one at the oculus of the Pantheon in Rome seen here in Fig. 7.39,
except that in this case, it is open to the sky with no glass covering at all. It is
remarkable how much reflected light there is for such a large space. The diameter
of the plan is 43.3 m which is exactly the same as the height from floor level to the
oculus. The oculus itself is 8.3 m in diameter and serves as a cooling and ventila-
tion method. During storms, a drainage system below the floor handles the rain
that falls through the oculus.
7.3 Natural Light 215
A rooflight allows natural light to enter the interior space from above (Fig. 7.40).
It is not designed for people to look out and therefore has a one-way function.
From the point of view of daylight entry, the rooflight is far more efficient than the
window in this illustration with its even spread of light.
Figure 7.41 shows how effective and even the spread of light is in this workspace.
Atrium spaces, such as the one illustrated in Fig. 7.42, are by definition a void
in the centre of a multi-storey building with a rooflight over. This shopping centre
survives mainly by the sparkle of the retail shop units, and the central space lit up
by daylight, which is a good fusion of the two sources of light. One does not con-
flict with the other.
Fig. 7.41 Rooflights in own
offices in Berlin, Germany.
Designed by Sauerbruch
Hutton architects, 2009.
Photograph by Annette
Kisling. Studio Karin Sander,
Berlin
216 7 Lighting Concept
Fig. 7.42 Bentalls
Shopping Centre, Kingston,
Surrey, UK. Designed by
BDP architects in 1994.
Photograph by Andy
Borzyskowski
But rooflights have a limited field of application in interiors, as they can only
be installed (in existing buildings) or designed for new buildings in the following
situations:
• Top floor of a building,
• Single-storey building,
• Every floor of a zigguratical building,
• Atrium or courtyard and
• Pavement lights for basements.
The requirement to use them to ventilate the interior can vary depending upon the
needs of the interior. If they are the sole daylight entry point into the interior, then
they would have to be openable.
7.3 Natural Light 217
7.3.4 Clerestory Window
Fig. 7.43 Ely Cathedral
exterior. Founded 673 and
built from eleventh century.
Photograph by author
218 7 Lighting Concept
Fig. 7.44 Ely Cathedral
interior of nave. Photograph
by author
Fig. 7.45 Clerestory window
diagram showing daylight
entry
Figure 7.45 shows the most common locations for clerestory windows. Without
any eye-level windows, the emphasis, in daytime hours, is on a brightness from
above which could be good for studio/workshop-type activities where concen-
trated effort is required undisturbed by the external environment. Figure 7.46
shows how effective this form of daylighting can be.
7.3 Natural Light 219
to be the weakest point of defence from invaders, a glazed opening was not on the
agenda. It was not until Tudor times that glass appeared either by the side of the
window or as a fanlight above the door as can be seen in Fig. 7.48, and in later
periods Figs. 7.49 and 7.50.
Fig. 7.48 Entrance door
to Blickling Hall, Norfolk,
England, fifteenth century.
Drawn by author
From the images above, it can be seen how gradual daylight entry had become
a desirable element. In the earlier periods, some of the entrance halls would have
been gloomy places, so the introduction of daylight would have lightened the
atmosphere. The side windows in Fig. 7.50 enabled the resident to view any caller
at the door. If we wind forward to the present day, we can see in Fig. 7.51 that new
technology and design has swept away all vestiges of the past. It shows a modern
house with the ground floor glass walls lit up from the inside. Three bays to the
left open up into a garage, and the last bay to the right is the main entrance into the
house.
222 7 Lighting Concept
Fig. 7.51 House in
Kyoto, Japan. Designed by
Alphaville architects, 2010.
Photograph by Kei Sugino,
Kentaro Takeguchi
7.4 Summary Diagram
I hope the reader is now in a clearer position to know what has to be handled in
order for a lighting concept to be formulated. The following diagram summarises
what this chapter has tried to do (Fig. 7.52).
Whatever forms of lighting are chosen, it is important that the designer’s selec-
tion amounts to a singular scheme without any conflicts between the various
sources.
