Tuesday, May 28, 2013

MATERIAL PROCESSES

MATERIAL PROCESSES
Surface Finish materials result from natural causes and human effort. Materials produced by natural causes are occasional, usually very slowly formed and with no quality control. Just the same, nature often presents spectacular and impossible to duplicate finishes. As natural finishes are rare and available in very limited quantity, some degree of quality generalization and equalization are required. Natural finishes require, minor to substantial modifications, such as physical conversions like cutting, dressing and polishing, to chemical alterations such as baking, bleaching and sintering. Materials modified out of the natural raw materials retain many of their original characteristics. Manufactured or man-made materials as raw materials have their own appearance, or after secondary processing, acquire a designed form and facet.
Since prehistoric times certain finishes have been collectively associated with specific materials, tools and techniques employed. A new product results with a variation in any one of these parameters. Materials provide vast options in their natural, processed and manufactured forms. Tools extend human limb abilities and also endow new capacities, so are continuously improvised through learning. Techniques of employing tools and processes relate to quality refinement, efficiency and productivity through scheduling, task management, planning, all leading to some form of automation.
Tools and techniques together create rational manufacturing processes, a strategy of for replicating specific end results. A manufacturing process could be very personal initially, but gradually spreads across the locality, and then becomes universal. Personal manufacturing processes reflect the personal skills of the originator or the inheritor of the knowledge. Craft-products as a result are very individualistic, local and ethnic. Industrial products on the other hand are universal, unless patented or copyright protected by the inventor. Industrial products come with assurance of consistency.
Creation of a surface finish is a cumulative consequence of all, the Processes, Techniques and Tools. There are many types of processes, techniques and tools. Some are more commonly associated with specific materials or end products, but many are common, i.e. applicable to many different materials and towards variety of end products. The difference between a process and a technique may not seem very obvious, unless when either of them, are specific to a material or end product.
Processes for processing materials for specific end product, e.g. surface finishes
Techniques for materials, using tools, etc. for surface finishing
Tools Hand tools
Power tools
Here we discuss about Material Processes.
PROCESSES:
Processing of Materials: Materials are processed with following three main objectives:
1 Shape and size formation
2 Alteration and induction of properties
3 Endowing finishes

1 Shape and size formation:
Body forming processes change the dimensional format of the material through phase-change of the material (solid to liquid to gas, or vice versa), within the same material phase (heat treatments, hot and cold working, and through mechanical work like mixing, stirring), and through material compositions (structuring, assembly).
Grains or dust mixed with a binder material can be cast into solids, or melted-fused as alloy, or sintered to a ceramic. Solids can be rolled into sheets or melt-spun into fibers, blown to powders, or drawn into wires. Fibres and wires are woven into fabric sheets.
Shaping processes can be categorized as:
Solid forming: Forging, beating, pressing, rolling, drawing, casting, extrusion, moulding.
Sheet forming: Bending, punching, stamping, cutting, seaming, forming, moulding.
Linear forming: Drawing, spinning, entwining, weaving.
Grain forming: Blowing or granulation, chopping, grinding.

These processes can also be classed as:
1a Flow processes: casting, moulding, extruding, drawing, rolling, forging, hammering, beating, powder-technology, material deposition, stamping, punching, pressing, bending, folding, seaming.
1b Additive processes: lamination, crystal growth, foaming (lower phase material dispersion in a higher phase material), plating, cladding, mounting, joining, material deposition, fabrication, joining, supporting, holding, keying, positioning, plugging, arranging.
1c Reducing processes: cutting, chopping, sizing, splicing, scooping, drilling, boring, machining, planning, chiselling, engraving, etching, de-layering, chipping, grinding, rubbing, sand blasting, cleaning, washing, melting, dissolving.
1d Other forming processes: spinning, weaving, knitting.

2 Alteration and Induction of properties:
Alteration and Induction of properties cause a change in the engineering or structural quality of the material, frequently accompanied by the modification of the surface characteristics. The alteration processes are also designed to regain the lost or the reduced properties during other processing.
2a Heat treatments: boiling, liquidizing, melting, softening, sintering, baking, drying, fusing, welding, soldering, forging, annealing, heating, hardening, crystal forming, blowing.
2b Non heat treatments: magnetizing, static discharging, infection proofing, cleaning, washing, earthing, wetting, drying, stretching, strenting, stressing, compressing, tensiling, twisting, filling.
2c Material applications: coatings, depositions, claddings, panelling, enamelling, inlaying, gilding, printing, moisture proofing, fuming.
2d Non material processes: embossing, engraving, polishing, burring, charring, burnishing, chasing, buffing.
2e Chemical treatments: dyeing, bleaching, etching.

3 Endowing finishes:
Finishes are provided: By altering the surface properties of the materials at a raw material stage and also after formation of the object, By reforming the objects, and By applying other materials at a raw material stage or at an object formation stage.
The need for a peculiar finish could be varied, but essentially for:
Imparting specific sensorial characteristics, for survival of the object in an environment, for changing the structural properties, as an aid in material processing and forming operations, for storage and handling of the raw materials or components, and for efficient operation of the system.
Processes for Natural Surface Finishes: Natural Finishes result due to many different factors, such as:
Elemental conditions of formation, subsequent responses like weathering, cognitive affectations, and later, natural or man-made interventions (angle of cut, tools and techniques used, etc.).
Natural surface finishes have three main cognitive affectations: Colour, Pattern and Texture. The colours are of original formation, subsequent weathering, readjustment of stresses, or induced by physical and chemical changes. The patterns result from the stresses, mixing of constituents, weathering, and the varied reactivity of different parts and constituents. Patterns also result from granular or fibrous orientation, method of cut, cyclic nature of growth, formation of residual products, deposition of contaminants, and tools-techniques of handling and processing. Textures primarily result from the degree of homogeneity, angle of cut, differential weathering, and various formative processes.
Processes for Manufactured Surface Finishes
Manufactured Surface Finishes result at three levels: Raw material stage, Product formation stage, and later, through Application of surface finish on Completion of the system. In an integrated production setup all three could be a single stage or plant process, but in most other fabrication shops only the last two processes are combined. For a site fabricated systems like buildings, the last process, i.e. surface finish application, is a distinct process as it is carried out at a site. Manufactured surface finishes as a result are of two categories: Plant based and Site-based systems. Though lot of preparatory work may occur in the industrial plant for the site-based surface finish application. Products fully surface finished in industrial plants require very careful handling (transportation, loading, storage, delivery and positioning), and so may carry protective but removable coatings or shields.
Make-believe or pseudo finishes: These finishes are of two basic types:
1 Surface finishes that duplicate the natural materials, such as: wood figure or texture effects in polymers, stone like effects in ceramics, cotton like fabrics made out of polyester, or synthetic gems and diamonds.
2 Surface finishes that copy the effects of other manufactured finishes, such as: chrome polymers for metals, white metal ornaments for silver, or acrylic for glass. Future possibilities include flexible glass, elastomeric metals, polymers with programmable colouring or texture forming system, metals lighter than ceramics or polymers, biodegradable ceramics, etc.

Surface finishes can be considered as:
Inherent Finishes
Applied Finishes
Integrated Finishes
PROCESSES FOR SURFACE FINISHES:
Materials have some surface finish qualities at a raw material stage, and these are either maintained or changed during the conversion to a product. Shaping of solid materials is done primarily to reformat the shape, and to convert them into a planer or linear forms, but surface finishes begin to evident at this stage.
 
