Quantitative Geographies

The Bartlett

 

 

 

 

The Quantitative Scale:

 

Walking the circuit as described in the project Diagramming the System, measurements were taken at five minute intervals of six quantities which describe these locations, quantitatively. This represents an alternative geographic reading of the landscape.

 

After the information was organized and collated, a graph was constructed, which was re-projected across the circuit in three dimensions, as an overlay onto the cityscape.

 

Image 1. The Quantitative Graph

Images 2. - 5. The Graph Projected Over The City

 

Quantitative Landscapes:

 

Another iteration of this quantitative mapping was an attempt to undersand not just the edges of the system, but the interior as well, so the three dimensional “ribbons” which described the edges were used to generate a series of forms which compose a “new territory” of the system.

 

Images 6. - 11. Quantitative Landscapes

 

copyright XOverZero 2016

  • Quantitative Geographies ▼

    The Quantitative Scale:

     

    Walking the circuit as described in the project Diagramming the System, measurements were taken at five minute intervals of six quantities which describe these locations, quantitatively. This represents an alternative geographic reading of the landscape.

     

    After the information was organized and collated, a graph was constructed, which was re-projected across the circuit in three dimensions, as an overlay onto the cityscape.

     

    Image 1. The Quantitative Graph

    Images 2. - 5. The Graph Projected Over The City

     

    Quantitative Landscapes:

     

    Another iteration of this quantitative mapping was an attempt to undersand not just the edges of the system, but the interior as well, so the three dimensional “ribbons” which described the edges were used to generate a series of forms which compose a “new territory” of the system.

     

    Images 6. - 11. Quantitative Landscapes