7.4 Summary Diagram 223
Fig. 7.52 Summary lighting
diagram
Conclusion
Statement
My purpose in writing this book was to expand on that part of the design process
defined as conceptual thinking, which gives birth to the ideas inherent in a design
scheme. I am hopeful that readers will gain further insight into this important gen-
erative stage in designing, and that their future work will have more body and sub-
stance than they have hitherto experienced. There are many books as I have referred
to in my text that are excellent in their coverage of the field of interior design,
design theory, geometry and the human form, but I have always found something
lacking in explaining where the creative spark comes from. Of course some design-
ers may say that they had a ‘eureka’ moment whilst climbing a mountain, or driving
long distance, or just falling off to sleep. This fortuitous and unplanned occur-
rence is not something that can be relied upon if there are deadlines involved. So in
breaking up the process of conceptualising into the seven categories as outlined in
this book, I have been pleased about how this kind of analytical thinking has been
pertinent to this difficult field of interior design.
Example
with the subject matter. I have found that the more successful design solutions
are those that have these connections, as compared with designs that have forms,
shapes and colours but with no meaningful links with the subject matter.
1 The geometry is simply divided up as follows:
• Fascia defined on client instruction to have the name—SHOE.
• Remainder taken up with central doors and window areas on a symmetrical
basis as exists with a ‘pair’of shoes.
• Grid lines in Fig. 2 showing main axis.
2 Visual connection to a SHOE as a design source is made as follows:
Professional Bodies
CSD—Chartered Society of Designers—UK
The Chartered Society of Designers (CSD) is the professional body for designers
and the authority on professional design practice.It is the world's largest chartered
body of professional designers with members in 33 countries and is unique in rep-
resenting designers in all disciplines. The Society exists to promote concern for the
sound principles of design in all areas in which design considerations apply, to
further design practice and encourage the study of design techniques for the ben-
efit of the community. In so doing, it seeks to secure and promote a professional
body of designers and regulate and control their practice for the benefit of industry
and the public.
BIID
The British Institute of Interior Design is the pre-eminent professional organisa-
tion for interior designers in the UK. Our growing national and international
membership represents both the commercial and residential sectors, from heritage
to cutting edge. In addition to rigorous entry requirements which assess training,
experience and professionalism, we require our members to continue their profes-
sional development throughout their career to ensure their continued expertise in
design process, practice and regulatory matters. TheBritish Institute of Interior
Designis the only professional organisation for interior designers, which has been
granted the prestigious and rare accolade of Institute status by the Minister of
State as the pre-eminent body in its field.
SBID
The Societyof British and International Design (SBID)is the national representa-
tive organisation to the European Council of Interior Design and Architecture. We
create and measure the professions trading standards through practice, knowledge
and science. We steer and protect our members in business to increase their pro-
file, protect and promote their reputation and create opportunities.
IFI—International Federation of Interior Architects/Designers
The profession provides leadership and utilizes an iterative and interactive process
that includes discovery, translation and validation, producing measurable outcomes
and improvements in interior spaces and in the lives of the people who use them.
IIDA (International Interior Design Association)—USA, with respect for past
accomplishments of Interior Design leaders, strives to create a strong niche for
the most talented and visionary Interior Design professionals, to elevate the
profession to the level it warrants, and to lead the way for the next generation
of Interior Design innovators. The Association provides a forum to demonstrate
design professionals’ impact on the health, safety, well being and virtual soul of
the public, balancing passion for good design and strategy for best business prac-
tices. IIDA stands at the intersection of passion and strategy where designers cre-
ate extraordinary interiors and experiences.
IDA (Interior Design Association)—UK
The IDA was established in 2009, when it became clear that no industry body sat-
isfactorily represented interior design practices and individuals in the commercial
market place.
It is an independent body for the interior design industry and has the objective
to facilitate a strong and prosperous contract interiors market. The development of
members' commercial interests is a priority and raising the status of the interior
designer its key objective.