Hammering or Beating: This is a very ancient process for shaping materials. Chipping by hammering stones to shape sharp edges was perhaps the most primitive of all processes. Hammering was also used to grind food stuffs, ceramic forming raw materials and metal ores. Even today hammering and beating, are mother processes for surface finishing.
Hammering was used to flatten-out the natural pure nodules of copper, and shape them into ornaments, tools and utensils. Hammering a copper nodule made it brittle, but frequent heating and graduated cooling -annealing made the mass ductile. Similarly sudden cooling by quenching in oil or water, caused surface hardening of the metal. Annealed and surface hardened materials had not only different structural properties but also had special surface qualities, (e.g. colour). Beating was also carried out to grind, and wet-mix materials, such as for ceramics.
Forging: The ancient process of Hammering to shape a material is now a rational process. Forging is a process of shaping iron and other malleable metals by hammering or pressing them after making them plastic by application of heat. Forging not only provides a desired form, but also refines the grain size and arrangement and by that improves the structure of the metal. Forged metal is stronger and more ductile than cast metal, and exhibits greater resistance to fatigue and impact. Forging is also used to compact materials by removing gases and by packing the cavities.
There are six basic Types of Forgings:
Upsetting: Decreasing the length and increasing the diameter of the metal.
Swaging: Decreasing the diameter of the metal on concave tools called swages.
Bending: It is done by hammering the work around a form or by levering it against a support.
Weld forging: It joins two pieces of metals together by hammering them together at high temperature with the help of a flux such as a borax.
Punching: It forms small depressions or openings in the metal by a punch of the proper shape on a base of a ring-shaped piece of metal.
Cutting: It cuts out large holes, apertures or niches in the metal with heavy, sharp chisels.
Forging can also be categorized, depending on the equipment used in the process.
Hand Forging: Sometimes called smithing, or black smithing is the simplest and oldest of all forging techniques. It uses a hammer and a beating block, called an anvil. An anvil has slightly tapered or a convex surface that allows precise hammering angles. Often concave shaped tools like swages are used to cover or hold the material (to restrict the flow of metal). A drop-forging uses force of gravity to drop heavy weight over the work piece instead of hammering.
Machine Forging: various types of machine-powered hammers or presses are used instead of a hand-held sledgehammer. These machines provide, heavy and rapid blows for production of large size and high quality objects. Forging-compression is obtained through the entire piece, compared to the hand-forging where mainly the surface is deformed. Drop forging or Impact-die forging involves placing a ductile, or heat softened metal in a single die or between two shaping dies. The upper of these dies, is dropped onto the lower one forcing the heated metal into the shaped die cavities, as in coin-making. For reducing part of a piece of metal stock to a predetermined size, forging rolls are used. These consist of a pair of grooved, cam-shaped rollers through which the metal is passed. Machine-forging operations are frequently accomplished by use of a series of dies mounted on the same press or hammer. The dies are arranged in sequence to form the finished forging in a series of steps. After the piece has been partially formed by one stroke, it is moved to the next die for further shaping on the next stroke.
Shaping by Rolling: Materials are shaped by passing through rollers. Rolling not only compresses, levels and stretches the material but it can emboss patterns (e.g. checkered aluminium plates of bus floors) and textures, cut shapes, polish the surface. Hot rolling, joins or fuses the layers of materials. Hot and cold rolling of metal sheets are done to provide specific surface qualities.
Shaping by Drawing and Stretching: Materials are drawn out through apertures or orifices to reduce the cross sectional shape and size, but elongate its length dimension. Wires, seamless pipes and filaments are drawn products. Drawing is often accompanied by twisting-spinning, entwining, thread or rope forming, etc. Extrusion of plastic is also a drawing process. Opposite to this, materials are stretched to increase their sectional shape and size, often slightly decreasing the length dimension. During drawing and stretching constituents like molecules, grains and fibers get rationally realigned, providing different surface qualities. Drawing and stretching, are also carried out to mix new ingredients such as colours, liquids, plasticizers, lubricants, etc.
Fabrics, Paper, Leather, Glass, Elastomers (rubbers), Polymers, Filaments, etc. are some of the materials receiving specific surface qualities (creased-crinkled, corrugations, gloss, matt, hardness, softness, evenness, etc.) through Drawing and Stretching processes. Most of the commercial metal forms (annealed, surface-hardened, ribbed, fluted and corrugations) are produced through such processes.
Shaping by Shear cutting, Stamping (die forming), Punching: In spite of simpler options these processes are used to achieve special surface qualities. Ordinary cutting by toothed saw leaves cut marks but shearing provides a smooth cut. Ruptures can be performed on materials with substantial stiffness (density) but softer materials shear cutting is required. Stamping allows stretching the material into a shape cast. The quality of a surface is determined by: nature of die surface, lubricants, force, nature of material (cold or hot workable, for stainless steel austenitic or martensitic), etc. Punching is faster than drilling, but stresses the edges of the hole rim.
Bending and Folding: are processes used for shaping ductile materials. Bending and folding can be done by controlled hammering, but today mechanical systems are used. Edge shaped tools provide linear shaping (almirah -cupboard shelves), solid shaped-ends create shaped deformations (spoons, frying pans, automobile bodies), balls are used for forming curved shapes (concave-convex as in wok or chemical vessels bottoms). Bending and folding operations are also used for shear-cutting. Bending relates to smooth curving whereas, folding relates to a sharp or angular turning. In Sheet metal fabrication bending and folding generally increases the planner stiffness, as in AC ducts, cans and tins, barrels, corrugated sheets, purlins, pipe etc.

SURFACE FINISHING TECHNIQUES:
Many techniques of achieving surface finishes in use today are essentially the same as those employed in ancient times. These have been refined in terms of the tools used and rationalized in terms of procedures. Many processes are now highly mechanised saving time and energy, and some even are fully automatized, using robotics that allows faster, accurate and safer production.
Some important techniques of associated with surface finishes are briefly discussed in following four groups.
1 Techniques for surface finishing objects' own material.
2 Techniques for surface finishing with foreign materials.
3 Techniques of material deposition for surface finishing.
4 Surface modification techniques.


