French window, despite its name, is a heavily fenestrated double door, usually found in domestic buildings and opening on to a garden.
French window, despite its name, is a heavily fenestrated double door, usually found in domestic buildings and opening on to a garden.
Tectonics is the science or art of shaping, ornamenting, or assembling materials in construction.
Stina Holm Jensen | Tectonic Architectural Studio
Eclectic refers to works of architecture and the decorative arts that derive from a wide range of historic styles, the style in each instance being chosen for its deemed appropriateness to local tradition, geography, or culture.
eclectic style // Madrid
Gingerbread refers to a heavily, gaudily, and superfluously ornamented, specifically in architecture.
gingerbread house // Russia
A feasibility study is a detailed investigation and analysis conducted to determine the financial, technical, or other advisability of a proposed construction project.
feasibility study // Transition Works
Juxtaposition is the state or position of being placed close together or side by side, so as to permit comparison or contrast.
Frank Gehry // Dancing House, Prague, Czech Republic
A diagram is a drawing, not necessarily representational, that outlines, explains, or clarifies the arrangement and relations of the parts of a whole.
Stan Allen // Field Conditions Diagrams, 1985
Geometric relates to shapes and forms which resemble or employ the simple rectilinear or curvilinear elements of geometry.
Geometric Paper Sculptures // Daryl J Ashton
An archetype is an original model or pattern on which all things of the same kind are copied or based.
The Pantheon, Rome, Italy
A modular coordination means correlating the dimensions of a structure and the unit sizes of its components, usually with the aid of a planning grid based on a 4-inch or 100 mm cubical module.
grid // modular coordination
Reproductive imagination is the power of reproducing images stored in the memory under the suggestion of associated images.
"Micro heart thinking as brain" // Skount Blog