ECIA—European Council of Interior Architects
The ECIA is the representative body for the European professional organizations
in Interior Architecture and Design. Founded in 1992, ECIA currently represents
16 members-national organizations, with over 7500 practicing Interior Architects.
ECIA provides a common platform for the exchange of information on best profes-
sional practices and has established common minimum standards of educational
and professional profile for the Associated Interior Architects in the member orga-
nizations. ECIA is the common voice of Interior Architects on European and inter-
national level, promoting this profession as vital part of society and economy.
BEDA—Bureau of European Design Asssociations
BEDA exists to ensure permanent liaison between its Members and the author-
ities of the European Union in order to communicate and promote the value of
design and innovation to the European economy. Founded in 1969 BEDA boasts
46 members from 24 member states in Europe. Members can be design promotion
centers and other publicly funded organisations that promote design nationally or
regionally as well as professional and trade associations for designers from across
Europe. Those professional associations represent some 400,000 designers from
across Europe in every discipline of work from industrial design and interiors to
digital design and branding. BEDA is a not-for-profit organisation funded in its
entirety by its members.
Appendix 231
Educational Bodies
• the advocacy for all affiliated undergraduate and postgraduate degree pro-
grammes in Interior Architecture and Design subjects and support the diversity
and range of that provision.
• recognition as the national authority on UK Interior Architecture and Design
education and research issues. IE will provide a mechanism for the recognition
of excellence through publication, citation and research outputs, and for the
collective promotion of affiliated programmes.
• contributing representative views too wider environmental / educational debates and
forum including CHEAD, CUMULUS, AHRC funding, and research studentships.
• coordinating and sharing good practice, external examiners and other subject
specialists.
I founded the forerunner of this in Nottingham 1983 which was the AIDDC
(Association of Interior Design Degree Courses in the UK).
IDEC—(Interior Design Educators Council) USA
The mission of The Interior Design Educators Council, Inc. is the advancement of
interior design education, scholarship, and service.
IDEC will be recognized as the leading association and authority on interior
design education by:
• Advancing responsible design thinking through education, scholarship, and service.
Advancing the interior design profession’s Body of Knowledge. (A profession's
body of knowledge is the abstract knowledge needed by practitioners to perform
the profession's work. Abstract knowledge is what an interior design practitioner
knows and applies to a design project. This is not to be confused with the skills
designers need to practice or tasks designers are required to perform.)
• Participating in leadership discussions and actions that affect the entire design
community.
• Being the primary source of innovative interior design teaching resources.
• Being the leading venue for the publication, presentation, and dissemination of
interior design scholarship.
• Preparing members for leadership roles in their academic institutions, commu-
nities, and the interior design profession at large.
• Providing support for the professional development of interior design educators
at all professional levels.
• Engaging interior design educators in service to the organization and to the
greater community.
Core Values
• We believe in the value of an accredited, formalized interior design education.
• We believe the preparation of an interior designer includes learning through
formalized education, scholarship, and service.
• We believe the foundation of interior design education is grounded in ethics and
encompasses environmental, cultural, social, global issues.
