S. Al-Thani, Lolwa Al-Mohannadi, Meera Al-Khulifi, Doha Elsaman, Mark David, H. Osama
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It includes continuing to develop a detailed post-occupancy dataset of movement and space use in buildings at QU. The goal is to contribute positively to future design refinements, alterations, and design of new university buildings at QU. We want to help create a world-class center of education and research where space use, interaction, and innovation are tactically ‘woven’ into the design and planning of the campus at various scales of the built environment. In the CUBE1 study, Major et al. (2019) were able to graphically illustrate building program/use and movement/space use patterns. It included quantifying the relationship between movement and spatial layout, and the significance of other end-user activities such as sitting and interacting in the common areas of the QU Women’s Engineering Building. It also included identifying adaptive re-use of classrooms and storage spaces for laboratory and office uses, leading to a shortage of storage spaces in the building. There was a consistent relationship (R^2=0.68, p < 0.001) between sitting and interacting unrelated to accessibility or metric area, i.e., the availability of seating was the dominant factor for casual encounter, mostly of students. Finally, there was a weak but consistent relationship (R^2=0.38, p < 0.001) between spatial layout and movement flows using space syntax modeling when allowing for the strongly programmatic differences (classrooms versus faculty offices) in different wings of the building (Major et al., 2019) (Figure 2). The post-occupancy evaluation findings in the CUBE1 project were largely consistent with previous results of space syntax research over the last 30 years for generative layouts such as office buildings, colleges, and research laboratories. Those results include the generative role of spatial layout for movement and casual encounter in buildings, the prescriptive effects of strong programmatic aspects (in this case, classroom location and course schedules) in causing some spaces to over-perform/underperform for some types of uses, most usually movement, and the singular importance for the provision of seating to facilitate consistent and robust use of spaces whether at the building or urban level (Hillier and Penn, 1991; Hillier, 1996; Hillier et al., 1996; Major et al., 2019; Sailer et al., 2016).","PeriodicalId":9295,"journal":{"name":"Building Resilience at Universities: Role of Innovation and Entrepreneurship","volume":"69 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Complexity and Use in Building Evaluation (CUBE2): The Modular Case of the BCR Corridors at Qatar University\",\"authors\":\"S. 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It includes continuing to develop a detailed post-occupancy dataset of movement and space use in buildings at QU. The goal is to contribute positively to future design refinements, alterations, and design of new university buildings at QU. We want to help create a world-class center of education and research where space use, interaction, and innovation are tactically ‘woven’ into the design and planning of the campus at various scales of the built environment. In the CUBE1 study, Major et al. (2019) were able to graphically illustrate building program/use and movement/space use patterns. It included quantifying the relationship between movement and spatial layout, and the significance of other end-user activities such as sitting and interacting in the common areas of the QU Women’s Engineering Building. It also included identifying adaptive re-use of classrooms and storage spaces for laboratory and office uses, leading to a shortage of storage spaces in the building. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
位于中区的BCR走廊,对大楼内的最终使用者来说,找路困难是出了名的。这些导航问题似乎是由于其模块化设计中单个部分的重复相似性,高度本地化的可读性和可视性障碍,如遮光设备屏幕和临时安装,以及组成BCR走廊集体整体的不同部分与QU校园周围环境的关系(图1)。在首个示范项目(CUBE1: QUST-2-CENG-2018-9)入驻后集群研究成功的基础上,开展QUST-2-CENG-2019-12研究。它包括继续开发一个详细的占用后建筑运动和空间使用数据集。目标是为QU未来的设计改进、改造和新大学建筑的设计做出积极贡献。我们希望帮助创建一个世界级的教育和研究中心,在这个中心,空间使用、互动和创新在不同规模的建筑环境中策略性地“编织”到校园的设计和规划中。在CUBE1研究中,Major等人(2019)能够图形化地说明建筑程序/使用和运动/空间使用模式。它包括量化运动和空间布局之间的关系,以及其他终端用户活动的重要性,例如在曲区妇女工程大楼的公共区域坐着和互动。它还包括确定实验室和办公室使用的教室和存储空间的适应性再利用,导致建筑中存储空间的短缺。与可达性或度量面积无关的座位和互动之间存在一致的关系(R^2=0.68, p < 0.001),即座位的可用性是偶然相遇的主要因素,大多数是学生。最后,当考虑到建筑不同侧翼的强烈程序性差异(教室与教师办公室)时,空间布局和使用空间语法建模的运动流之间存在微弱但一致的关系(R^2=0.38, p < 0.001)。CUBE1项目的使用后评估结果与过去30年对办公楼、大学和研究实验室等生成式布局的空间句法研究结果基本一致。这些结果包括空间布局对建筑中运动和偶然相遇的生成作用,强大的程序性方面(在这种情况下,教室位置和课程安排)的规定作用,导致一些空间在某些类型的用途中表现过度/表现不佳,最常见的是运动,以及提供座位以促进建筑物或城市层面上空间的一致和强大使用的单一重要性(Hillier和Penn, 1991;希利尔,1996;Hillier et al., 1996;Major等人,2019;Sailer et al., 2016)。
Complexity and Use in Building Evaluation (CUBE2): The Modular Case of the BCR Corridors at Qatar University
The BCR Corridors at QU are notorious for wayfinding difficulties of end-users in the building complex. These navigation problems appear to arise due to the repetitive similarity of individual parts in its modular design, highly localized impediments to readability and visibility such as shading device screens and temporary installations, and the relationship of those different parts composing the collective whole of the BCR Corridors to the immediate surrounding context of the QU campus (Figure 1). The purpose of the “Complexity and Use in Building Evaluation” research project (CUBE2: QUST-2-CENG-2019-12) is to build on the research success of the post-occupancy cluster in the first demonstration project (CUBE1: QUST-2-CENG-2018-9). It includes continuing to develop a detailed post-occupancy dataset of movement and space use in buildings at QU. The goal is to contribute positively to future design refinements, alterations, and design of new university buildings at QU. We want to help create a world-class center of education and research where space use, interaction, and innovation are tactically ‘woven’ into the design and planning of the campus at various scales of the built environment. In the CUBE1 study, Major et al. (2019) were able to graphically illustrate building program/use and movement/space use patterns. It included quantifying the relationship between movement and spatial layout, and the significance of other end-user activities such as sitting and interacting in the common areas of the QU Women’s Engineering Building. It also included identifying adaptive re-use of classrooms and storage spaces for laboratory and office uses, leading to a shortage of storage spaces in the building. There was a consistent relationship (R^2=0.68, p < 0.001) between sitting and interacting unrelated to accessibility or metric area, i.e., the availability of seating was the dominant factor for casual encounter, mostly of students. Finally, there was a weak but consistent relationship (R^2=0.38, p < 0.001) between spatial layout and movement flows using space syntax modeling when allowing for the strongly programmatic differences (classrooms versus faculty offices) in different wings of the building (Major et al., 2019) (Figure 2). The post-occupancy evaluation findings in the CUBE1 project were largely consistent with previous results of space syntax research over the last 30 years for generative layouts such as office buildings, colleges, and research laboratories. Those results include the generative role of spatial layout for movement and casual encounter in buildings, the prescriptive effects of strong programmatic aspects (in this case, classroom location and course schedules) in causing some spaces to over-perform/underperform for some types of uses, most usually movement, and the singular importance for the provision of seating to facilitate consistent and robust use of spaces whether at the building or urban level (Hillier and Penn, 1991; Hillier, 1996; Hillier et al., 1996; Major et al., 2019; Sailer et al., 2016).