Sunday, 16 November 2025

LUPA LONGING - ARTFUL KNOWING


What should one know about an object before one can enjoy it, let alone understand it? Is art a private, intellectual game that requires learning, or does it delve deeper into the haptic emotional world? Can one merely feel art or does one need knowledge of the artist and the intent of the concept before one can participate in and enjoy the piece; ‘appreciate it’? Is one wrong to be confused, unimpressed with what can be seen to be an abstruse, obscure, perplexing exercise?


Master weaver Saffron Gordon at work on Longing (Camilla).

The winner of the design prize that ‘reimagined’ Robin Boyd’s house in tapestry has been announced: see – https://architectureau.com/articles/2025-winner-of-tapestry-design-prize-announced/. Troy Emery with Cox Architecture won with a piece woven by Saffron Gordon, named enigmatically Longing (Camilla). The jury justified its choice with the usual fanfare: The work reimagines the potential of tapestry as an art form: its materiality, tactility and artistic nature. The result is a piece that could only exist as tapestry, not painting or print. Interestingly, the jury did not mention that the work could not exist as a sculpture. Why? Maybe it is, in low relief?


Short version?

The work was a puzzle. What was one looking at?  The jurors' blurb was not useful, reading as something like hyped, artistic puffery: Thoughtfully positioned within Walsh Street’s living room, its location, scale and textures harmonise with its architectural context, engaging with the materials and tones of Boyd’s design. Yet strangely, one was eventually able to make some sense of the piece, but only once the work had been explained and the house had been seen seen. Here, in Boyd’s residence, one was confronted with cables, experiment, boldness, and clever invention, the very same things the woven work espoused in threads.




Initially one saw a pile of threads massed as a bundle woven into a black background, and made no sense of the presentation other than as a ‘modern’ weaving. One has come to expect anything in art these days. The quantity of dangling filaments was exuberant, impossibly overdone, oozing out to an array of clipped lengths lapped as fringes in varying shades of pink, with an underlying skirt of threads. The majority of the fibres were long, oversized, reaching the floor and resting on it as overlying tresses. The darkest hues seemed to terminate in a globular mass, the only somewhat defined piece of the mess - (remember the idea in Catch 22 of being able to make sense of a mess) - being more identifiable as something than the remainder of the hanging filaments that appeared as a flowing muddle, an ill-defined and amorphous shambles that seemed to have been combed to tidy things up a little for presentation, like unruly hair.  One was left puzzled, wondering what to do with this voluminous mass of hanging coloured trailings that were strangely presented as a weaving, a tapestry, when they looked like anything but being so organised and arranged into the cohesion of an intertwining. This was the work of a sculptor and a firm of architects, woven by a master weaver, and had just been given the top award by a jury that one assumed had been selected for its experience.  The work must have something about that was worthy of recognition. What was one missing? It is a familiar question these days when viewing art.


Longing (Camilla), Tapestry, 2025, Designed by Troy Emery + COX Architecture,
Woven by Saffron Gordon.

The artwork/tapestry/sculpture/invention appeared as a vague jumble of differently hued fibres of varying lengths, awkwardly amassed as a bulky draping from a woven black carpet/wall hanging, all nicely fringed with its exposed warp holding the black weft surrounds. One could make sense of this conventional structural rigour, but the mayhem of the hanging threads left one wondering what the bundling of tassels was all about. The work held something of the image and visual energy of the Niagara falls in a way that confused, making no sense of the acclaimed wonder called Longing. Even this strange naming of the tapestry was not useful as a guide: Longing (Camilla). How? Why? The only Camilla who was known had a history of awkward royal references that seemed askew and irrelevant in this context. Surely the work was not pretentious enough to be dedicated to the queen?


Niagara Falls.

One started to read to learn more. The jury blurb seemed to read as a lot of over the top, indulgent, arty bull - using H.W. Flower’s Modern English Usage as a guide for the word for nonsensical, exaggerated statements rather than the cruder bullshit that the word seems to have developed into: see - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullshit. The explanatory words only added to the frustrated confusion. Knowing that the Troy Emery and Cox Architecture’s tapestry ‘Longing (Camilla)’ is a two-dimensional interpretation of Emery’s 2024 sculpture ‘Lupa,’ an amorphous animal-like companion; which, In the domestic site of Walsh Street, Camilla echoes Boyd’s family life with their pet cat of the same name with The excess tendrils of yarn drip(ping) down out of the plane of the woven surface towards the floor, stretching the silhouette of the animal figure and evoking emotion and memory, was helpful in one way, but it all seemed to be pompous, elitist nonsense, drivel drawn from the private preferences of the artists’ explained way of seeing; the preferred interpretation applied to a pile of threads.



