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| The acacia's branching structure is fractallike because of the repeated forms in its branches, from large to small. Fractals are found elsewhere in nature — think snowflakes — but not nearly as explicitly, or over such long periods of humanity, as in this tree. Hosey refers to fractals as "the fingerprints of nature" and cites studies in which preschool children of various backgrounds were almost universally drawn to images of acacia trees. Looking at this photograph, the appeal of the tree is undeniable, lending credence to the argument for fractallike imagery. |
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| One project that embraces all three aspects (fractals, sheltered views, golden section) in Hosey's book is the "Eastern Seaboard" project in Connecticut, designed by G. Steuart Gray, AIA. The categories not be readily apparent in this view, but there is something very pleasing about this space, from the built-in furniture and open wood structure to the paint color and the soft light entering through the windows at left. They combine to create a cohesive environment that appears quite relaxing. |
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| A rough golden section ratio (1 unit high by roughly 1.6 units wide) can be found in the window of the dining room when the sliding screens open to reveal a carefully framed garden. As Hosey discusses in his book, the golden section's appeal is rooted in our area of focus, specifically in regard to hunting. Here that frame is not about the kill, but about a scene of beauty. (Note the landscape painting on the side wall, of a similar proportion.) |
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| The last consideration, a sheltered horizontal view, is evident in this bedroom, where a corner with large sliding glass walls opens to a great view with water and trees beyond. The sheltering aspect is also reinforced by a roof overhang that's visible from inside and covers the residents when they're outside. |
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| Not all design features that tap into our deep history need to encompass a whole environment, from the landscape and building to the rooms and furnishings. One room's wallpaper can suffice (though it may make the owner strive for the same effect elsewhere). The walls of this bathroom are covered in a fractallike tree pattern that is very appealing. |
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| The fractallike part of the tree extends up the second floor, where it sits next to a railing that uses branches (of the same tree?) for the guardrail infill. The shadow effect is particularly nice. |
| This residence designed by Washington, D.C.'s, Travis Price dramatically merges the house with its landscape. Modern houses with glass walls framing horizontal views of the surroundings are nothing new, but designing the house around the trees in the forest certainly is. It's like deflected modernism, something that extends to the use of large timber members and wood surfaces above the glass walls. The residents of this house don't look at the trees so much as through them. |
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| An alternative to the previous example is this more traditionally modern house — the parallel, minimalist floor and ceiling sandwich frameless glass walls. Unlike the previous example, the horizontal view is flattened, more of an image than something that the resident is part of. |
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by Don F. Wong
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| I like the way this horizontal view is broken up by the wood framing, which alternates between large panes and stacked small panes. Note how the large panes approximate a golden section (1 wide by roughly 1.6 tall), a ratio that is roughly repeated in the small panes. Overall, the framing breaks the view into smaller chunks, making the landscape more intimate — fitting, given the proximity of the trees. |
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| This house, on the other hand, opens up to an expansive horizontal view of Mandeville Canyon east of San Francisco. Still, the view is broken up by columns that alternate with trees in the foreground. The sheltering aspect of the view is very strong, as the living room extends to a covered porch. |
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| Like the custom metal screen in the kitchen earlier, this view uses a real tree to filter the city beyond. This fractallike tree is similar to an acacia tree, though this relationship does not need to be a conscious thing for the architect or client to take advantage of the tree through the large glass wall. |
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| As mentioned, fractal- and acacialike images can be abstract or real, so in the latter case, the selection of new trees and use of existing ones are important. This lovely tree anchors a patio and one corner of a ranch outside San Francisco. The view is tremendous, but the tree helps to shelter and frame it, scaling down the immensity of the sky and focusing attention on the green and the hills beyond. |
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by Urrutia Design
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| Sheltering trees with fractallike forms can have an even more substantial impact on a house, such as the huge tree shading the house and large deck. One result of trees with fractallike forms is fractallike shadows, which in a sense are abstract images of nature. More: Find High Architecture When Home Gently Meets Ground 5 Unique Homes Throw the Landscape a Curve |
Marie Meko
Still, they are very pleasing until then.
Thought a picture would be helpful... Both trees are Desert Ironwood, my personal favorite. One is of an entry courtayard, that envelopes the home. The Ironwood in the planter, is the view right outside a sliding panel door system. It frames the view of the mountains beyond and interestingly, the shadow of the tree reaches into the house as well.