1 TECHNIQUES FOR SURFACE FINISHING OBJECTS' OWN MATERIAL.
Cutting: Cutting is the oldest of all techniques. First cutting edges were made of sharp edged flint stone chips. Cutting stone chips were tied to wood or bone handles which not only improved tool holding, but leveraged greater force. Cutting Axes were reasonable for medium strength materials like wood, but for harder materials like stone, cutting and beating separated into hammer and chisel (for tools: see next chapter). Cutting is used for fast division of materials and quicker removal of parts of materials (skinning, debarking, chopping, mining). Cutting is the crude but primary technique of material processing.
Carving: Carving is a controlled cutting technique requiring use of a chisel and only occasionally pounding by a hammer. Carving is associated with fine but soft grain materials like ivory, horn, bones and wood. Carving is also done to pliable metals like copper, silver-based alloys, and also hard but fracture-able materials like stones.
Engraving: Engraving is a delicate and shallower material removal technique than carving, using a chisel or sharp pointed tools with hand pressure, or very light pounding of the hammer. Engraving is today done by fine rotary tools similar to the dentist's pneumatic drill. A computer controlled, diamond bit engraving is now done to ultra thin materials also.
In Intaglio, or Gravure, printing, the image to be printed is etched or incised into the surface of the printing plate or cylinder. Gramophone records have engraved and embossed grooves.
Chasing: For chasing, the material is depressed or displaced by a fine tool as dots, small length linear-strokes or in continuous linear patterns. Wet ceramic pieces, and plastered-surfaces are patterns rendered by chasing. Braille writing on a thick paper sheet is a form of chasing.
Engraving and chasing techniques are frequently used to provide a matt finish, onto normally very glossy stainless steel surfaces. Chasing techniques are also used for relieving as well as introducing stresses at the surface section, allow moisture and heat transfer, and improve the ductility of the material.
Embossing: Embossing introduces a texture through pounding, beating or by pressing of the surface. The pressure may be applied from one face or both faces of a sheet, locally as spots, or continuously under a plate or roller, creating repeat patterns or random designs. Pounding or beating, compacts the surface-sections of the material, and thereby increasing its density and integrity. Embossing techniques are used to reduce the gloss by matting the surface. Embossing is done to increase the thickness bulk of very thin surface materials and make them apparently stiffer. Synthetic fabrics and fibers are emboss-deformed and permanently set (perma-set and texturizing) through heat or chemical treatment.
Repousse: Repousse is a method of raising a design in relief from the reverse side. The design is first drawn on the surface of the metal and the motifs outlined with a tracer, which transfers the essential parts of the drawing to the back of the plate. The plate is then embedded face down in an asphalt block and the portions to be raised are hammered down into the soft asphalt. Next the plate is removed and re embedded with the face uppermost. The hammering is continued, this time forcing the background of the design into the asphalt. By a series of hammering and re embedding, followed finally by chasing, the metal sheet attains the finished appearance. There are three essential types of tools used: -for tracing, -for bossing, -for chasing.
Ornaments in relief are also produced by mechanical means. A thin, pliable sheet of metal is pressed into moulds, between set of dies, or over the stamps. Embossed utensils of copper and brass, statuettes of gods formed of thin silver and gold plates are very much part of every Indian house. Today Aluminium craft pieces are similarly embossed and black anodized.
Traditional Indian Brass and copper utensils have hammered finish on the outside. The same is often copied on aluminium utensils but reducing the strength due to 'cold working' of the metal. Leather and paper surfaces are rolled embossed to create textured patterns. Timber veneered surfaces are pressed for texture creation. Rendering of a wet plaster face by variety of pressing and chasing tools is very common. Chasing is very common with copper and brass pots (e.g. Peshwai Lotas and glasses).
Matting and Etching: These are mainly used for creating textured surfaces. Matting is generally a mechanical technique compared to etching where a chemically active substance is used. Mating and etching, are also achieved by metal removal processes (reversing the metal deposition by changing the cathode charge) in the final stage of plating.
Parallel, crossed, irregular, concentric, circular and other geometric configurations are carved or embossed on the surface. Line and spacing between them are often less than 1/100 part of a millimetre, depending on the compactness of the material mass. Another method of surface decoration is to impress it with repeating patterns of hatched lines ( used on precious metals), thus matting or breaking up areas to contrast with other areas left polished and reflective.
Etching: Etching is usually done by an active substance that will either eat away part of the surface or change its colour quality. Acid and alkali treatments also provide etched surfaces. Etching is also an artwork technique (see: chapter: Coatings) Glass surfaces are etched with Hydrofluoric acid.
Surface levelling: Surface levelling is a major field of surface finishing. Surfaces are levelled by chipping away very thin sections off the surface. The material must have layered formation (e.g. Kotah -ladi stones, bamboo, cane) or fracturable or brittle constitution (e.g. stones). Surfaces are ground and polished for a levelling.
Grinding: Grinding removes material from the surface to roughen a normally glossy surface like glass, or polishes a rough surface like stone. Grinding requires material of higher hardness than the surface material, and is done by rubbing down with a graded series of coarse to fine abrasives, such as carborundum, sandstone, emery, pumice, sand, glass and diamond powders. Where a material constitution permits, very fine grinding may polish the surface. Grinding is a cutting operation in which each grit that comes in contact with the material cuts out a minute chip, or swarf.
Grinding wheels usually consist of particles of a synthetic abrasive, such as silicon carbide or aluminium oxide, mixed with a vitrified or resinoid bonding material. Grinding can be coarse or fine, depending on the size of the grit used in the grinding wheel. Metal and glass can be ground to a mirror finish and an accuracy of 0.0000025 cm. Abrasive are used as grinding wheels, sandpapers, honing stones, polish, cutoff wheels, tumbling and vibratory mass-finishing media, sandblasting, pulp-stones, ball mills, and many other tools and products.
Stone surfaces are chiselled to split the material into thinner sections, to remove the weathered crust and also to level out the surface. Grinding and polishing is done to: Hard materials such as building stones, marbles, granites, metals, glass; Precious and Semiprecious stones like gems, diamonds; Animal products like ivory, bones, horns, teeth, leather; Plant products like timbers, seeds; Ceramics like pottery products, bricks, cement concrete and other cement products.
Polishing, Honing, Lapping, Buffing: Polishing uses extremely fine abrasive substances, such as jewellers rouge, Tripoli, whiting, putty powder and emery dust to rub or burnish an extremely smooth and brilliant finish on the surface of a material. The polishing materials are coated on the surface of cloth, felt, leather, rubber pr polymer wheels or as belts. Metal surfaces are levelled and finished by honing and lapping. Honing removes less than 0.0125 millimetres of material from the surface to eliminate micro scratches and machine marks from ground machine parts. It is done with bonded abrasive sticks or stones that are mounted in a honing head. Lapping is a process in which a soft cloth (wool, linen and chamois-leather) impregnated with abrasive pastes (rubbing compounds), is rubbed against the surface of a workpiece. Honing and lapping, are essentially metal finishing techniques. Buffing is a term used for polishing of metals. Buffing is done with polishing compounds and brushes of various shapes, and materials, like: (animal hair, synthetic fibers, plant fibers -coir), flex, wool and leather. Barber polishing the razor on a leather stripe is a buffing process that levels out small nicks on the blade.
There are four types of precision grinding machines: Center-type grinders used for tiny valve spools to steel mill roles. Center-less grinders used for bowling balls, surgical sutures, and tapered roller bearings. Internal grinders are employed for inside diameters of gears, bearing races, and similar parts. Surface grinders are used for die tops, bench surfaces.
Lapping is used to produce a high-quality surface finish or to finish a workpiece within close size limits. Dimensional tolerances of 0.00005 millimetres can be achieved in the hand or machine lapping of precision parts such as gauges or gauge blocks.
Shaving and Splitting: Shaving is done to remove material's components such as outward hair or fibers, layers, etc. Leather surfaces are shaved for thinning and to remove the surface hair. Leathers are also surface-split to separate leather suitable for uppers and soles. The palm leaves are shaved to remove the stems and make them smoother for writing. Tree-barks are removed by axes and choppers to retard insect attack and increase moisture removal. Timbers are re-cut or planned with finer tools to achieve a smoother surface. Timbers are split very finely to create veneers. Wood planning is also a shaving technique. Carpets and rugs require close shearing by scissors to shave of protruding fibers.
Burnishing: Burnishing is controlled burning (or a heat treatment) at the surface section to remove part of the material and to change the colour or texture properties of the surface. Burnishing is both a process of surface finish and surface cleaning. Most of the organic materials can be surface-treated directly with fire or indirectly with high heat to achieve a burnished or ironed effect. Textiles, paper, leather, leaves, wood, etc. are some materials that can be burnished. High temperature burnishing removes the surface fibers and hair, and chars or burns (sinter) the top part of the surface, creating a burnt colour + texture effect. Textiles are Ironed, i.e. de creased or perma-set, i.e. creased with pressurized heat treatment. Synthetics or composite textiles are selectively or locally burnished to fuse the fibers or filaments, create texturized effects and also alter the transparency, opacity, etc. Wood surfaces on burnishing, creates a dehydrated or an old shrivelled or shrunk surface, similar to an old wood. Metal surfaces also burnished not only to harden or anneal the top surface but to burn the oily residues, dehydrate, and descale the surface. Burnished metal surfaces often attain peculiar colour and pattern effects.