The work was supposed to relate to Robyn Boyd's, (not Boid – see: https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2018/08/robyn-boid-egg-cellence-in-mind-growing.html), Walsh Street house, so this project was looked up. One recalled it as the cable house, Boyd's own home now standing as a museum maintained by the Robin Boyd Foundation - $25 - $45 per person for a guided tour/event. One perused the place: classic 1950s, with Mies’s sparse array of self-consciously placed furnishings of the period, with large volumes stepping across the site under a roof slung above, supported on steel cables that one usually associated with being a part of a suspension bridge.








Lupa.

Dougal.

The discovery that this representation of Lupa, ‘bracketed Camilla,’ referenced Boyd's cat of the same ‘bracketed’ name - not Lupa but Camilla - with Lupa being a previous sculpture 3D by the artist Troy Emery, allowed one to understand something of this work. The Longing, Lupa, (Camilla) weaving was said to be a ‘2D’ variation of this earlier Emery sculptural work. This was looked up: see – https://share.google/images/hrziVRc0IVJbjtOmn.



One wondered what the architects on the team had to do with this odd concept that seemed to be all about a recreation in 2D version - really? - of a previous Troy Emery concept for an animal form looking like the lovable Magic Roundabout dog, Dougal; a dog/cat-animal-like form expressed in an earlier work as a mass of yellow ochre hanging threads.  This work brought to mind the odd blue sculpture of another strange animalistic sculpture that had been in the news recently, with problem eyes and fragile paint: see - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jW1R8WUgazs.


Cast in Blue - 'the blue blob' - Mt. Gambier.

Matching black.
Left to right: Saffron Gordon, Marc Raszewski (Cox Architecture), Troy Emery and Rachael Halstead (Cox Architecture).

Did the architects, the two photographed as the Cox team along with the sculptor and the weaver - Left to right: Saffron Gordon, Marc Raszewski (Cox Architecture), Troy Emery and Rachael Halstead (Cox Architecture) - decide on the cat reference story to help give some relevance to the artist’s self-referential idea that seemed to have no relationship to Boyd or his house? What was the shared effort here? Did the rules demand that an architect be involved? What did the architects do? What did the master weaver think of the piece - the long or the short version?


Long version?

Apparently the jury said that the work looked splendid on the wall of a room of the house - which one? - and that it expressed the qualities of the place; re-interpreted or ‘reimagined’ them. Mmmm.


Robin Boyd's Walsh Street house.



One tried to transpose the piece to this phantom context and slowly a feeling for place and work converged. One could see that Boyd’s place was dominated by the ‘hanging threads’ of the cabled roof, a draped hammock of a surface slung above an artfully arranged set of furnished levels that must have been avant-garde for its time as an exhibit, a theatre for living that remains an architectural exhibit today, a museum; an example of how an architect 'lived' - or does one say performed?  How does one envisage everyday life in this place? Where is the messy ad hoc piecing together of pieces of habitation that come with its array of ordinary mixed emotions and issues as detritus and clutter? We can admire the place as a pretence, a vision of a possible, ‘maybe’ visionary life and living, a whimsical dream, but is this like watching a play, a stage set? Is it merely an artful self-conscious assemblage for appraisal and acclaim, to be admired for its courage and bespoke invention that can be praised in a slew of pompous words? Is this the connection to the tapestry?





A Victorian lady in distress?



Finally, eventually, one could see how the mysterious Longing/Lupa/Camilla related to this place.  The work held an intrigue in the self-conscious referencing of not only the assertive boldness of the house’s gesture, but also touching on that the much-loved house cat, dragging sentiment into longing. What more could one want? One could finally appreciate why the jury chose the work – everyone loves family cats in some way; but one is left puzzled: does an artwork need a lengthy analysis in order to be 'seen;’ understood; appreciated? Why did it take such an effort to get to this position from the viewing of the initial ‘mess’ of dangling, Dougal threads?




One recalls traditional art which was symbolic, rooted in references that stood as an essential base for beauty. Any deviation from these notions could not be beautiful; copying was better than personal invention. One did not have to know these complete details in order to perceive the wonder and sense the relevance. With Lupa 2D (low relief?) – well, Longing (Camilla) - there was a coherent story/referencing that knitted, wove the work and the place together - (pun intended); but there was no ad hoc wonder to be comprehended, only the lingering wondering, puzzling, asking the question as to why such a quantity of thread was self-consciously bundled together to make this cotton ooze, a so-called 2D form that obviously was 3D, into a flood of expectorant-type tresses, or tendrils, stretching all concepts of weaving in the same way that Boyd stretched the concept of structure beyond the perceptions and necessities of the everyday to create an amazement, a bespoke exhibit worthy of an award. Walsh Street was the winning nomination for the RAIA (Victoria) 25 year Award in July 2006, and also the winner of the National 25 year Award, announced in October 2006. One can appreciate how, unlike Seidler’s mother’s house, this Boyd house is a part of suburbia, but it conceals itself cleverly, adopting the true intentions for isolation and originality embedded in Modernism, with its ambitions for singularity: see - https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2019/10/the-rose-seidler-house-private-visions.html.



