In connection with the international climate summit COP15
in Copenhagen, the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts,
School of Architecture’s Institute of Technology and
Institute of Planning have joined forces with architect
Philippe Rahm, researchers and students to bring into
focus the role of architecture in the ongoing climate
debate.
The result is the exhibition "Climate and Architecture"
on show untill December 20 at The Royal Danish Academy
of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, and the symposium
"Climate & Architecture towards an Atmospheric
Architecture" held by Philippe Rahm on December 10.
Following a text by Philippe Rahm on the subject:
Today the climate has become the main aim of architects
and architectural practice changes in order to integrate the
new goal of safeguarding the climate. But as the balance
with climate and its protection becomes the goal of
architecture, it is also possible that climate becomes the
resources and tools of architecture. Thus weather
vocabulary used to describe atmospheric phenomena
(convection, pressure, depressions, temperature, heat,
relative humidity, reverberation, for example) becomes an
architectural language.
The climate is getting warmer, a phenomenon that might
have catastrophic consequences in the future: more
extreme weather incidents, flooding, rising sea level.
Today, experts and politicians agree that the climate
change is due to the massive carbon dioxide emission
generated by the human activities since the beginning of
the industrial era, in the 19th century. We know that the
building sector is responsible for more than half of the
emissions of gases that cause the greenhouse effect
through the use of fossil fuels for warming or conditioning
the indoor climate of buildings. The architects now
mobilize themselves and take action to reduce these
emissions, for example by arguing for better insulation of
the buildings, the use of renewable energies, a better
planning of the territory for reducing the travel distances
and to increase the use of biomass.
Architecture as meteorology opens to other dimensions
and space definitions: at a large scale, it explores the
atmospheric qualities of the space (temperature, air
pressure, water, vapor, light, etc) as physical and
chemical phenomenon dealing with the new climatic
building techniques like ventilation, heating, air
conditioning, insulation, radiation.
At the microscopic
scale, it will explore new fields of reception (cutaneous,
olfactive, hormonal, digestible, breathable), as biological
and chemical perceptions dealing with the invisible
qualities of the environment such as air, ions,
electromagnetic waves, light or radiations. On one hand
we will focuses on architecture working on the
meteorological scale and on the other hand on architecture
as the physiological scale.
Philippe Rahm, architect, Paris, France
Guest professor at the Royal Danish School of Fine Arts,
School of Architecture. Director of the Nantes Symposium
of Copenhagen 2009
Architecture météorologique
View Article details
- Francesca Picchi
- 03 December 2009