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Towards Embodied Knowledge in Architecture: Investigating the relation between traditional handcrafts and technological development

Part 1 Dissertation 2019
Tord Mardoff Nielsen
University for the Creative Arts | UK
When we speak of architecture, we often imagine the built object or a beautiful drawing. This thesis instead turns to exploring the less acknowledged stage of architectural production: the very process of building and making construction decisions. Arguing that the building site plays a central role for both education and continuous innovation that the architectural discipline depends on. The study approaches the field of architectural production by analysing discourses surrounding building industrialisation, modular construction and skilled craftsmanship. It offers an understanding of culture as ordinary, produced by everyday interactions (after Raymond Williams), beyond and above the notion of ‘high culture’. Starting from the premise that traditional skillset is not antithetical to technological development in architecture, the thesis engages with the author’s personal background in joinery, using work diaries and oral history to explore the less–documented process of education in craft and design as ‘learning through making’ (after Tim Ingold). This methodological tool is further used to question how the official narratives often neglect the architectural knowledge produced collaboratively, on site, which, the dissertation argues, is dependent on both workers’ skillsets and resolution of ambiguities that the dialogical work on site lends itself to.

Tutor(s)
Tijana Stevanovic
2019
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