I think I have final found the missing link to my project, and at 7:30 in the morning coming out of an all nighter.
Im sorry for posting this, but I feel like if I don't type through my thoughts they will vanish, much like trying to recall a dream.
I've always been interested in this ecological metaphor of a building being able to grow to its environment.
My project is about transit (urban level) and is about knowledge/idea sharing (building level) both share the same concept of making connections. well I thought I realized this weeks ago and the things that I am producing don't seem to embody connectivity, maybe some do at the transient level, but not as an architectural aesthetic. Being in the bio -synergy studio looking toward nature for inspiration I started to think of what natural systems/ or things lend themselves to salving the problem of making connections. First though were roots and the second is neurons or nerves, which also posses a root like structure. Could my building begin to aesthetically take on some of these characteristics? could it begin to express this the most at where it touches the ground/ or as it creates the space in which the ted talks are held. I am very excited to have finally put two and two together. I honestly think I have been running my self down trying to grasp what my thesis was getting at and look for any excuse to change site/or program.
I hope the next couple of days will allow me to explore the formal possibilities of testing the nerve like structure. If not I have all of spring break to test to my hearts content.
Currently I am satisfied with what my urban plan has left me to respond to and I feel like I have a good grasp of my building's volume/scale and the necessary adjacencies/ frontages of my program.
I think the hardest part of my project is that I am designing for a brand new context and it doesn't allow for a way to check if what I am doing is actually appropriate, the way preexisting context would.
-my apologies to john in advance if my building ends up having similar ties to mycelium.
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