If you're lucky, and a building succeeds, the real product has many more dimensions than you can ever imagine. You have the sun, the light, the rain, the birds, the feel.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
And a building must be like a human being. It must have a wholeness about it, something that is very important.
We are creating a unique experience. It's starts with how you see the building from a distance.
A building has at least two lives - the one imagined by its maker and the life it lives afterward - and they are never the same.
I would not be at all surprised to find out... that the dimensions of buildings affect us in ways we don't guess.
The buildings that I build very often have a dreamlike reality. I don't mean by that they have a fantasy quality at all, in fact quite the reverse. They contain in some degree the ingredients that give dreams their power... stuff that's very close to us.
In other words, each piece of the building must look as though it was designed for that particular building.
You have to see a building to comprehend it. Photographs cannot convey the experience, nor film.
Height, width, and depth are the three phenomena which I must transfer into one plane to form the abstract surface of the picture, and thus to protect myself from the infinity of space.
Every building is a prototype. No two are alike.
The space within becomes the reality of the building.