Title: Context analysis
1Context analysis
Prof.dr.ir Taeke M. de Jong SASBE June 15th 2009
2Operational study proposals
- y(x)
- landscape( villa)
- villa( landscape)
- villa( landscape( water system))
- urbanity( liveliness, choice)
- ( liveliness, choice)( density, variety)
3Nested key words
- villa(landscape(water-system, history))
- villa(landscape(water-system(history)))
- villa(landscape((water-system, occupation)(history
, spatial dispersion))) - )( means a matrix
history spatial dispersion
water-system 1 2
occupation 3 4
useful as a list of contents of your report 1
water-system(history) 2 water-system(spatial
dispersion) 3 occupation(history) 4
occupation(spatial dispersion)
4Syntactic key words
- object y as a working (function, action, output,
result, property) of - subject x (independent variabele actor, input,
condition, cause) - y(x)
- object(subject)
- Suffering object(subject)
- impact(condition, cause)
- aim(means)
- The verb is replaced by brackets ()
- Form follows function. form(function)
- landscape(villa)
- villa(landscape)
See also index of Ways to Study
5Operations (functions) y f(x)
- intuitive f(x) associated with x
- conditional f(x) possible by x
- set-theoretical f(x) part of x, encloses x,
without x ... - logical f(x) if x, not x ...
- mathematical f(x) xx , x2...
- causal f(x) caused by x
- temporal f(x) preceded, followed by x
- spatial(formal) f(x) near to, contiguous to,
surrounded by x ... - structural f(x) connected with x, seperated
from x ... - combinations a box of boards connected by
nailsbox(boards, nails)
6Valid, Reliable
7Classical empirical research
- problem statement (problem isolation)
- clear aim
- reference
- starting points
- hypothesis
- variables
- data
- method
- content
- publish
8Design related study
- can not isolate problems from a coherent field of
problems - brings aims together in a field of aims, a
concept - has many references, not only written text but
especially images forms, types, models,
concepts, programmes - has many starting points
- has designs as hypothesis stating This will
work - has many context variables (parameters)
- while the object still varies in your head
- has many ways to study (in a book with 10 000 key
words) - content grows drawing, calculating and writing
- publishes with the medium as a message
9Empirical research orDesign related study
- Research produces probabilities by causes
- Design produces possibilities by conditions
10Make probable by causes Make possible by
conditions
Not every condition is a cause, but every cause
is a condition for something to happen
11Unravelling condition and cause
12Domains of future
13Domainsin design science
14Design related study
15Design related study
16Design related study
17Design related study
- The object of design study is variable by
definition - Social and physical context delimits that object
- But context is everything
- How to get grip on that vague concept first?
18Context sensitivity of our design object
Preface by Rector Fokkema Within the range of a
technical university the object of design in
terms of (urban) architecture and technique is
the design subject that is amongst all others
most sensitive to context. The programme of
requirements is not only derived from an economic
and technical context, but also from contexts
hailing from political, cultural, ecological en
spatial considerations on many levels of scale.
19Explicit future context
- protects your study against judgements with other
suppositions about the future context - raises the debate about the robustness of your
study in different future contexts - makes your study comparable to other studies in
comparable contexts - raises a field of problems instead of an
isolated problem statement by subtracting
desirable futures from the probable ones
20How tohandlecontext
21Ideal contents of a study proposal
- 1. Object of study and its context
- 2. My study proposal
- 3. Accounts
221 Object of my study and its context
- 1.1. Object of my study scale, frame and grain
- 1.2. Probable future context field of problems
- 1.3. Desired impacts of my study field of aims
- 1.4. My designerly references field of means
- 1.5. My portfolio and perspective field of
abilities
232 My study proposal
- 2.1. Location andor other future context factors
- 2.2. Motivation andor programme of requirements
- 2.3. Intended results, contributions
- 2.4. Planning
243 Accounts
- 3.1. Meeting criteria for a study proposal
- 3.2. References
- 3.3. Key words
25Criteria for a study proposal
- A.Affinity with designing
- B.University breadth
- C.Concept formation and transferability
- D.Retrievability and accumulating capacity
- E.Methodical accountability and depth
- F.Ability to be criticised and to criticise
- G.Convergence and limitations
261 Object of my study and its context
- 1.1. Object of my study scale, frame and grain
- 1.2. Probable future context field of problems
- 1.3. Desired impacts of my study field of aims
- 1.4. My designerly references field of means
- 1.5. My portfolio and perspective field of
abilities
27Ways to Study and Researchurban, architectural
and technical design
- CONTENTS
- Introduction
- Naming and describing
- Design research and typology
- Evaluating
- Modelling
- Programming and optimising
- Technical Study
- Design Study
- Study by design
- Epilogue
Empirical research
Study by design
28How to limitate, concentrate
- give way to fascinations (motivated
concentrations) - choose a scale (frame and grain) before an object
- publish your portfolio evaluating it as field of
abilities - decide to improve or to extend them in your
proposal - publish images that fascinate you as a field of
means - look at them as a professional which concepts,
types, models programmes could you harvest? - make your assumptions about the future explicit
- imagine the impacts your study could have
- cash your dreams
29Scale paradox
- On the level of one spot you should conclude
difference - On the level of 7 spots you should conclude
equality - Reversal of conclusions may appear by a factor 3
radius - So, the order of size determines your view
30Levels of scale to be aware of
- Different scales mean different legend units,
categories, views, approaches, conclusions
31Names and boundaries of size categories
- In this presentation nominal values indicatean
order of size - They are elastic
- 10m means somethingin between3m and 30m
32A frame 100x the granule of a drawing
representing a building
- r/R determines the resolution of a drawing or
discourse, - the resolution of the argument
33Limit your object of study by scale
http//team.bk.tudelft.nl
34Grain and impacts of your study
http//team.bk.tudelft.nl
35Explicit impacts within that context
- indicate actors and specialists to join the team
or take into account - imply a societal and personal relevance or
fascination - imply a field of aims
- imply actors willing to finance your study
- could produce a programme of requirements
- before you have a precise study proposal !
