There is a lot of this new v. old in neighbourhoods in London. Perhaps because I'm a pedestrian here I notice it more than in the states. I think its because the city is older and has had reason to replace housing. I admire the fact that they kept the building palette similar (brick and white) and that the size of the buildings are similar. This weekend I'll try and get some more pictures of this infill at different scales, it looks like it will be a nice couple of days - or at least it won't be raining the entire weekend!
Friday, July 06, 2007
Good or Bad Infil?
There is a lot of this new v. old in neighbourhoods in London. Perhaps because I'm a pedestrian here I notice it more than in the states. I think its because the city is older and has had reason to replace housing. I admire the fact that they kept the building palette similar (brick and white) and that the size of the buildings are similar. This weekend I'll try and get some more pictures of this infill at different scales, it looks like it will be a nice couple of days - or at least it won't be raining the entire weekend!
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Well, how would you define "good"? By good, do you mean that it should match what is there? Or good that it fulfills the same purpose in the same space? I think that we are at a hyper sensitive point where aged things are imbued with a sort of "charm" simply because of their age. While the old house, in my eyes, is cuter and sweeter, it doesn't mean that the severe angles of the house on the left won't eventually become more appealing with the passage of time.
So, I think that this is good infill because it doesn't harm, because it fills its space with the same mass, purpose, use, and similar materials. At the very least it isn't bad infill.
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