Abstract

This article investigated montage to understand and arrange cinematic architecture through operations of spatial reconstruction to present a sequence of spatial experiences. Montage is a part of discourses related to cinematic, film, and architecture. This article explored the montage approach as the primary basis in the architectural design process through spatial experience. The discussion is based on the idea that montage is emphasized in three things, i.e., sequence, multiple layers of meaning, and movement. These three aspects were further observed through the montage precedent comprising various cinematic precedents based on montage in architecture, i.e., Manhattan Transcripts and Parc de La Villette from Bernard Tschumi, Villa Savoye from Le Corbusier, and Maison Bordeaux from Rem Koolhaas. The finding of this study is a synthesis of some of these precedents that resulted in an understanding of space reconstruction operations, i.e., dismantlement, disappearance, and reassembly, all three of which exist as strategies that will be part of the production process to develop montage-based cinematic architectural design, creating new spatial sequence that provide alternative spatial experience. This article expands the knowledge regarding montages that cinematics and films can be a development in architectural design.

Highlights

  • This article aimed to understand more deeply about montages in cinematic architecture and how it generates operations of spatial reconstruction

  • MATERIAL AND METHOD This study presents a study on architectural montage approach in designing cinematic architectural space through operations of spatial reconstruction

  • Against unification in Manhattan Transcripts, Manhattan Transcripts does not produce a product in the form of a building, so designing the montage only ends in the dismantlement process to dismantle spatial/context to be produced

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Summary

Introduction

This article aimed to understand more deeply about montages in cinematic architecture and how it generates operations of spatial reconstruction. The discussion is based on the idea that a form of montage emphasizes three things, i.e., sequence, multiple layers of meaning, and movement These three aspects were further observed through the montage precedent comprising various cinematic precedents based on montage in architecture, i.e., Manhattan Transcripts and Parc de La Villette from Bernard Tschumi, Villa Savoye from Le Corbusier, and Maison Bordeaux from Rem Koolhaas. The finding of this precedents study suggests an understanding of space reconstruction operations, i.e., dismantlement, disappearance, and reassembly. Exploration on montages and its design mechanisms expands the knowledge regarding cinematic-based architectural design

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