RESEARCH ARTICLE

Examining control, centrality and flexibility in Palladio’s villa plans using space syntax measurements

  • Michael J. Dawes ,
  • Michael J. Ostwald ,
  • Ju Hyun Lee
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  • UNSW Built Environment, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia

Received date: 29 Nov 2020

Accepted date: 25 Jan 2021

Published date: 15 Sep 2021

Copyright

2021 Higher Education Press Limited Company. Publishing services by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi Communications Co. Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

Abstract

Andrea Palladio’s Renaissance villas are amongst the most famous and widely studied examples of domestic architecture ever produced. The majority of past research about Palladio’s architecture employed historical, mathematical and computational methods to analyse their complex proportional systems and rules. In contrast, this paper examines three of Palladio’s arguments about his villas plans which relate to their spatial properties and topological connections. Specifically, this paper uses a computational method e the justified plan graph (JPG) e to test two arguments about the location and significance of the primary salon on the plan, and a third about the extent to which the rooms in Palladio’s plans are, as he claims, flexible enough to contain alternative functions. Using ten of Palladio’s piano nobile (main floor) plans from I Quattro Libri Dell’Architettura as cases, this paper develops mathematical data to test three hypotheses framed around Palladio’s plans and theories.

Cite this article

Michael J. Dawes , Michael J. Ostwald , Ju Hyun Lee . Examining control, centrality and flexibility in Palladio’s villa plans using space syntax measurements[J]. Frontiers of Architectural Research, 2021 , 10(3) : 467 -482 . DOI: 10.1016/j.foar.2021.02.002

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