2 TECHNIQUES FOR SURFACE FINISHING WITH FOREIGN MATERIALS.
Surface finishing or decorating with a foreign material is a very ancient technology. Some important and traditional methods are described here. Other Material relevant techniques are dealt in chapters on Materials.
Damascening: Damascening is a technique of encrusting gold, silver or copper wire on the surface of iron, steel, or bronze objects. The metal base surface is finely chased or engraved with a sharp tool. The decorative metal thread is forced into the minute grooves by hammering.
Niello: Niello is made by fusing together silver, copper and lead, and then mixing the molten alloy with sulfur. The black product is powdered. Chased or the engraved metal surface is wetted with a flux compound and black powder is spread on it. On heating the niello melts and runs into the depressions or channels. Excess niello is scraped and the surface is polished, giving a dual metallic effect or pattern.
Granulation: Granulation is mainly used for gold jewellery. In granulation, beads of gold are soldered onto gold surfaces. Etruscans produced such jewellery in 5th BC. The beads were minute and provided an effect of a bloom to the gold surface, rather than of a beaded surface.
Filigree: Filigree can be made of either gold or silver. Open-work patterns are worked from minute wires or cables made of two or three gold or silver wires twined or braided together. In the 16th and 17th C. filigree was extremely popular for decorating vases and drinking vessels, especially in Italy and Germany, and in the 18th- and 19th AD in South America. In Russian and Scandinavian countries filigree has survived as a provincial craft and is used for boxes, mirror cases, and peasant jewellery. It is obviously very delicate and fragile work and, except jewellery, usually has a backing material. In India, Orissa is the main centre for filigree work in India.
Ajouré: Ajouré are achieved by cutting or piercing patterns in the metal. Raised patterns were also affixed by soldering small castings or cut out motifs onto a flat surface.
Embellishments with Other Materials: These include fixing or embedding precious and semiprecious gemstones, enamels, a variety of exotic substances such as rare woods, metals, ivory, horn, beads, sea shells, jade, and amber, and niello (a black finish on silverware) into chased cavities, heat or solvent softened materials. Fixing is also done by wire or thread knitting and knotting (Kutch Mirror work and embroidery on fabrics). In ancient times ceremonial furnishings were almost as exotically decorated as personal jewellery and cult implements.
Inlay: Inlay works are of many varieties, with metal into wood, stones and metal, and wood into wood, ivory into wood, more recently high grade plastics into wood, metal, and plastics, glass beads into ceramics, etc. Floral patterns and scripts on Taj Mahal are examples of Marble inlay work. Inlay work involves incising a pattern's shape and filling it up with a cutout of material to be laid in. The fixing is done with tight fitting, adhesives, or by hammering a ductile metal.
Gilding: is the art of decorating wood, metal, plaster, stone, glass, or other objects with a covering or design of gold in leaf or powder form. The term also covers similar application of silver, palladium, aluminum, and copper alloys. Thin sheets of gold and silver are beaten in leather sheet folders to create leaves (foils) as thin as 0.00001 millimetre. After being cut to a standard 90 to 100mm square, the leaves are packed between sheets of tissue-paper as small books, ready for the gilder's use. Gilding by gold or silver sheets requires as no adhesives as sufficient electrical charges attract the foil to the base, however for permanent fixing (exterior use) some form of adhesives are used. To day commercial guilders used aluminum powders in a variety of metallic shades such aluminium in different shades of oxidation, bronze, copper, gold, etc. These powders are dry sprayed on an adhesive or varnish-covered surface or mixed with a carrier varnish or lacquer.
Overlays: Overlays use slightly heavier sheets of metal than gilding, otherwise it is the same as gilding. Egyptian mummy cases and furniture were gold covered. The Chinese ornamented wood, pottery, and textiles with designs in gold. The Greeks not only gilded wood, masonry, and marble sculpture but also fire-gilded metal by applying a gold amalgam (gold+mercury) to it and removing the mercury with heat, leaving a coating of gold on the metal surface. The Romans acquired from the Greeks the art, and covered their temples and palaces with gold. Jain and Buddhist statues are covered by gold and silver foils and sheets. Ancient gilding shows that gold was applied to a ground prepared with chalk or marble dust and an animal size or glue. Today lacquers, epoxies and rubber-based adhesives are used to fix the foils and sheets. Temple statues are decorated by gold foil without any adhesive, by the electric (ion) charge, which makes it removable it. Silver gilding gets tarnished in moist weather. Gilding requires careful surface preparation. To day flat paints, lacquers, or sealing glues are used, depending on the nature of the substrate. Metals surfaces prone to corrosion may be primed (and protected) by red lead or iron oxide coatings. The area to be gilded is covered with an adhesive. When it has dried enough so that it just adheres to the fingertips, it is ready to receive and retain the gold leaf or powder. After fixing the foil, it is rubbed gently (burnishing) with a dry cotton swab, to achieve high luster. Other materials for burnishing include agate. Loose bits of gold, or skewing are removed from the finished work with a camel's hair brush.
Enamelling: Enamelling is technique of providing a lustrous finish on any surface such as metal, ceramic or wood. A vitreous paste consisting of mixture of silica (from quartz or sand), soda or potash, and lead, is deposited on to metal objects such as jewellery, small metal boxes, utensils, ceramics or glass, and fused by heat. A resultant surface is chemically identical to glass or highly vitrified ceramic. The ingredients are made opaque and coloured by the addition of other metallic oxides. Enamel work is also known as Minakari in jewellery field. Enamel finishes were very popular as coatings for steel items when alternative rust-free materials like aluminium and stainless steel, were not available. So hospital-ware such as gandy, urine pot, kidney tray, instruments' tray, camping-ware like tumbler, bowls, dishes, and decorative items like ceiling panels, signboards, watch or clock panels, etc. were made with enamelling.
Bombay suburban trains' stations and street' name boards were created by ceramic enamelling on wrought iron plates (slightly puffed-embossed in the centre). Similar Multi coloured enamelled ceiling plates were used in many rich homes in Europe and India. Some such plates still survive after 100 to 175 years.
Five main types of enamelling are in use: Champlevé, Cloisonne, Basse-taille, Plique-à-jour, and Encrusted.
Champlevé (French= raised field): Champlevé enamels are done by scratching or etching a metal surface, usually copper, leaving hollows or troughs with raised lines between them. The hollows are filled with pulverized enamel that is then fired. The hard-finished enamel is subsequently filed down until the glossy surface and the metal surface can be polished simultaneously, with crocus powder and jewellers rouge.
Cloisonne (French= partitioned): In the cloisonne process, very small partitions, or cloisonne, consisting of thin metal strips are built up on the surface of the metal. They may describe a pattern and are fixed to the surface by solder or the enamel itself. The partitions are filled with pulverized enamel, and the subsequent procedure is the same as for champleve. The Cloisonne technique is usually applied to silver, although gold or copper may also be used as bases.
Basse-Taille (French= low cutting): The Basse-taille process is a kind of champlevé but is applied to silver or gold. The metal is engraved or hammered to various depths according to the design. The depressions are then filled with translucent enamel, through which the design beneath it can be seen.
Plique-à-jour (French=open braids): Plique-à-jour enamelling resembles cloisonne, but differs from it in that the partitions are soldered to each other rather than to the metal base, which is removed after firing. The remaining shell of translucent enamel gives the effect of stained glass. Because it has no metal base, Plique-à-jour enamel is exceptionally fragile.
Encrusted Enamel: Encrusted enamel or enamel en ronde bosse is prepared by spreading of an opaque enamel paste over slightly roughened surfaces of objects such as small figures.
Painted Enamel Painted enamels resemble small oil paintings. These are made traditionally on a metal plaque covered with a layer of white enamel and fired. The design, in coloured enamels, is then applied on the white ground, by painting, spraying, screen printing, or block printing. A separate firing may be required for each colour because each may fuse at a different temperature.
(Techniques of art work painting and other coatings are covered in Chapter: Coatings) (Techniques of knitting etc. covered in Chapter: Fabric Crafts) (Metal related techniques are further detailed in Chapter: Metal Crafts, and Chapter: Metal Treatments) (Wood related techniques are further detailed in Chapter: Wood crafts).

