GRADED DISCUSSION ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN 3 ABAY | DIAZ | MORALES | ROXAS | PALIZA
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INTERIOR DESIGNERS AND ARCHITECTS IN THE INTERIOR DESIGN JANE CLAIRE ABAY
For several decades now, architecture and interior design have struggled with how and where they intersect as professions and as academic disciplines. The most compelling argument for why the career tracks in architecture and interior design need to remain connected is actually a simple one: it is impossible to separate the design of a building from the design of its interior. The interior evolves directly from the formal and conceptual ideas of the building, and the building is (or should be) directly impacted by programmatic and human behavioral constraints of the interior. This connection is particularly obvious in the curricula of aligned academic programs. Foundational courses addressing beginning design principles, history, theory, graphic communication or building technology are fundamentally the same for the beginning student in architecture or in interior design. As the knowledge base diverges, and the student develops more specialized knowledge, so too do the academic tracks diverge. Students must increasingly rely on each others’ expertise
In the most basic form, when you hire an architect, we are looking at not only the forms of a space, but also the big picture pieces, such as life safety issues, engineering, exterior materials, and the big code questions. For a house, that means what the exterior looks like, how the house performs from an energy point of view, handling building permits, and often how the interior casework and cabinetry lays out. When you hire an interior designer, he or she is typically going to handle the parts of a project that deal with how the interiors look. This can include selecting interior finishes (tile, hardwoods, carpets, wallpaper), as well as selecting furniture and soft goods (pillows, accessories, etc.). It ideally includes working with the architect on the layout out of the spaces, and how the cabinets, furniture, and other considerations work within the layout. This ensures that windows are properly placed, rooms are sized appropriately, and that the whole space feels harmonious.
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN INTERIOR DESIGN AND INTERIOR DECORATING ALYSON NERISSA PALIZA
INTERIOR DESIGN | INTERIOR DECORATING The Interior Design is an art and science of understanding people’s behavior to create a functional space for the building. It follows a systematic process where they have to know about their client for them to apply a creative and technical solutions that makes the structure functional, attractive and beneficial for its occupants. The Interior decoration focus on furnishing and adorning of the space. Like for example the paints, color pallets, accessories and finishes. In summary interior designers may decorate but the decorators cannot design.
AREAS OF EXPERTISE LIFE SAFETY & BLDG. CODE STYLE HEALTH & WELL-BEING COLOR ACCESSIBILITY FINISHES RESEARCH & ANALYSIS FURNISHES ACCESSORIES PROGRAMMING & SPACE PLANNING SUSTAINABILITY LIGHTING DESIGN FUNCTION AESTHETIC CONSTRUCTION &TECHNICAL DRAWINGS PROJECT MANAGEMENT
QUALIFICATIONS 4-6 YEARS O NO FORMAL EDUCATION REQUIRED EDUCATION PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATION (NCIDQ EXAM)
C O M P I L E D B Y: DOMINIC ARKIEN S. MORALES
Search
Read the Text Version
- 1 - 28
Pages: