The
Role of Glass in Interior Architecture:
Aesthetics, Community, and Privacy
by Matthew Ziff
Design education seeks to
infuse students with knowledge, skills, and attitudes, regarding the design
of the built environment. In the areas of knowledge and attitude, sophistication
and competence are developed through both practice (largely carried out
in the design studio environment), and engagement with critical analysis
(largely carried out in seminar classes and traditional lecture format
class environments). For design students the world of design is both to
be known and understood, and to be created, at their own studio desk.
In order to both know and create design, students often behave like nocturnal
predators, seeking what is necessary in a mode that is often unobserved,
and then returning to digest their catch, to produce responsive and synthetic
work. One arena in which design students find rich fields of information
is that of material characteristics. Materials used in the design and
construction of the built environment form a significant portion of the
skeleton of a designer’s body of knowledge, skills, and attitudes
toward design. A current hotbed of material character and application
is that of the world of glass. This essay is an exploration of some of
the issues that the architectural uses of glass raise from the point of
view of design student exploration.
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