3 TECHNIQUES OF MATERIAL DEPOSITION FOR SURFACE FINISHING.
Material Depositions: There are many techniques of depositing materials. These techniques implant or deposit a material or combination of materials onto a substrate to make it an integrated surface. This is done without the use of mechanical joining or adhesive fixing. Chemical reactions, if any are only at the surface level.
Form of materials to be deposited: Metals, metalloids, alloys, ceramics, polymers, composites, and other material compounds in intermediate or a nascent stage.
Phase Stage of the material to be deposited: Gas, Liquid, Solid or Plasma.
State of the material to be deposited: Powders, granules, solids, liquids, plasma, gases and vapours, molecules and ions.
Production Status of the recipient object: Raw material, partially formed, fully composed objects, or operative systems.
Form of the recipient object: The recipient object and material to be deposited are of vastly different forms, such as: Ceramics deposited with metals or polymers, Metals loaded with alloying metals, metalloids, ceramics, composites, polymers, etc., Polymers receiving depositions of metals, metalloids, ceramics and composites. Biotic materials like bones, skins, and other natural materials are deposited with ceramic materials.

Electroplating: This is a method of electrically depositing a metal or a mix of metals (as alloy) on conductive surfaces (metals), as well as on nonconductive materials such as plastics, wood, leather, etc.; after these have been rendered conductive by processes such as coating with graphite, conductive lacquer, etc. Metal alloy compounds that nominally cannot be produced can be alloyed and electroplated on a surface (e.g. tin-nickel compound).
Modern Electroplating started with the discovery of battery, sometime in 1800. It all started when it was seen that a nodule of copper deposited on a silver cathode could not be easily removed. The battery current was used to deposit the lead, copper, and silver. During the same period zinc, copper and silver were deposited on themselves, and on other electroplating worthy metals including gold and silver. Commercial scale electroplating began in 1840s when cyanide copper solution was discovered. Iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, zinc, ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, silver, cadmium, tin, iridium, platinum, gold, and lead are commonly used for plating. During 1925, introduction chromium plating changed the face of many automobile and household gadgets completely. Chromium plating provided a permanently glossy surface. Soon nickel-chromium or copper-nickel-chromium strengthened the plating industry.
Chrome plating on nonconductive materials is in use since 19th C. However, in 1963 ABS plastic was found suitable for chrome plating. The plastic part is first etched chemically by dipping in a hot chromic acid-sulfuric acid mixture. It is then activated by dipping in stannous chloride solution and palladium chloride solution. It is then coated with an electro less copper or nickel before further plating.

Melt deposition: Melt deposition is a very broad term, and includes many different technologies of applying or depositing a material by melting through radiant heat, friction heat, pressure and solvents. Traditional processes use radiant heat, but today infra red, microwave, high velocity oxy-fuel-TIG, electron beam, laser and plasma systems are used for fast and controlled heat input. Pressure is caused by direct pressing, impact loading, pressure exerted through gas and liquid surroundings. Melt depositions are made in ambient environments, under pressure, in near vacuum conditions, electrically charged enclosures, and also in presence of inert gases and ionised materials.
Direct Material Deposition is one of the most common of methods to build up 3D objects, and also a method of surfacing. It uses feed from a wire or powder, which are melted before deposition. It, in a simple and economic way affords a very fast buildup, but causes distortions in the component. Melt deposition creates comparatively substantial (heavier-thicker) surface, or heavier-solid buildups. It is used to repair worn out surfaces, add features to an object, fill up cracks, level out the machined surfaces to a very fine finish. Metal deposition is also used in building up planner or solid prototypes.
Household tinning of brass and copperware is a metal deposition process. Gold and silver plating is a metal deposition process.
Deposition of the metal powders: Metal or an alloying-agent in the powder form, are sprayed through a nozzle that is coaxial to the CO2 laser beam. The metal powder gets deposited on the molten mass on the object's surface. The process is fast and occurs on top surface section so does not affect the basic mass properties of the object.
Vapour Deposition Technologies: Vapour deposition technologies include processes that put materials into a vapour state via condensation, chemical reaction, or phase conversion. Manufacturers use these to alter the mechanical, electrical, thermal, optical, corrosion resistance, and wear properties of substrates. Vapour deposition technologies are used to form freestanding bodies, films, and fibers and to infiltrate fabric-forming composite materials. There are two main sub techniques: Physical vapour deposition and Chemical vapour deposition. In physical vapour deposition the object is placed in plasma (of active gas like nitrogen, oxygen, or methane) bombardment, whereas in the chemical vapour deposition, thermal energy heats the material to vaporise in a chamber, and initiates a deposition reaction. Physical vapour deposition involves dry vacuum deposition methods in which a coating is deposited over the entire object rather than in certain areas.
Metallizing: Metalizing is essentially a surface metal deposition technique used to change the appearance (gloss, colour, texture), to alter the surface properties (rust proofing, protective coating, spark or erosion proofing, wettability, conductivity, etc.), to fix or clad new materials, components, etc. Metalizing creates a very thin surface where inter particle boundaries are not very important. Though the density of particles spread is very critical.
Metallized Polyester films control the solar radiation. Gold Metallized glass, are used in windows of outer space vehicles to eliminate radiation penetration. Metallized films are used as mirrors. Metallized glass is used as mirror. Metallized films split into a very narrow-stripes are used in place of gold or silver Jari. Metalizing is also done through special mixtures -amalgam of gold or silver+ mercury in craft work such as gilding, Sankheda and Chinese lacquer work patterning.
Alternative Methods of Metal Deposition: Traditional methods of metal deposition such as electroplating (chromium, nickel, cadmium, copper) use toxic substances like cyanides that cause pollution problem. These alternative technologies include thermal spray coating, vapour deposition, and chemical vapour deposition.
Sputtering: Sputtering is used for etching and deposition of metals. In both instances it changes the physical properties of the surface. A gas plasma discharge is set up between two electrodes, a cathode plating material, and anode substrate. Positively charged gas ions are attracted to and accelerated into the cathode. The impact knocks the atoms off the cathode, which impact the anode substrate while coating it. A film forms as atoms adhere to the substrate. The deposits are thin, ranging from 0.00005 to 0.01 mm. The materials deposited are chromium, titanium, aluminum, copper, molybdenum, tungsten, gold, and silver. Three techniques for sputtering are available: Diode plasmas, RF diodes, and Magnetron-enhanced sputtering.
Sputter-deposited films are used in watch bands, eye glasses, and jewellery. The electronics industry uses sputtered coatings and films for thin film wiring on chips, recording heads, magnetic and magneto-optic recording media. Architectural glass, solar radiation control films, reflective films and food packaging films produced by sputtering.
Infiltration: Infiltration is a technique of filling in the cracks, pores and voids of various, micro to macro sizes. The infiltration is done with particulates of smaller size than the cavities that exist. Filling in of pores is caused by reaction with or deposition from a liquid or vapour. In the case of liquid reaction, the technique is called melt infiltration, and in the case of vapour phases, it is called chemical vapour infiltration. Many composites are formed by infiltration of the matrix forming compound, into the filler.
Typically in a cement concrete mass, the voids in the stone aggregates are filled in by sand, voids in sand granules are filled in by cement, voids in cement particles are filled in by water. Stone aggregates and sands stay deposited but cement and water react.
Laser Surface Alloying/Laser Cladding Lasers are very suitable for surface modifications. Lasers can soften or melt a surface mass for a controlled depth, in a localized spot and very quickly. Laser generating equipments operate to synchronize injection of feed material. One of many methods of laser surface alloying is laser cladding. In this, a thin layer of metal or ceramic, or powders thereof, are bonded with a base metal through heat and pressure. Materials that are easily oxidized are difficult to deposit without using inert gas streams and envelopes.
Thermal Spray Coatings: Coatings are sprayed from rod, wire or granules or powder stock. The molten stock is heat melted and atomized by a high-velocity stream of compressed air or other gases, and sprayed on the substrate. The substrate is often both, charged and heated.
Ceramic coatings by thermal spraying: Ceramic forming materials are heated fused and sprayed, or are deposited and allowed to form a ceramic surface.
Ceramic coated surfaces are tougher, and highly scratch resistant besides are non static charging and better wettable than chrome sprayed surfaces. Ceramic rolls are now replacing the chrome rolls for offset and such printing techniques.
Electric Arc Spraying: An electric arc is formed between two ends of coating material feeds (wires, etc.). They continuously melt at the arc point is blown by a jet of gas like air or nitrogen, as droplets towards the substrate.
Plasma Spraying: A DC current passing between a water-cooled copper anode and tungsten cathode forms an arc ionizing to form plasma. The plasma heats the powder coating to a molten state. Compressed gas propels the molten mass at very high speed towards the substrate. Materials for plasma spraying are: zinc, aluminum, copper alloys, tin, molybdenum, steels, and ceramics.

