59 2024 אוגוסט 138 אדריכלות ישראלית | | פרופיל העונה: רוזן-ליננברג אדריכלים | profile of the season when the smell of citrus and childhood is in the rain organic architecture - Ron Rozen Itay Linenberg Architects Eli Leffler "So here I stand before you preaching organic architecture, declaring organic architecture to be the modern ideal if we are to see and serve the whole of life, holding no 'traditions' essential, nor cherishing any preconceived form of the past, present or future, but instead exalting the simple laws of common sense, or of super-sense if you prefer, determining form by way of the nature of materials..." (Frank Lloyd Wright, An Organic Architecture, 1939). The question whether any architectural situation can create a framework of laws that allows for a reasonable degree of random occurrences has always engaged city planners, whose best definition in this regard is: "A place where you can find everything you are looking for, but also get lost. Various theories produced during thousands of years of experience may fill a city with planning illusions, whether these are American cities based on streets and avenues, or medieval cities that naturally developed by a river, as random accumulations of intentions. Usually, most attractive places were random events and circumstances which actually answered the attitude of varying needs for residence, work places, commerce, public institutions, leisure facilities, transportation systems and accessibilities. It is interesting that a product approaching the meaning of the term "organic architecture" is breathing and naturally responding to occurrences, while architecture that negates too much order, or allows for the incidental, in stark contrast to modern planning, is constantly engaged in amending past mistakes. Although random, implicit architectural dimension is the secret of every successful system, the desire for a clear and defined order has always been the basic impetus of any architectural act. Against this reality, our attention was drawn to an exciting post painfully describing the random relationship established between fighters in Gaza, exemplifying a random situation that no orderly architecture could have predicted, This naïve post spurred us to contact its writer - Architect Itay Linenberg, who in 1993, with his partner Ron Rozen, founded Rozen Linenberg Architects. Both Itay and Ron volunteered to fight in Gaza despite their age, while surprisingly carrying their memory of the "amazing authentic architecture they saw there". And this is what architect Itay Linenberg wrote: "Natan was wounded and stretcher-borne to the troop carrier. which took him to the border where a helicopter was waiting to ferry him to the hospital,... while only a few Various attempts to define the term "organic architecture" naturally encounter the built-in conflict between "natural" and artificial, that is, between a seemingly free situation, opposed to a planned one. While the term “organic” reflects the symbiotic arrangement of systems concerning nature, architecture is an intervention – and not a necessarily beneficial one. The term "organic architecture" was first coined by the father of plan-to-details architecture, Frank Lloyd Wright in his philosophy of architecture as early as 1908, while his mentor, Louis Sullivan, coined the term form follows function which became the mantra of modern architecture. Wright changed this phrase to "form and function are one," with nature being the best example of this integration.
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