Renaissance architects manipulated architecture for sensory pleasure and intellectual delight.
One of the intents of Renaissance architecture was to control the perception of
space through the arrangement of mass.The key word here is perception. To Michelangelo, Brunelleschi, and Palladio, architecture was not about picture-perfect images. It was about the perception of
space in real life.
A recent article by Gregory Karp in the Chicago Tribune indicates this philosophy of space - dating to at
least the renaissance in architecture - is now understood by those who design
the interiors of airplanes.
New airplanes are being outfitted with interiors that address the perception of space in environments normally perceived as cramped and claustrophobic. Even in coach, the new Boeing 737 planes, for example, "are likely to have the Boeing Sky Interior," reports Karp, "which evokes a greater sense of space." Boeing's regional director in Chicago, Kent Craver, cites this as "a step change in our interior philosophy" because passengers have an emotional reaction to the airplane simply based on the way it looks. BINGO! That is what Renaissance architects knew about space five centuries ago.
Filippo Brunelleschi, architect. |
Brunelleschi's dome, Florence, Italy. |
Boeing Sky Interior. |