4 SURFACE MODIFICATION TECHNIQUES:
Patina forming: Patina is a rust layer formed on bronze objects, either naturally over a period of time or intentionally by chemical treatment. Sculptures exposed to different kinds of atmosphere or buried in soil or immersed in seawater for some time acquire attractive patina. Bronze can have a wide variety of green, brown, blue, and black patinas. Iron is sometimes allowed to rust until it acquires a satisfactory colour, and then the process is arrested by lacquering.
`Anodising: Anodising is a technique of creating an oxide film on a metal surface. The film is intended for purposes such as corrosion resistance, electrical insulation, thermal control, abrasion resistance, sealing, improving paint adhesion, and as a decorative finish. Anodizing-process consist of electrically depositing an oxide film from aqueous solution onto the surface of a metal, often aluminum, which serves as the anode in an electrolytic cell. Plate properties such as porousness, abrasion resistance, colour, and flexibility, depend on the type, concentration, and temperature of the electrolyte, the strength of the electrical current and the processing time, and the type of metal being plated. Dyes can be added into the oxidation process to achieve a coloured surface. Coloured anodised aluminum is used in gift ware, home appliances, and architectural windows sections and trimmings.
Carburizing: Carburizing is one of the oldest methods of surface hardening iron-based metals, next only to fast cooling by quenching in oil or water. Iron or steel products heated to a very high temperature are placed in a carbonaceous environment for long duration. The carbon diffuses into the surface of the object, making it harder. The depth of the carbon penetration depends on the exposure time and temperature. In gas carburizing the parts are heated in contact with such carbon-bearing gases such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, methane, or propane.
Carbunitriding: The same process is used in Carbunitriding except that ammonia is added.and it takes place at lower temperatures that produce less distortion in the steel. Gears, ball and roller bearings, and piston pins are among the products made by carburizing.
Nitriding: These surface hardening technique uses utilizes nitrogen and heat. Cam shafts, fuel injection pumps, and valve stems are typically hardened by this process.
Flame hardening and induction hardening: in which high heat is applied for a short time, (by gas flame or high-frequency electric current, respectively) and then the steel is immediately quenched. These processes are used generally for larger implements.
Peening: Peening is mechanical technique of hardening the surface by rolling, hammering, drawing or hammering of the surface at temperatures that do not affect the composition of the steel.
Sintering: Sintering is a high pressure and high temperature baking process. It is used for production of alloys, ceramics and composites. Pressure increases the densification and decreases the heat requirement by nearly half the melting point of ceramic. High pressure or impact load helps in shape formation. Simple hot pressing does not allow forming of complex shapes. In another process, called hot isostatic pressing (HIP), a ceramic is pre sintered to squeeze out the porosity (so that interconnected pores are eliminated) or encapsulated with a viscous coating such as glass. The ceramic is further processed under a high pressure fluid such as argon or helium, and at high temperature, so that residual gases from the object bubble out. Very complex objects can be formed by this method.
For sintering conventional radiant heat input are too slow. For rapid heating two sources are used: Plasma and microwave. In plasma heating energized and ionized particles deposit large quantity of energy on the surfaces of the ceramic being sintered. Plasma sintering takes place in an ionized gas. In microwave sintering, electromagnetic radiations at microwave frequencies penetrate and deposit the heat in the interior of a sintering ceramic first rather than on the exterior surface. A combination of radiant and microwave heating can be used to obtain thorough heating of the object.
Glazing: Glazing is a very common term, used for many different processes and purposes. In building construction it means providing and fixing glass, including roof lights, clerestory windows, curtain wall constructions and as figured-glass. Glazing is also used in ceramics as a process that provide gloss and colour through a pre-firing coating of slip and salt spray during firing. Glazing is used as polishing or asa glaze achieving process by coating (wax, oil, lacquer, silicon, etc.) and rubbing or roll pressing a surface. In textile glazing as a term is used for a process that provides slight gloss with sealing of the surface by a starch or polymer sizing composition. The term glazing is used with paper in the same manner.

What do you write in Interior Design Plans?

 


What do you write in Interior Design Plans?

An interior Design schematic presentation or 'Plan' is required for several purposes. In later part of middle ages, it was required when designers began to work out of their design studios or city based offices, rather then working on the site workshops. This was required as a city based or fixed address design office allowed greater interaction with the urbane client. Site based work could be left to a contractor (vendor) if the execution agency is provided with complete set of working drawings. Complete documentation of design intentions helped in two manners. It rationalized the design creation and also stream-lined the execution processes. The design documentation creators and interpreters, both were technology proficient people, and as a result the communication was smooth.

The problems of 'Interior Design Plan' were occurring at another level. The client wanted to perceive the Interior Design scheme before execution started. The nominal and 'adequate' ortho graphic system of Plan, Section and Elevation was not working with a lay person like client. Clients wanted an 'in-depth' visualization. Isometric and Axonometric projections were not sufficiently correct images. Perspective renderings were used for the purposes. This renderings showed the space 'in-depth', in color and texture.

Such detailed renderings very limited in numbers, could not give justice to the exclusive finishes and effects. These inputs or back-up had to be offered by way of oration. The orations were often too elaborate and unreliable.

'Interior Design Plan' today include such explanatory details as writings. So the usual rule is whatever you cannot detail-explain through drawing language mechanics, must be presented in writings.

There is a need to write Interior Design Plans for law agencies. Here often drawing details-explanations are likely to be interpreted differently from the original intentions. Such situations need a backup in writing.

BEHAVIOUR IN INTERIOR SPACES

BEHAVIOUR IN INTERIOR SPACES

Index

Part - I

1 Behaviour

2 Inhabitation

3 Domains

4 Domains and Spaces

5 Interior Spaces

6 Behaviour in Interior Spaces

7 Privacy and Intimacy

Part - II

8 Expression and Communication

9 Task Settings

10 Real and Virtually Real

11 Amenities

12 Furniture and Facilities

13 Body postures

14 Sensorial aspects of Objects and Surfaces



1 Behaviour

Human behaviour is evident at many different levels. The physical manifestation of the human behaviour is the conspicuous action through body-limb movements and the discreet expressions of body related gestures. Body-limb movements and gestures are voluntary (intentional) and involuntary (natural reflexes). Voluntary expressions are intelligent or 'calculated' responses. Involuntary reflexes result from the mental processes as well as body's functional systems (such as metabolism, equilibrium maintenance, body temperature and fluid controls, etc.).

'Human behaviour is also conveyed through art, and spoken or written language. The fear, pain, love, affection, joy, wonderment, admiration, hatred, etc., are intense emotions that are expressed through art or language. Perhaps physiological tools (body-limb movements and other body language expressions) are too slow, inadequate for the purpose, useless for the need, or unavailable (due to physical impediments, age, sex limitations, etc.). Expression on media is much longer lasting, and so unlikely to be misinterpreted.'

Basic human behaviour originates from the genetic make-up and it is further conditioned by the experiences (the knowledge base). Appropriate behaviour allows a being to survive and proliferate, whereas Inappropriate behaviour causes pain, difficulties and makes a being extinct. During normal times a person or society with inappropriate behaviour has slower evolution, and in acute or hostile environmental conditions a break down occurs. All beings learn through experiences. The accumulated knowledge base may perish with the being but the achievements survive as heritage or folklore. Experiences enrich one with productive efficiency, and such accomplishments pass-on to other generations.



Three chief operants of human behaviour: Human behaviour is in response to three chief operants: 1. Own body, 2. Environment and 3. Nature of Relationship with other beings.

1. Responses of the body relate to the cognitive capacities that determine what one perceives, 'reach' abilities of the limbs decide what one can change in the immediate world, and the social interactions regulate what one shares.

Cognitive capacities: Aristotle had listed five senses: sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch. This concept remained well-accepted for centuries, but there are many other categories of sensory receptors. For example human skin alone can perceive, hot, cold, pressure, and pain. The modern categorization includes a kinesthetic sense (sense organs in muscles, tendons, and joints) and a sense of balance or equilibrium (vestibular organs of the inner ear stimulated by gravity and acceleration). In addition, there are receptors within the circulatory system that are sensitive to carbon dioxide gas in the blood or to changes in blood pressure, and there are receptors in the digestive tract that appear to mediate such experiences as hunger and thirst. Not all receptors make one conscious about their functions. The cardiovascular receptors regulate the blood pressure or heart rate without the person being aware of it.

Reach abilities: Human beings have two classes of 'reach'. The capacity of the body limbs to reach out (through various manipulations and movements) represents the physical reach, and our sensorial capacities that allow us to reach to the far off objects marks our cognitive reach (like seeing, smelling, listening etc. from certain distances). Both the reach abilities vary in their effectivity depending on factors like desire, need, compulsion, aversion, instinct, motivation, gratification, etc. Reach capacities can be 'sharpened' to a certain extent by learning (training, exposure, etc.). Olympic records show what a human body can achieve.

The physical reach is function of distance and mobility. It is the capacity to move a limb of the body in a wide range of purposeful movements at the required speed and in coordination with other movements. It dynamically helps one to activate as well as deactivate (relaxation) the limbs. Physical reach is a very important tool of manifesting the human behaviour. Human beings also extend their physical reach by devising tools, gadgets, equipments, etc. A spear is a distanced knife or pin. People have very widely variable capacity to move their limbs depending on the experience, habit, body size, age, sex, situational demands, accruing advantage or pain, etc. It also varies with the direction of movement and the opposing friction, mass, and springiness.

In medical field a doctor is able to increase the vision through a microscope, 'finetune' the control over surgical procedures by various types 'scopes', reach inaccessible areas through shaped tools, check out various conditions through 'multi-channel monitors', carry out simultaneous action through 'automats', examine and treat patients at remote locations through tele-medicine and surgical robots.

The cognitive reach is inherently limited for a being. Some animals have capacity to see at night, some recognise colours compared to others that only see in grey tones, dogs can hear sonar sounds normally inaudible to human years. The perception capacities can be enhanced or dulled by certain implements, or recorded and transformed into a 'readable' -perceptible mode. Astronomical objects that cannot be seen by visually by the naked eye are observed through telescopes. Where telescopes are ineffective, one listens the space through a radio telescope. Heart's beats are translated into graph for reading in a cardiogram. Remote sensing, satellite mapping, chromatography, sonography, radiography, etc. are tools that change how much and what we can observe.

The sensual perceptivity represents the capacity to perceive through various senses. These capacities can become very acute or get dulled in specific conditions. A human being can listen to sounds within the range of 20Hz to 20000 Hz, below and over these range one may not hear the sound, but experience it as an energy causing chemical and other changes. Such sounds are read. The sensorial capacities can be enhanced by use of certain devices or recast in some other recognisable form. We do not see deep into the celestial space but rather listen to the noise emanating out it. A radio telescope listens to the space, rather than see it. The capacity to perceive sensory stimulations vary from person to person, the physiological condition, age, habit, experience, psychological state, etc.

The reach of an expression and communication is vastly different from the nominal or physical reach. The reach of expression and communication are always circumstantial as conditioned by the means of expressions, recording, playing out, transmission modalities, the media, etc. The expression is subjective interpretation of absorbed or learnt knowledge. Expressions manifest as re-enactment of the event and also formatted onto medium. The direct transactions like expressions and re-enactments and indirect transmissions as formatted over a medium have different reach capacities. Such means are, 'one-way channels' -allowing one to be unaffected by the reactions, 'two-way channels' -with live interaction that permits intimate sharing, and 'delayed response systems' that let one to be prepared.

2. Environmental responses of the body produce specific behaviour. One of the most important and common response mechanisms relates to acclimatization. The body and its various systems adopt the environment. The adaptation could be instantaneous (such as the perspiring, sweating, high breathing, blinking of eyes, change of body posture, shuddering, etc.) or much slower involving evolutionary process lasting for several generations. Environment is the most important factor that continuously varies and affects everything. There are many indirect and delayed effects of environment.

A human being distinguishes specific pockets of environment to conduct own self. Such pockets have location related (orientation, position) value and also time relevance. Where such pockets are not easily, available new ones are intentionally formed through barricading or realized through time management of events. Environmental responses define our living (life style, foods, clothing, etc.) built forms (forests, farms, open lands, structures, plants, equipments, etc.) and activity cycles (choices, schedules of rest and work, food intake, entertainment, daily and seasonal chores).

A being tries to be efficient and conserves energy. First preference is to accommodate changes through the metabolism and by selectively switching the sensorial functions. Failing these, one changes the posture to assist the body and to use the environment. The next option is to move to different location. But during these processes one can format the space (and there by the environment) and reschedule the activity.

3. Nature of relationship with other beings The social interaction provides a vast arena for human behaviour. It provides a learning and testing ground for the knowledge base. Social interactions ordinarily relate to expression and communication, but now increasing evidence show how the presence of other beings, their odours (enzymes), body heat, etc. also affect the human behaviour.

'Proxemics: Edward Hall, an US anthropologist has theorized how people use both time and space as well as body positions and other factors for purposes of communication. The nonverbal communications consist of such culturally determined interactions as the physical distance or closeness maintained between individuals, the body heat they give off, odours they perceive in social situations, angles of vision they maintain while talking, the pace of their behaviour, and the sense of time appropriate for communicating under differing conditions.'

Human behaviour is conditioned by the presence and also awareness of other human beings. Group mechanisms like intra personal communication, empathy, degree of familiarity, etc. also affects the behaviour of an inhabitant. For the same space+environment, members of a group may show common, as well highly individualistic response depending on many factors (age, sex, experience, physiological make-up, psychological state -last two together affecting our cognition and response mechanism).

Human behaviour also has many areas of ambivalence. The uncertainties arise because it is not easy to understand how the mental processes work. Other uncertainties arise because certain space-time conditions do not manifest in an obvious manner. When one or the other (time or space) is absent, delayed, preceded, a new experience arises. These are pseudo or make-believe situations where the real qualities of the space and time are shrunk, enlarged, skewed, delayed or hastened. Such Pretentious reach can be experienced in reflections of mirrors (doubling of the depth and displacement of left-right), bifocal vision (perspectives, optical anomalies -long straight lines seem curved), echoes, in transmitted audio messages and images, condensed graphics, metaphoric and symbolical representations, holographic images, virtual reality conditions, etc. These conditions are now explored in creating new behaviour patterns, For these time and space conditions are isolated and separately manipulated by techniques like: the bio-cycles (working of bio systems) are altered by hypnosis, administration of special chemicals (drugs, medicines), and by changing the group dynamics (social engineering).





2 Inhabitation

Inhabitation is a prime human behaviour that is necessary to survive and proliferate. Inhabitation is a life style set into a spatial realm. The life style and the realm continuously modify each other, resulting into a unique approach, the inhabitation. Inhabitation is instinctive as well as learned behaviour.



The inhabitable realm is a unique spatial organization with an implicit but personal environment. The spatial form and the environment are evident simultaneously, as the substantial realization of a functional usage. The usage is further aided by functional facilities (tools, equipments etc.). The usage is also supported by preset strategies (traditions, customs, rules) of dealing with the built spaces, the environment and functional facilities. The Built form, the Environment, Functional facilities, and Strategies, all together instill certain sensual experiences. Such sensual gratification leads to better form, superior conditioning of the environment and enriched functional facilities.