36The object (O,o), its impacts inconvenient (I) or
profitable (P)
- The programme of requirements is a set of desired
impacts - Locate them to locate the stakeholders
- Perhaps they are willing to pay the project!
37Subtracting futures
- Field of problems Probable - Desirable
- Field of Aims Desirable - Probable
38Desired impacts of your study
http//team.bk.tudelft.nl
39How to judge these impacts without future context?
http//team.bk.tudelft.nl
40Layers of social and physical context
- Managerial/governmental contexts (active ltgt
passive) - Cultural contexts (innovative ltgt traditional)
- Economic contexts (growing ltgt declining)
- Technological contexts (separating ltgt connecting)
- Ecological contexts (differentiating ltgt
equalizing) - Spatial contexts (accumulating ltgt dispersing )
41Changing context changes impacts
http//team.bk.tudelft.nl
42Changing perspective
43Imaginable
art
design study
Extending science
empirical research
44Design related study orempirical research
- Research produces probabilities by causes
- Design produces possibilities by conditions
45Creativity according toHerman Hertzberger
- A simple recipe for creativity written by
architect - Herman Hertzberger (1999, 2000, 2002)
- break off the cliché,
- collect many images,
- locate them in another context and
- start to adapt them.
46Break off the cliché
Robert Delaunay (1913)
47Change context (for example museum)
Marcel Duchamps (1917)
48Combine, leave out, adapt
Pablo Picasso (1942)
49Adapt reference images
50Model them in a composition
- dividing (verdelen)
- articulating (geleden)
- tailoring (tailleren)
- detailing (detailleren)
51Dividing, Articulating
52Tailoring, Detailing
adapting to context
components and connecting details
53Composition
- marking out components, their variation and
characteristic details, - connecting details between components,
- crucial details in the composition,
- determining striking details.
5410m
5530m
56100m
57Varying components
58Composition
59Larger scale as context(museum, movement)
Marcel Duchamps
60Policy, research and designas different language
games
- Prof.dr.ir. Taeke M. de Jongchair Technical
Ecology, chair Regional Design, assignment
MethodologyUniversity of Technology Delft,
Faculty of ArchitectureT.M.deJong_at_bk.tudelft.nl
http//team.bk.tudelft.nl
61Different modalities of future
- art science (imaginable futures)
- design science (possible futures)
- empirical science (probable futures)
- policy (desirable futures)
62Language games
63Probability
s 68, 2s 95, 3s 99.7 chance
64Possible futures
Anything probable is per definition possible but
not everything possible is also probable. The
probable future could be predicted. The
improbable possibilities cannot be predicted. You
only can explore them by design.
65Design study or empirical research
- Design produces possibilities by conditions
- Research produces probabilities by causes
66Desirable futures
Ir. Drs. Mr.
67Obvious and impossible futures
68Problems and aims
69Undesired, improbable possibilities
Are they relevant as long as nobody wants them?
70Unexpected inventions
Yes
71Changing desires
72The modality of possible futures
73Conditions presupposedin causal paradigms
74Possibility
Not every condition is a cause, but every cause
is a condition for something to happen
75Conditional and causal thinking
76Conditional analysis
77Environment set of conditions for life
78Environment as set conditions for life means at
least18 different kinds of technical
environments (contexts)
79Balancing
80Conditional methodology
A1 VERSCHIL wordt voorondersteld, A2 VERANDERING
vooronderstelt een soort verschil, A3 VERBAND
duur in verandering, A4 AFZONDERING
ongebondenheid in verband, A5 SELECTIE
continuiteit in afzondering, B1 VERBRUIK
verschil in selectie, B2 REGELING verandering in
verbruik, B3 ORGANISATIE verband in regeling, B4
SPECIALISATIE afzondering in organisatie, B5
REPRODUCTIE selectie in specialisatie, C1 NIEUWS
reproductie van informatie, C2 ZEKERHEID geregeld
nieuws, C3 AFFECTIE georganiseerde zekerheid, C4
IDENTITEIT specifieke affectie, C5 INVLOED
gereproduceerde identiteit.
81Diversity as a hidden supposition
- risk-cover for life
- precondition of
- communication
- trade, economy
- possibility of choice for future generations
- uniqueness of individual and context
- quality of human living
So, average is useless where exceptions
survive in ecology, evolutionary theory,
management and design science.
82Ecologicaltolerance
demonstrating diversity as a risk coverfor life
83Quality f(diversity)
84Diversity as a first condition
- The intellectual challenge of this century is to
handle diversity - instead of generalising it by statistical
reduction. - Generalising research has diminishing returns
- what could be generalised is generalised in
centuries of empirical research. - Problems left are context sensitive problems
- object of design generating study.