We really should not have to labour so much in order to see a work of art. Tradition identified both esoteric and exoteric qualities in a work: those internal and the external qualities held integrally in one work symbolically, with one aspect being private, the other public. Our indigenous art has the same quality: see – https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2024/06/country-outside-inside-place.html. Art today seems to have become merely clever personal whims embodied in a mystery nothingness that has to be decoded before one can 'see'. Wittgenstein called it 'seeing as' and used the 'duck-rabbit' as the example for 'ways of seeing' as John Berger called it. The viewer is left to somehow interpret the work, with its intent becoming obvious only once one learns the facts: who, what, and why, and accepting these as a guide to perception and understanding to locate the desired interpretation. There is no rich immediacy that lingers as a part of the whole that is just a personal preference to be comprehended in the seeing of things MY way, be this be the vision of the artist, the jury, or the nonchalant viewer who is mocked as ignorant if any negative or disparaging comment is made about how the piece is seen, perhaps suggesting that:

"It looks like waste being dumped;" or, of the house, "like a living space under a bridge" - and one thinks of fly tipping and homelessness.

“Crude, foolish, uninformed idiot!”

“Maybe a woven pink poles?"

"Uh?"

"A Victorian lady in distress?"

“Oh! No! Cretin! This is ART! A two-dimensional interpretation of Lupa; art inspired by art reimagining the potential of tapestry as an art form: its materiality, tactility and artistic nature.”

“Did you say ‘loopy’?”

""It's a cat."

"Ya kidding?"

"Boyd's kitten."





The grim reaper?



THE ARTICLE


Winner of 2025 Tapestry Design Prize announced

The 2025 winner of the Tapestry Design Prize has been revealed, transforming Robin Boyd’s iconic Walsh Street house into a canvas for contemporary textile art and reimagining architecture through texture, colour and the craft of weaving.

by InteriorsAU Editorial

 Artist Troy Emery and Cox Architecture have been awarded first prize in the Tapestry Design Prize (TDP), presented by the Australian Tapestry Workshop (ATW).

This year’s prize focuses on one of Australia’s most significant modern homes – Boyd House II / Walsh Street designed by Robin Boyd. Since its inception in 2015, the TDP has been a celebration of the meeting point between architecture, design and contemporary textile art – a space where creative disciplines entwine and reimagine how tapestry can transform built environments.

This year’s iteration invited designers and architects to respond to the intimate domestic spaces of Boyd’s Walsh Street residence. From over 150 applications, five finalists were selected, each interpreting a different room within the house. Their proposals were handwoven by ATW’s master weavers, translating digital sketches and architectural concepts into rich, tactile surfaces of wool and cotton.

The resulting works — five distinct tapestries, totalling 1,487 hours of weaving and over 39 kilometres of yarn — were unveiled during a special exhibition at Walsh Street on 14–16 November 2025.

Troy Emery and Cox Architecture’s tapestry Longing (Camilla) is a two-dimensional
interpretation of Emery’s 2024 sculpture Lupa, an amorphous animal-like companion. In the domestic site of Walsh Street, Camilla echoes Boyd’s family life with their pet cat of the same name. The excess tendrils of yarn drip down out of the plane of the woven surface towards the floor, stretching the silhouette of the animal figure and evoking emotion and memory.

Commenting on the winner’s work, the jury – consisting of Kennedy Nolan principal Patrick Kennedy, Nexus Designs director Sally Evans and InteriorsAu editor Cassie Hansen – said the piece was selected for it “authentic innovation and deep resonance with Robin Boyd’s Walsh Street house.”

“The work reimagines the potential of tapestry as an art form: its materiality, tactility and artistic nature. The result is a piece that could only exist as tapestry, not painting or print. Thoughtfully positioned within Walsh Street’s living room, its location, scale and textures harmonise with its architectural context, engaging with the materials and tones of Boyd’s design. Evoking the domestic intimacy of the site, the work draws inspiration from the home’s former resident cat, Camilla. Distinctive, conceptually rich and masterfully realised by weaver Saffron Gordon, this tapestry represents a significant and contemporary evolution of the medium,” said the jury.

