Appropriate organizational
structure may be defined as the single ordering outline for any construct. In
the process of architectural design, it is useful to express it as a diagram.
The determination of appropriate
organization structure—the single diagram—is an integrative act of great
complexity. Much must be considered, many tentative syntheses tried, each synthesis
carefully analyzed and evaluated. Appropriate organizational structure cannot
be determined simply by acts of personal expression or will. It must be discovered
anew for each new project.
“Creation is a patient search.”
(Le Corbusier)
“I have to wait my turn . . .
before I know what a building wants to be.” (Louis Kahn)
Because appropriate organizational
structure is singular (there can only be one at a time), it is the basis for
unity in built places; thus, the basis for the clarity and eloquence of those
places in regard to their purpose, meaning, and intent.
Clarity and eloquence require
unity. Unity requires structure.
Structure is about organization.
Organization must always be new.
Appropriate organizational
structure, then, is the single outline of arrangement—discovered anew for each
design project—that appropriately orders all parts of that project so that it
may be unified, eloquent, and complete. Once this outline has been determined, emphasis
may shift to its development and enrichment.
This book is about
the considerations and actions required—first, to determine appropriate
organizational structure, and second, to develop and enrich it. Necessarily, it
is also about the processes and study media required in these efforts.
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