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Category: Architecture (Page 25 of 29)

Government Policy on Architecture 2009 – 2015

The new Government Policy on Architecture 2009 – 2015 Towards a Sustainable Future: Delivering Quality within the Built Environment was published on 8 October. Download it here.

The implementation of this Policy on Architecture and its 45 actions is of crucial importance to promote quality in the built environment and to promote awareness, education and sustainability on the role of architecture.

Government Policy on Architecture 2009 – 2015

The quality of our built environment profoundly affects the quality of our everyday lives.”

“…conceiving, designing and delivering sustainable architecture in our environment presents a significant challenge to this generation. This is a challenge that requires a fundamental re-appraisal of the role of architecture and urban design, integrating their cultural and environmental responsibilities to combat the effects of climate change. In rising to the environmental challenges facing our country there is a need, through research on the built environment, to make informed choices on how we use our existing places, buildings, landscapes and natural resources.”

“…the Government through this Policy on architecture and the built environment seeks to promote awareness and understanding of the contribution of good design to the daily life and well being of society as a whole. High quality design, whether in the details of the buildings we work in, or in the spaces and places that we share socially, should not be viewed as a luxury, achievable on a one-off basis. The realisation of good architecture is fundamentally about much more than individual buildings.”

“The Policy recognises the place of architecture in society as an expression of cultural, aesthetic and social values, both past and present, and the challenges and expectations of the future in shaping a sustainable high quality environment. We can all learn to embrace and indeed love architecture and still preserve the diversity of our own personal tastes and empathies. This will only serve to deepen and enrich the great debate on the places and spaces that lend to shaping our lives.”

John Gormley TD, Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government October, 2009

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Read the first Report of the Government Policy on Architecture 2009-2015 published in February 2011.

Design Exposed and the Architect’s Brain

The diagram below was taken from Visual Thesaurus, an interactive tool that allows you to discover the connections between words in a visually captivating display.

Design Diagram

The connections and relationships between words are very interesting and meaningful.

If you could cross this diagram with one showing client’s requirements, environment & energy requirements and regulations, you would get a pretty good idea of what happens inside an Architect’s brain.

The Architect's Brain

The complexity of an Architect’s Brain, by Isabel Barros.

Architecture and Sustainability: Declaration and Policy of the Architects’ Council of Europe

ACE (Architects’ Council of Europe) declaration on Architecture and Sustainability:

“We, leaders and representatives of the architectural profession believe that the design of the built environment has a profound role to play in ensuring the survival of the human race and thousands of other living species, the integrity of the earth and its biodiversity and the heritage of future generations currently threatened by climate change and unsustainable development.

We are conscious that buildings account for almost half of the primary energy used in the western world, and if we add to that the impact of spatial planning on the movement of people and goods our responsibility as built environment professionals extends even further. Inequitable and unsustainable production and consumption patterns exacerbate environmental changes and aggravate poverty in many regions of the world. Can we find the collective wisdom to choose a more sustainable path of development?”

Read more.

View Isabel Barros's LinkedIn profileView Isabel Barros’s profile

 

 

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