The winning team received $5,000, while all finalists receive $1,000, along with a People’s Choice Award to be decided by public vote.

The 2025 finalists were:

  • Jack MacRae, Wilson Architects

  • Troy Emery and Cox Architecture

  • N’arwee’t Professor Carolyn Briggs AM and Greenshoot

  • Yvette Coppersmith and Anouska Milstein, A.mi

  • Mouriya Senthilkumar and Ian Tsui

Thursday, 13 November 2025

ON SLOPES – THE INTENT TO INCLINE


If there is one phrase that might sum up the current architectural trend, it is ‘the intent to incline.’ This is the ambition to twist, skew, slant, slope, pitch, ramp, bank, tilt, angle, veer, incline, spiral, cant, curve, tip, bend, turn, slew, arc, swerve – do anything except construct a horizontal surface, a vertical plane, or any flat datum. The article on Rethinking the Flat Datum: Designing Space with Incline and Intent by Jonathan Yueng – see below – chooses these words, incline and intent, in its title, but concerns itself only with the fashion to deviate from the horizontal plane.




Yeung writes poetically about the experience of the sloping surface using grandiloquent, rhapsodic terms, and provides numerous examples of inclined planes in recent projects, itemising the subject into sloping roofs; sloping interiors; and sloping public spaces. He uses lyrical words to present the case for sloping surfaces in projects instead of maintaining the historically favoured horizontal surface for habitation, pointing out that many so-called ‘horizontal’ surfaces are really sloping planes to enable drainage. It is a moot point, because one could argue that the earth is spherical; that all surfaces that we inhabit are curved: that horizontality is only an idea.




What Yeung is praising is the slope that is obvious, readily perceived and experienced as a visual and physical intrigue, not the subtle variations for water flow, be this for everyday functions or merely safety purposes. He is interested only in the gradient that is noticed, observed to be different, felt: roofs that become . . .curved paths and sloped planes that choreograph distinct spatial and bodily experiences; and indoor sloping floors that are seen as . . . contoured treatments that can resonate more closely with a site's character.




The question that Yeung asks is: How are these projects improving the experience of moving through architecture? – as if they might. Yeung sees the slope as relating to the different movement of the body through space, having a significant impact on this motion - to produce a faux-natural, meandering journey, suggesting that this might not be possible on a horizontal plane. The concept eventually becomes political, with the movement: giving visitors shifting vantage points and a way to engage space that feels less authoritarian than an unyielding flat floor. Here one recalls Frank Lloyd Wright’s story about walking with his uncle: in a straight line, noting how he learned of the rigour involved in intent. For Yeung, slopes hold a power over the body and the mind; they are transformative: Indoors, gentle gradients and micro-terraces define thresholds without walls, carve pockets for personal agency, and invite new ways of encountering art, furniture, and surfaces. They are different, a truism that he uses later to relate to constant change, although this might really be the repeated difference in the diversion from the horizontal with 2D inclines.




One is left wondering why we even bother with the horizontal, given all these marked benefits with different gradients. It is Yeung’s seemingly endless hyperbole that eventually makes one question his enthusiasm for inclines, when he continues describing the roof as . . . embracing required slopes as a gently calibrated terrain that aligns with climate, drainage, and context. . . . As a walkable weave, the roof invites visitors to script their own routes—rising, dipping, and reconnecting. The description gets just a little too deliberately exotic; but still there is more, with: the subtly undulating ground is not only a way to negotiate the site's vast topography; its shifting elevations also help organize programs both beneath and above the surface . . . creating . . . a civic carpet that serves a wide spectrum of visitors. Here there is the suggestion that slopes are special and offer the ‘red carpet’ treatment for people – something like a transfiguration.





Eventually Yeung becomes vaguely abstract, almost mystical in his exaggerated enthusiasm for the incline: By treating sloped circulation as social infrastructure—an armature for exercise, chance encounters, and outdoor programs—the project turns movement into public space. Just what Yeung means remains to be discovered, but it sounds grand.




