1 minute read

Tale VII: How Soon Is Now

Theory

Transient State

Advertisement

Compared to the entire history of nature, the emergence of humans and cities is only transient.

For centuries, the main ideal of architecture has been a solid, resistant and inflexible entity with a lasting and stable order to the surrounding life scene. Just as the presence of urbanization forces animals to change their way of life, or to find the next viable habitat. The cities where humans live are also greatly influenced by nature.

The development and evolution of the city is the result of the confrontation and coexistence of architecture and nature When the threat to the city gradually increases, human beings are naturally coerced, imprisoned, and even forced to move. To survive, space requirements are also gradually transient. Humans are a product of nature, and all human work, their physical practices, buildings, and artefacts, evolve and develop over time and become part of nature.

keyword: Transient/Confrontation

This article is from: