並且透過上訴的三個核心方向進行延伸,藉此提出當代對於場域認知的詮釋。從人的尺度,重新思考空間變動所創造出的複合場域,再逐步到都市規劃的尺度。透過設計操作重新思考人、場域與時間的關聯性,藉此提出「變動」的構思,使得原先設定好的機能,能透過空間變動進而調整機能,面對時間流動與快速轉變的社會,提出都市空間調整之道。
In the long history of the urban development in Taiwan, the rise and decline of cities and towns as well as industry reforms and transformations all have their imprints. In the early period of urban development, most urban renewals are economic-oriented due to fast economic growth, underdeveloped environmental awareness and insufficient laws. This urban renewal approach, which disregards the living conditions of human beings and surrounding spaces, still remains today. However, can cities’ development nowadays still take the same approach? Should we rethink the use of architectures and urban space in the future generations from the users’ perspective?
This design thesis aims at discussing the relationship of human beings and their surrounding fields in the change of time. By redefining users’ perception of fields, it is possible for architecture designers and urban planners to take appropriate adjustment to create new functions and usages in limited urban space. The avant-garde architectural groups Metabolism and the Archigram of the 1960s have proposed several significant concepts and works regarding urban development and renewal. This design thesis first uses historical analysis to discuss how the architects in the 1960s responded to urban problems by architectural designs and plans. It then, by comparing the design concepts of the two groups, reinterprets the perception of spatial fields today in terms of the three core dimensions: mobility, unit, and placement.
This design thesis reconsiders the complex field created by spatial change from people’s perspective and applies the idea to architectural design and urban planning. By reconsidering the relationship of human, field and time, this design thesis proposed the concept of “Trans-formation¬”. The functions designed for specific purposes, by the concept of change, can be adjusted through the change of space to respond to the fast-changing time, space and our society.