argia.eus
INPRIMATU
Territory and architecture
Building body
Ula Iruretagoiena 2024ko apirilaren 17a

The drop of the bridge over the Baltimore River will be picked up among the end-of-year memory images, as the fall of a bridge is an exciting and exceptional spectacle. Because bridges and buildings do not fall by themselves, the explosion of an artifact or artifact causes a collapse of spontaneity, accompanied by a cold brruuummm sound and a sharp rise in dust. The spontaneity of the skeleton tends to stand, as is the natural tendency of living beings to remain alive. The collapse of the structure requires an unpredictable accident for a fall to occur. Many other accidents are taken into account for the calculation of the skeleton or the vital experiences of buildings show the structure stiffness in thickness and shape.

The collapse of the human body is also very rare. The explanation of the building and the space with a metaphor of a body supposedly offers closeness and affection to the materiality of the construction. A building ages and becomes ill like the human body. It's not anthropomorphism, it's a simple way to understand the life cycle of matter. Like another space of nature, which is the same, human beings do not depart from life cycles. Buildings are only given up and tristan because energy remains dead; if it is not negligently related to the building, the presence of dust will be reason for non-adherence. In addition to the human and building relationship, age influences space: over time buildings may present cracks as traces of movements or communicate their disease through cracks. Like any other body, buildings require attention and vigilance, otherwise their characteristics change. We talk about keeping the house as a technical and cold action, when sustenance is the expression of our love relationship with the house.