Appendix 233
P S
Palazzo Grassi, 148 Safdie, Moshe, 41
Pallotta Teamworks, 152, 182 Salingaros, xviii
Pantheon, Rome, 214 Samoo Architects & Engineers, 155
Paolelli, Meneghello, 166 Sander, Karin, 215
Parker Morris, 71 Santa Margherita, 144
Particular Architects, 121 Sauerbruch Hutton, 215
Partisans, 91 Saunders Architects, 180
Partition, 12 Sawmill, 141
Paul, Judith, 153 Scarpa, Carlo, 145
Paxton, Joseph, 134 Schott, Randolf, 31
Percy Thomas Partnership, 87 Scored plasterboard, 113
Pérez, Javier, 60 Scott, Fred, xxii
Perfectionist café, Heathrow, 178 Seating, 158
Phototaxis, 187 Seating stones, 180
Picketts, Dave, 181 Serpentine Sackler Gallery, 147, 212
Picogna/Ikon, 166 Shape, 183
Pile, John, 127, 186 Shelf, 124
Pilkington, 155 Shelving, 161
Pilkington, Sir Alastair, 207 Shenzhen Bao'an International
Pint Shop, 173 Airport, 148, 188
Placebo Pharmacy, 34, 35, 48, 194 Shopenn, Michael, 198
Placement of object, 22 Shulman and Associates, 212
Plain Box, 68 Simpson and Brown, 59, 211
Planning Concept, 2 Single colour dominance, 174
Plan patterns, 5 Single Cube Room, 68
Plastic laminate, 143 Skyhouse Penthouse, 65
Plowright, Philip, xvii, xix, xxiii Smithson, Alison and Peter, 135
Point d’orgue, 44, 150 Smolenicky and Partner, 30
Poldma, Tiiu, xx, 127 Snug, The, 158
Porsch Pavilion, 18 Society of British and International
Powell-Tuck, Connor and Orefelt, 95 Design, 231
Proportional Judgement, 174 Sodhi, Ar Rajat, 142
Pub interior, 172 Solera Corp, 201
Punta della Dogana, 149 Space and Light, 57
Spiral, 130
Square, 61
R St Alban Restaurant, 194
Rand, Patrick, 141 St Albert the Great Chapel, 58
Rasmussen, Steen Eiler, 157 St Matthew’s Church, 79
Rayen Restaurant, 184 Stairtread, 129
Realisation sequence, 56 State Bank of India, 161
Rengel, Roberto, xxi Stiff and Trevillion, 196
Renzo Piano, 94 Stone, Sally, xxii
Retail lighting, 198 Stool, 158
Richard Rogers Ptnrsp, 51 Storage, 28
Richijheath, 214 Storage essentials, 164
Rivera, Eunice, 201 Storage units, 164
Rock Star Villa, 9, 153 Stormwindows, 209
Ronan and Erwan, 124, 125 Structure, 149
Rooflights, 187 Studio Mieke Meijer, 84
Rubio, Alberto, 9, 153 Studio Thesia Progetti, 202
Sugino, Kei, 98, 222
240 Index
Sullivan, Louis, 76 V
Sully, Anthony, v, xxi, 31, 128 Vandervort, David, 198
Sundblad, Filip, 32 Vanguard Foundry, 142
Sunset Point House, 197 Venini furnace, 197
Support systems, 10, 157 Vertical circulation, 47
Surface Architects, 97, 183, 184 Victorian interior, 67
Surface finishes, 153 Viñas, Ghislaine, 65
Surfrider Foundation Europe, 44, 45, Volshotel Amsterdam, 66
150–152, 217
Suspended stair, 84
Symbiosis bath, 165 W
Waagner Biro, 213
Wall hung desk, 111
T Walter Knoll, 180
Table, 122, 160 Wardrobes, 164
Taj Mahal, 75 Warhole, Andy, 183
Takeguchi, Kentaro, 98, 222 Washington Park Residence, 219
Tallis, 135 Wave sanitary ware, 166
Task lighting, 191 Weigand, John, xx
Taylor and Miller, 62, 192 Weinheim House, 99
Teatrino, The, 148 White, Allison Carll, xx
Testi, 197 Wiktorowicz, Igor, 159
ThinQ, 144 Wilkinson, Clive, 152, 182
Thomas, Rodney, 84 Window House, Kyoto, 132
Thonet, 31 Windows, 207
Thony, Günther, 163 Window seat, 83
Tinyfroglet, 136 Witamina, 159
Torafu Architects, 32 Wondertrees Restaurant, Heathrow, 205
Torggler, Klemens, 114 Wood, Nick, 83
Triangle, 61, 64 Workbenches, Counters, 161
Tribal DBB, 46 Workplace solutions, 161
Tschumi, Bernard, 92
Y
U Yao, Kris, 25
Umami bowl, 142 Yasuda, Makoto, 100
UN studio, 24, 181
Uncino chair, 124, 125
Unit type, 147 Z
Unwin, Simon, xx Zanetta, Alo, 210
Uribarri, Nicolás, 60 Zeisel, John, 4
Zenz, Rainer, 75