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Embodied Time: Applied and Incidental Architectural Narratives

Davies, Owen; Hanks, Laura

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Authors

Owen Davies

LAURA HANKS LAURA.HANKS@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Associate Professor



Abstract

In this analysis of storytelling through building, encompassing a search for practical applications for how future buildings can embrace the passing of time, narrativity has been categorised into: the ‘applied’ or ‘artificial’, meaning the construction of a directed story, identity or philosophy; and the ‘incidental’ or ‘organic’, the accidental erosion and patination caused by weathering and human use. In ‘Building Time’, David Leatherbarrow considers three groupings for his analysis of buildings inhabiting the temporal dimension. The ‘Time of the Project’, the alterations, adaptations and adjustments made to a building, can be considered a prototype for ‘applied’ narrativity, while his ‘Time of the World’ can be linked to the gathering of ‘incidental’ narrativity. Leatherbarrow’s third aspect, the ‘Time of the Body’, can be compared to the phenomenological aspects linking these categories together, directing human passage and activity through design cues and through the traces of those who have come before (Leatherbarrow, 2021). At times these categories overlap and intertwine with each other, mirroring the idea that in the communication of narrative the “the corporeal is not more fundamental than the intellectual, but… are entangled” (Austin, 2012: 108). In summary, the aim is for an architecture that may “articulate the experiences of our very existence” (Pallasmaa, 2009 :19). Therefore, as time passes and our experiences become history, we can still tell our stories through the medium of building. This methodology to create buildings with a high degree of ‘story-ness’ was later tested in the design of a new library and literary museum. Based in Nottingham’s Lace Market, the existing tale of County House, a derelict and crudely adapted Georgian townhouse, was clarified, curated and secured, while the adjacent plots provided opportunities to experiment with applied and incidental narratives told through new buildings.

Citation

Davies, O., & Hanks, L. (2022). Embodied Time: Applied and Incidental Architectural Narratives. Journal of Design, Planning and Aesthetics Research, 1(2), 28-53. https://doi.org/10.55755/deparch.2022.10

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 6, 2022
Online Publication Date Nov 7, 2022
Publication Date 2022
Deposit Date May 4, 2023
Publicly Available Date May 12, 2023
Journal Journal of Design, Planning and Aesthetics Research
Publisher Selçuk University
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 1
Issue 2
Pages 28-53
DOI https://doi.org/10.55755/deparch.2022.10
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/13181923
Publisher URL https://deparch.selcuk.edu.tr/index.php/deparch/article/view/14/15

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