39分

On Balance: Architecture and Vertigo Unfrozen

    • デザイン

Mankind’s quest for verticality has an underexplored dimension:
the queasy feeling of vertigo many experience when close to the edge of a sheer drop. Davide Deriu, Reader in Architectural History and Theory at the University of Westminster, London, has taken on the relative lack of research into the subject with an interdisciplinary approach, captured in his book On Balance: Architecture and Vertigo. Come, stand on the edge with us.

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Intro/Outro: “Vertigo” by U2

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Discussed:

          
Vertigo, Alfred Hitchcock, 1958

        
Vertical: The City from Satellites to Bunkers, Stephen Graham, 2016

        
Vertigo in the City program at University of Westminster, 2015

      
The Eiffel Tower and Other Mythologies, Roland Barthes, 1979

        
Funambulism

            
Jean François "Blondin" Gravelet – Niagara Falls wire walk, 1859

      
Philippe Petit, World Trade Center wire walk, 1974

            
Jan Gehl on humans’ “natural” habitat in horizontal planes

          
Singapore’s HDB social high-rises

           
Mies’ insertion of ventilation grilles in front of the glass curtain wall at the Seagram Building, 1958

         
Prosper Meniere, father of the vestibular sciences

Mankind’s quest for verticality has an underexplored dimension:
the queasy feeling of vertigo many experience when close to the edge of a sheer drop. Davide Deriu, Reader in Architectural History and Theory at the University of Westminster, London, has taken on the relative lack of research into the subject with an interdisciplinary approach, captured in his book On Balance: Architecture and Vertigo. Come, stand on the edge with us.

--

Intro/Outro: “Vertigo” by U2

--

Discussed:

          
Vertigo, Alfred Hitchcock, 1958

        
Vertical: The City from Satellites to Bunkers, Stephen Graham, 2016

        
Vertigo in the City program at University of Westminster, 2015

      
The Eiffel Tower and Other Mythologies, Roland Barthes, 1979

        
Funambulism

            
Jean François "Blondin" Gravelet – Niagara Falls wire walk, 1859

      
Philippe Petit, World Trade Center wire walk, 1974

            
Jan Gehl on humans’ “natural” habitat in horizontal planes

          
Singapore’s HDB social high-rises

           
Mies’ insertion of ventilation grilles in front of the glass curtain wall at the Seagram Building, 1958

         
Prosper Meniere, father of the vestibular sciences

39分