Abstract:
With the development of digital technologies, orthographic projection has been slowly removed
from the process of architectural design. Instead, orthographic projection drawings are increasingly
utilised purely post-design in the form of technical construction documents. Yet, according
to Robin Evans orthographic projection is an active agency in the formation of images, and an
effective agency for the elaboration of imaginary objects. Furthermore, for Iain Fraser and Rod
Henmi orthographic projection produces conceptually sophisticated constructs whose abstract
representation of space allows certain aspects and relationship to be seen which may not otherwise
be visible. This thesis argues that the reduced role of orthographic projection in the process
of design has affected architects' ability to elaborate the imaginary.
To investigate the potential of orthographic projection in the elaboration of the imaginary, this
thesis expands upon Marco Frascari's written theory of technological images as a palimpsest
displaying three overlapping relationships: (1) between a real artefact and the reflected or projected
image of it, (2) between a real artefact and its instrumental image, and (3) between the
instrumental image and its symbolic image. To expand upon this theory graphically this thesis
employs a methodology of architectural drawing as research. Outlined by Clemens Steenbergen,
this framework proposes three distinct forms of architectural drawing that constitute research.
This thesis couples these three forms with Frascari's three overlapping relationships of a technological
image: (1) The Reproduction Drawings aim to register more accurately how something
is made up through a process which interprets the object of observation and incorporates it into
memory. These drawings embody the first overlapping relationship of Frascari's, technological
image, between a real artefact and the projected image of it. (2) Analytical Drawings reveal abstract
qualities and potentials by reducing the complex compositions of the first series to their
elementary geometric forms, lines and grids. These drawings embody the second overlapping relationship,
between a real artefact and its instrumental image. (3) Experimental Drawings project
the reproduction and analytical drawings into an existing context to expand upon or reinforce the
relationships and conceptual connections formed in relation to the site in the preceding two series.
The effects of these interventions are assessed and altered, ultimately leading to new concepts
and new compositions. These drawings aim to elaborate imaginative relationships between buildings
and architectural ideas, through a process Frascari terms a mutual measure derived from a
familiar nature. These drawings embody the third and final overlapping relationship between the
instrumental and its symbolic image. By extending upon Frascari's theory graphically, this thesis
argues that orthographic projection remains a valuable tool in the process of design.
The real artefact chosen to demonstrate the continued value of orthographic projection is Wellington's
Civic Square. This site was selected as the buildings located around its formal rectilinear
domain offer a heterogeneous mix of civic architecture, ranging from the strictly orthogonal Town
Hall and City Gallery to the curvilinear Public Library and City Administration Building. This
site offers the opportunity to test both the advantages and disadvantages of orthographic projection,
for the reading of architecture and the elaboration of the imaginary, within a formally diverse
existing urban environment.