If you are a designer, artist, or architect looking to integrate this philosophy, the 2021 learning pathway is clear:
Designed by a collective of architecture students and biophilic artists, the Harmony Pavilion is a timber grid-shell whose every node sits at a golden ratio intersection. The team spent six months "learning the measure" of local eucalyptus: its tensile strength, its moisture movement, and its spiral grain. The resulting structure—a 200-square-meter community centre—has no air conditioning. Its roof geometry (based on H.S.M. Coxeter’s spherical tilings) naturally ventilates the space without a single fan. Critics called it "a leaf made into a building." If you are a designer, artist, or architect
To understand the urgency of Infinite Measure in 2021, one must first acknowledge the preceding crisis. For nearly a century, modernist and postmodernist architecture often celebrated the "rupture"—the breaking of historical continuity and geometric stability. While intellectually provocative, this approach frequently produced environments that induced what psychologist Colin Ellard calls "architectural malaise": buildings that fight the topography, cities that ignore the sun, and interiors that repel touch. Its roof geometry (based on H
(Ed.). (2021). Nexus Network Journal: Architecture and Mathematics , Vol. 23 — which includes papers on geometric harmony. For nearly a century
The Infinite Measure is not a trend you follow in 2021 and abandon in 2022. It is the underlying grammar of reality. To design without it is to write without consonants—possible, but incomprehensible.
The book is organized into two primary sections to guide the reader from theory to creation: Infinite Measure - Rachel Fletcher
Here you'll find all collections you've created before.