Cornell Journal of Architecture 10: Spirits
By (Author) Caroline O'Donnell
Cornell AAP Publications
Cornell AAP Publications
1st November 2016
English
United States
General
Non Fiction
Yearbooks, annuals, almanacs
Environmentally-friendly (green) architecture and design
Paperback
192
Width 200mm, Height 225mm
500g
In distilling, the small amount of alcohol evaporated during the aging process is known as the angels' share. at is, while lost to us, the alcohol does not cease to exist, but instead is given to -- or taken by -- the angels. Architecture's own angels' share--the notion of an absent and intangible other--has too been personi ed. From Genius Loci to Zeitgeist, the gure of the spirit is perhaps the most fundamental component of architecture, even before walls or columns. Whether phenomenal or conceptual, without this ickering spirit, one might say, there is no architecture. As technology enables the virtual realm to be inhabited in more everyday ways, the notion of another kind of spirit becomes more present yet more blurred. e digital, as architecture's alternate and now ickering specter, skirmishes with architecture's existing ghosts.