His exuberant words define the experience of walking on a slope, creating and changing the ‘curated’ story of the path, even grasping Heraclitus’s concept of not being able to step into a river twice, as an analogy for movement over a gradient that Yeung seems to assume is always a variable 3D rather than a consistent 2D surface. This assessment and analysis might be fine as an intellectual exercise, or an aesthetic appraisal, but what is the impact on the everyday, when one is confronted with the challenge of coping with the slopes? One immediately knows when one is on an inclined surface, be it 2D or 3D. There is that awareness, that self-conscious change of movement in the wholeness of the body’s poise that takes one’s attention away from meandering, distracting one from the private considerations of personal engagements as one goes about one’s daily grind; quietly contemplating the casual perusal of ponderings that linger in the mind. One is immediately alerted to the possibility of a fall or a slip and adjusts appropriately. Here one can recall that sudden shock of moving over a ramped floor in a shopping centre; or that jerk into a different understanding of place as one moves off the street into the plaza of the Pompidou Centre in Paris. The change in movement alarms one; there is no choreography or creation in the meandering; one senses the change and makes a conscious variation to the gait to manage one’s equilibrium.


Pompidou Centre, Paris: the sloping plaza.


Entering Pompidou, one immediately is stirred with the awareness of the discovery of the unexpected slope. From that point on, one is alert to how one steps. Consciousness is concentrated, not on the urban space or the 'architecture,' but on moving down or up, or along the slope. One might self-consciously even choose a diagonal path to better manage the gradient, with curating a path for aesthetic purposes being a luxury not made available by the challenge of necessity.




One is doing everything other than considering the slope aesthetically out of the sheer physicality involved. It was Ananda Coomaraswamy who noted the philosophical/intellectual issues in aesthetic viewing itself, beyond ordinary experience, highlighting its problematical concerns.# Even without considering Coomaraswamy’s point in any detail, one forgets that the individual moving through place/space is otherwise engaged with life, not curating a pathway, choreographing distinct spatial and bodily experiences, or scripting their own routes. One merely walks, taking the path planned nonchalantly to get to where one is going, while thinking of the current events in one’s life and nonchalantly observing the world. Instead of being a meaningful, poetic intervention, the sloping surface is more a hindrance to wandering and pondering than a calculated, observed experiential journey of discovery.




One has to ask the question: Is this interest in sloping surfaces grabbing attention only because it is different? We have seen fashions promoting forms that are distorted by bends, curves, etc. in all types of quirky ways. Is it a case of, when there is nothing else to skew, try twisting the world?  This is 'architecture' by ME, for the ME; to be considered and noticed for its clever variations; its surprising differences that declare: LOOK AT ME! Experience is rooted in one, the individual, and can be spoken about in this way, but society/culture relies on a shared experience. Teung’s special way of seeing is an acquired position; slopes have no inherent necessity in regards to the everyday other than being exhibitionist when manipulated self-consciously, for clever display. We have conventions like language that enable us to share, with meaning lying in agreement. The problem with concentrating on MY peculiar experience is that one gets that statement: “I know what I am saying,” as though another’s lack of comprehension is irrelevant; it is your problem that you fail to understand or experience in a particular way; MY way. 


Sitting on a slope - Pompidou Centre, Paris: everyone sits in the same way.


One has to ask: Will everyone enjoy relaxing on the slope when something rolls off downhill, or when one's orientation for balance is disturbed? One sits on a slope in a particular manner in order to properly and comfortably manage the body’s stresses and balance. This settling on a slope raises issues that need attention – how to locate, and where to be placed for stability and equilibrium. The slope will define the angle of repose of the body that is sensed as being the most stable. Flat or near flat - read horizontal - surfaces were not developed and used for no reason.  Today's interest in skews seems to be yet more of ‘How can I be totally different’ – a one-off Grand Design.*  One might suggest that the world is being McClouded – entertained with quirky difference, and a lack of deference that creates a cloud of uncertain experiences, each struggling for attention.




And as I struggle with the loaded shopping trolley across a sloping footpath, I wonder about creating my path just to make moving forward possible, instead of sliding sideways. This is no aesthetic choice; the slope forces me to manage the trolley appropriately, awkwardly, not ponder any vague poetic path: the incline becomes a true nuisance. Then it hits me: what about all of these wondrous bespoke slopes and disabled access? Has everyone forgotten about these folk now that they have achieved general recognition with codes and legal requirements being enforced? One now recalls all of the special barriers, warnings, and rails, etc. required to make disabled access possible and safe; but now all this seems to have gone out of fashion, careless of experience and performance other than curated aesthetic visions for ME; something different every minute of every day, like new architecture: the ‘grand’ design theory. How might these admired slopes be managed by the disabled?





The Sanno Office image has all of the character of an LS Lowry painting.

For Yeung, slopes seem to be something to grasp for a PhD study, or for ME to have a completely new view of the world, never before seen: WOW! – perhaps both? It’s not like stepping into a river; it might be said to be “ever new,” but the experience lacks the flow of life, that reality of permanence in changing change: the Eternal Present. We should never become just too clever with our words and belittle meaning for our own benefit.




The layered experience of moving through these buildings makes repetition unlikely, if not impossible; the path you curate for yourself is rarely identical from one visit to the next.

The sloping surface, beyond curating the experiential journey and creating pockets of space, also alludes to the continuity of the environment and site.

The text has something of the flavour of Eliot’s lines:

What we call the beginning is often the end. And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from.




Alas, with slopes, this could very well become a reality as a fact.

The Mobius strip: a continuity of ends and beginnings.




Yeung’s reference to the Sydney Modern – now named Naala Badu: see - https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2024/05/more-on-sydney-modern-ai.html  - highlights the exaggerated exuberance of the text that glosses over the reality of the everyday.


The classic drone image of Naala Badu: no waterfront.


By contrast, later projects by SANAA and Ryue Nishizawa push the ground plane to the opposite extreme, aiming to create as many distinct spatial moments as possible so the sameness never settles in—much like a river you can't step into twice.

. . .

in the case of the Sydney Modern Museum, cascading architectural volumes respond to the site's unique slope. Through the careful articulation of non-flat entry surfaces, the building invites visitors to roll in and roll down into the museum, testing the limits of inclined planes and the tolerances of furniture. More importantly, it reminds visitors of the site's particular condition: one arrives from the hillside and moves toward the waterfront. The ground is not flat, and that simple agenda is clearly and powerfully articulated, curated, and enacted at the museum's threshold.


The 'Sydney Modern' context.

One has to point out that the museum is separated from the harbour by a string of apartments; that the waterfront has no essential intimacy with the art gallery extension that is again illustrated by the drone shot. One struggles to hold any image of this building as a passerby, the individual who will experience this ‘cascade.’


The 'interesting' drone shot: what does the passerby experience?

While spoken of as the new Opera House – no more needs to be said about this building, such is its iconic status – this $344 million art gallery expansion holds nothing memorable in its imagery other than the aerial view – see: https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2023/02/thoughts-on-sydney-modern.html - and Yeung’s intellectual explanation of it as a cascade: a place for one to roll in and roll down: the words suggest drunkenness. The slope always takes over, such is its power of difference that has become the new intrigue in architecture, as the copious number of projects referenced by Yeung in his text proves. We find ourselves swept up in this enthusiasm for ‘design’s newest obsession.’*



Naala Badu street frontage.


#

To equate the love of art with a love of fine sensations is to make of works of art a kind of aphrodisiac. The words “disinterested aesthetic contemplation” are a contradiction in terms and a pure non-sense.

“A Figure of Speech, or a Figure of Thought?”

Ananda K. Coomaraswamy


*

Design is constantly seeking things new to keep being different: see -

https://www.architecturaldigest.com/story/caveman-core-design-trend

Headline: Design’s Newest Obsession Goes Back—Way Back.



Sanno Office by Studio Velocity.




15 NOV 25

NOTES

THE HORIZONTAL

It is interesting to observe that the incline is always referenced to the horizontal, with its deviation from the horizontal being identified in degrees.  


THE CENTRE OF THE ROAD

The problem with slopes was highlighted for me by the guide in a wheelchair who took me around the campus prior to my commencing the review of the whole university that resulted in a report outlining all of the access issues that needed attention, both inside buildings and outside. This guide was skilled in the operation of his wheelchair, and proudly showed how he could bounce down flights of stairs in plaza areas; but it was the challenge with slopes that proved to be the greatest bugbear.

While attempting to traverse a sloping surface, it was pointed out how the natural forward path for the wheelchair was a zigzag, with the movement down the slope constantly being corrected to maintain the route. It was this problem that explained this guide’s preference for choosing the centre of the road for travel, with the crown of the road providing an arc that did not manoeuvre the wheelchair off to one side or the other. Here one could truly move forward in a straight line.


THE ARTICLE


https://www.archdaily.com/1035411/rethinking-the-flat-datum-designing-space-with-incline-and-intent


Rethinking the Flat Datum: Designing Space with Incline and Intent

        Office in Sanno / Studio Velocity. Image Courtesy of Studio Velocity


Historically, architecture and the built environment have insisted on creating flat, hard surfaces. In earlier eras, walking without paved ground meant mud-caked shoes, uneven footing, tripping hazards, standing water after rain, and high maintenance. Hence, as we shaped cities, we prioritized a smooth, continuous, solid horizontal datum. The benefits are real: easier walking, simpler cleaning, and straightforward programming—furniture, equipment, and partitions all prefer a level base. This universal preference for building on flat ground remains the norm and, for many practical reasons, will likely continue to be.

What's less recognized is that making a truly flat surface is surprisingly difficult—and many well-executed "flat" floors aren't perfectly flat at all. They are often gently sloped, calibrated to precise gradients for drainage. While interior spaces do not always require this, many ground floors and wet areas do incorporate subtle inclines as a safeguard—whether for minor flooding or to manage water that overflows from the street or plumbing when one of the discharge systems is malfunctioning.

Quietly, a number of ambitious projects are challenging the tyranny of the perfectly flat floor. Architects are reclaiming roofs as walkable terrain: because roofs typically can't be perfectly level for drainage, they become logical testbeds for curved paths and sloped planes that choreograph distinct spatial and bodily experiences. The idea has extended beyond rooftops to exterior ground surfaces, where drainage needs likewise justify—and inspire—more contoured treatments that can resonate more closely with a site's character. Even indoors—though far less common—some projects now sculpt floor plates with gentle gradients and micro-topographies, contoured treatments that can resonate more closely with a site's character.

How are these projects improving the experience of moving through architecture? Designers have pursued several tactics. Some align topography and building into a seamless whole, letting required slopes read as natural extensions of the site. Others deliberately sculpt both façade and ground plane to produce a faux-natural, meandering journey. Many enlist the roof—already sloped for drainage—as a public promenade, giving visitors shifting vantage points and a way to engage space that feels less authoritarian than an unyielding flat floor. Indoors, gentle gradients and micro-terraces define thresholds without walls, carve pockets for personal agency, and invite new ways of encountering art, furniture, and surfaces.

Yoshino Nursery School and Kindergarten / Tezuka Architects. Image © Katsuhisa Kida

Elevated Commons: Occupying the undulating Fifth Elevation

What would it take to turn a building's subtle necessities into distinctive experiences—amplifying them to invite new ways of use, even a sense of freedom? One powerful tactic is the occupiable roof: embracing required slopes as a gently calibrated terrain that aligns with climate, drainage, and context. More than a gesture, opening the roof to people does add cost, but it repays that investment by expanding how users inhabit the architecture and engage the surrounding environment.

A widely cited precedent is Tezuka Architects' Fuji Kindergarten (2007), which pioneered a liberating roofscape where children run freely, weave around existing trees, and discover nooks formed by skylights and plantings. The softly sloped loop becomes both playground and arguably, an outdoor classroom. Less known—but arguably equally empowering—is their Yoshino Nursery School and Kindergarten, where steeper roof inclines physically connect to the ground plane. By merging roof and site, the building extends the landscape itself, allowing children to move seamlessly between levels and experience the architecture as an open, continuous field rather than a set of bounded rooms.

Yoshino Nursery School and Kindergarten / Tezuka Architects. Image © Katsuhisa Kida

At the Site Verrier de Meisenthal, SO–IL and FREAKS Architecture wrap the new cultural center extension in a continuous, occupiable roof. The undulating surface does more than cap an addition to the 18th-century glassworks; it stitches otherwise separate buildings and grounds into a single, legible campus. As a walkable weave, the roof invites visitors to script their own routes—rising, dipping, and reconnecting—to rediscover the factory from shifting vantage points a conventional flat datum could never offer.

Site Verrier de Meisenthal / SO-IL + FREAKS Architecture. Image © Iwan Baan

Less commonly explored is merging structural performance to the roof's uniquely non-flat form. In Studio Velocity's Office in Sanno, a deliberately curved, walkable roof does more than shelter the office below: it becomes a liberating terrain where staff can step away from desks, engage the surrounding context, and curate their own niches through loose furniture, the roof's natural gradients, and punctuating plantings. Structurally, the roof and timber beams are held in a calibrated equilibrium by vertical members that act in tension when the roof is lightly used—subtly "pulling" the surface into shape—and shift to compression as people gather, supporting the load. The result is a layered dynamism: geometry tuned to the site, occupation that grants users spatial agency, and a quiet, constantly adjusting balance of tension and compression that holds the roof's silhouette in place.

Office in Sanno / Studio Velocity. Image Courtesy of Studio Velocity

Office in Sanno / Studio Velocity. Image Courtesy of Studio Velocity

Office in Sanno / Studio Velocity. Image Courtesy of Studio Velocity

Yoshino Nursery School and Kindergarten / Tezuka Architects

Yoshino Nursery School and Kindergarten / Tezuka Architects. Image © Katsuhisa Kida

Site Verrier de Meisenthal / SO-IL + FREAKS Architecture

Site Verrier de Meisenthal / SO-IL + FREAKS Architecture. Image © Iwan Baan

Gammel Hellerup Gymnasium / BIG

Gammel Hellerup Gymnasium / BIG. Image © Jens Lindhe

Office in Sanno / Studio Velocity

Civic Carpets: Non-Flat Surfaces as Public Program and Civic Agency

Beyond roofs, many offices are testing expansive outdoor planes that gently slope and shape themselves to cultivate community. At Mecanoo's National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts (Weiwuying), the subtly undulating ground is not only a way to negotiate the site's vast topography; its shifting elevations also help organize programs both beneath and above the surface. By liberating the ground from an unyieldingly flat datum, uses of different heights and performance needs can be flexibly tucked under or set upon the terrain. The approach aligns with the building's formal expression while turning the surface into a civic carpet that serves a wide spectrum of visitors—at times a market plaza, at others a picnic field, and, when needed, an amphitheater. The undulations stitch together multiple edges of the building and site, making an otherwise monumental arts center more porous, welcoming, and empowering.

National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts / Mecanoo. Image Courtesy of Mecanoo

A more structured example is Jiakun Architects' West Village—Basis Yard, where a network of long outdoor ramps activates, loops, and connects the campus to form an elevated promenade for the community. The intertwined ramps become the project's most porous façade, opening an otherwise inward-looking complex to its larger urban context. By treating sloped circulation as social infrastructure—an armature for exercise, chance encounters, and outdoor programs—the project turns movement into public space, inviting rapid engagement while binding the site into a coherent, walkable whole.

West Village - Basis Yard / Jiakun Architects. Image © ArchExist

National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts / Mecanoo

National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts / Mecanoo. Image Courtesy of Mecanoo

West Village - Basis Yard / Jiakun Architects

West Village - Basis Yard / Jiakun Architects. Image © ArchExist

Four Car Parks / Christian Kerez

Four Car Parks / Christian Kerez. Image © Maxime Delvaux

Grace Farms / SANAA

Grace Farms / SANAA. Image © Iwan Baan

The Interior Landscape: Elevation Shifts that Define Space

When discussing sloping architecture, the most legendary example has to be Frank Lloyd Wright's Guggenheim Museum in New York. Its distinct form, strikingly white façade, continuous interior ramp, and the painstaking task of installing artworks along a constantly tilted promenade make it an icon of the type. Arguably, though, Wright's slopes are about continuity and the longevity of a single route rather than the varied, empowering experiences seen in other examples. The ramp remains largely consistent, opening slightly toward the atrium and the exterior; most of the time, walking it on the fifth floor feels much like the second. That was the intent—and the magic—of the museum: an unending journey of art in a spatial condition that remains steady through the sloping surface.

By contrast, later projects by SANAA and Ryue Nishizawa push the ground plane to the opposite extreme, aiming to create as many distinct spatial moments as possible so the sameness never settles in—much like a river you can't step into twice. In the Hiroshi Senju Museum and the Rolex Learning Center, the sloped surface embraces site conditions while empowering a spectrum of nooks and territories. Separation is achieved not only by walls or furniture but by subtle shifts in elevation height and section. The layered experience of moving through these buildings makes repetition unlikely, if not impossible; the path you curate for yourself is rarely identical from one visit to the next.

Hiroshi Senju Museum / Ryue Nishizawa. Image © Iwan Baan

Rolex Learning Center / SANAA. Image © Iwan Baan

The sloping surface, beyond curating the experiential journey and creating pockets of space, also alludes to the continuity of the environment and site. Different from Grace Farms—where the interior remains largely flat while the exterior follows the surrounding topography—in the case of the Sydney Modern Museum, cascading architectural volumes respond to the site's unique slope. Through the careful articulation of non-flat entry surfaces, the building invites visitors to roll in and roll down into the museum, testing the limits of inclined planes and the tolerances of furniture. More importantly, it reminds visitors of the site's particular condition: one arrives from the hillside and moves toward the waterfront. The ground is not flat, and that simple agenda is clearly and powerfully articulated, curated, and enacted at the museum's threshold.

Sydney Modern Museum / SANAA. Image © Iwan Baan

Sydney Modern Museum / SANAA. Image © Iwan Baan

AD Classics: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum / Frank Lloyd Wright

AD Classics: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum / Frank Lloyd Wright. Image © Creative Commons

Zaishui Art Museum / junya ishigami + associates

Zaishui Art Museum / junya ishigami + associates. Image © ArchExist

Sydney Modern Museum / SANAA

Sydney Modern Museum / SANAA. Image © Iwan Baan

Hiroshi Senju Museum / Ryue Nishizawa

Hiroshi Senju Museum / Ryue Nishizawa. Image © Iwan Baan

Rolex Learning Center / SANAA

Rolex Learning Center / SANAA. Image © Iwan Baan