Inhabitation is initiated on the basis of a potential perceived at a locus. One then begins to improvise the locus by adding upon the advantages and by eliminating all disabling features. It is an integrated approach of many interdependent elements, whose individual or distinct identification is difficult. The process of inhabitation begins as realization and occupation of a realm. All beings have a primary tactic (often instinctive) of owning and occupying a spatial entity, which on sensual gratification (including comfort) becomes a greater strategy (often intellectual) of inhabitation. The legacy of past experiences increases the capacity to occupy and inhabit a space entity. The reliance on intuition and the past experiences assures a 'failsafe' response.

By following customs and tradition one can create a habitat that is 'time tested'. Self built buildings are maintainable by their creators because local materials and technologies are used. Fail safe assurance also arrives from the fact that failures are continuously corrected, and the accumulation of failures never occurs, leading to sudden termination of the entity.

Primary space occupation is cursory and minimal, using only the personal assets such as resetting of the bio activities. It is easier (being efficient) to adjust own self rather than cause any change in the environment. However, the capacity to bio-adjust is temporary and limited in effectivity. Such a space occupation (personal - bio adjustment) is experimental, so notional and transient. It only offers realization that the space is worthy of survival because it has some potential of size, shape, environmental qualities and sensual characteristics. There is also recognition that this realm can be: improvised in form, the environmental qualities reset, and the sensual characteristics enriched for satisfaction and greater efficiency.

A person or a group perceive such potential accidentally or after an intensive search, and so consider it an asset worth 'hanging-on to' it. The desire to own requires that the realm remain consistent. However, the environment and the user or the user-group dynamics (interrelationship) vary continually. The original efficiencies (first realizations) may not remain valid in the changing circumstances. Yet the possession ensures some permanency in the realm. The constancy is achieved by domestication of the realm. The user converts the realm, and inturn exposes own-self to forces of change. The space adaptation is thus an elaborate cycle, where the user and the space change each other. The change in one aspect poses new possibilities elsewhere. The explorative occupation of a space turns into a domesticated domain, and the process persists as inhabitation.

Space inhabitation is a matter of subsistence, so it is more considerate, realistic and longer lasting. Inhabitation involves devising and deploying devices such as handy tools, relocatable equipments, fixed plants, and involvement in active as well as passive systems. The devices are placed, attached or integrated into the built forms. The devices help formulate and 'enrich a space entity', temper the environment, and endow task efficiencies by adjusting the human 'reach' capacities (see previous chapter). The involvement in various system allows a being to make use of other manifestations of inhabitation.

Inhabitation is continuous process. The changes, though, are often so subtle that the user may not be aware of it, yet over a period of time the minor changes accumulate into substantial modifications (like Charles Darwin theory of Evolution).

Inhabitation is a continuous process of improvising the means and methods for living. It involves, forming a space (a built form) with environmental responses, rendering it with required sensual attributes, provisioning for the functional needs of living. The living includes personal acts like grooming, eating, resting, etc., living with others (including family life), communication, earning a livelihood, and other diversionary activities like revelry, grief, etc. These activities are personal, family based, group-based and universal (of humans and of other biological beings).

Some of the processes of change for inhabitation are either instinctive or so imperative that such responses are taken for granted. Such responses also get condensed as metaphoric expressions, or pass-on into the folklore or heritage (beliefs, customs, traditions, taboos).



A spatial entity is habited by a lone user as well as groups of (participating, interactive, related or unrelated) persons. A user reacts to the 'real presence' of others and also to the 'incorporeal imminence' (presence in spirit) of others.

In a holy space like a temple, one is affected by the presumed presence of God. Memorials are designed for causing the reverence. Burial grounds and crematoria cause an eerie feeling. Odours, lingering sounds, distant visibility, touch, etc. reinforces the presence of others at realistic level, as much as images, metaphors, signs and other associated items do so at the abstract level.

The behaviour is of Individual's 1( not affecting a group), or is Individualised 2 (not affected by a group), The behaviour of groups involves couples or twosomes, families, communes, cooperatives and communities. The groups also seem to get formed with affinities such as sex, age profile, interests, physiological and psychological functionality, etc. The behaviours of such entities are Group based3 (to project unity or belonging yet remaining substantially individualised), or are Grouped4, (everyone acting in unison overcoming the individual differences).



The Devices and Strategies of habitation are evident at Four distinct levels: 1 The User adopts own-self biologically, 2 the Environment is conditioned, 3 the Realm is dimensioned and structured, 4 the Enrichments and Facilities are deployed.

A user nominally may not distinguish such categories, because beyond the usual easily recognisable single cause-singe effect conditions, there could exist many in-specifiable situations with single cause-multiple effects or multiple causes-singular effect. Inhabitation is thus a fairly complex process, where simultaneously many strategies are at work, some at psychological and at physiological level, and others function at very realistic or physical level and even at abstract level.

The behaviour in a habited domain could be local and immediate: like going to a shaded area, changing a body posture, breathing deep before a strenuous action, to extensively spread and persistent: like migrating to another space, putting on a light, installing a sound proofing system.

Behaviour in a habitat is naturally meaningful to all its occupants -the inhabitants. Self help formation of a habitat is a seamless process for its occupants. It is as natural as the process of survival, expression, living together, sharing, etc. Inhabitation is very rarely considered to be a new venture but rather a 'continuing process of bettering'. However, such processes of bettering are slow and less efficient. So in a habitat efficiencies are better provided by habitat forming professionals like Builders, Architects, Interior Designers, etc. who not only form the spatial entities, but also devise means of 'extending the reach capacities' and 'enriching facilities'. These habitat forming professionals, in cooperation with other social sciences experts also evoke strategies (life styles) for using the habitat.





3 Domains

Possession and Occupation of a spatial entity are the first acts of habitation. It allows a person or a group of persons to establish a role locus (a stage or setting). The locus has three essential qualities: a value due to its location, some appropriate physical features, and a potential for alteration.

The locus is: a marking -a 'place' in the universe, a spread -a 'territory' for occupation, and a space -an entity for inhabitation ('enactment'). A person establishes a locus by delineating a territory and also recognises it as a zone of effectuality. The territorial marking is a deliberate creation, whereas the zone of effectuality could be both, conscious as well as subconscious action.

We mark a space as fit for occupation, but cannot explain why (and very often How) we selected it.

A domain is a role locus for the individual. It has an individual as its focus. The role locus has many facets. It is a space for inhabitation, a zone of an individuality and also an entity existing in its formal and allegorical or abstracted form.

Domains have a focus, centric or acentric. A domain could be linear, planner (2D -with a circular spread) or blockish (3D -with cubical, spheroidal). In computer science a Domain is a group of networked computers that share a common communications address. Domain is also a particular environment or walk of life, sphere, area, orbit, field, arena. A domain is the set of values of the independent variable for which a function is defined. A domain as a spread is defined by the Lord or owner at one end, and by the strength of the governance at other end, both are rarely consistent, gaining strength or shading weakness continuously, a domain is a very ambivalent term.

As an inhabitable space, a domain is defined by bounding barriers. So it is a dimensioned territorial entity, a physical reality. It is finite in scale and permanent. A physical domain is scaled in reference to its occupant. It also reflects the cognitive capacities and 'reach capacities' of the occupant.

As a zone of an individuality, a domain is distinguished with intuition, beliefs, etc. of the creator. Such a domain is metaphysical, a nonphysical spread or effect evident in the high density at the point of origin which thins out into infinity. Metaphysical domains may not have territorial markings of their own, but sometimes are 'incumbent with the physical territorial markings'. Otherwise, metaphysical effects can transcend a physical domain.

In abstracted form a domain is a representation. Such a domain is metaphoric and arises from the few essential elements that allow us to perceive the substantial space entity. Such a space entity could be part of our experiences or are intuitive part of the psyche. A metaphoric domain is operative till it is consciously accepted as a representative form for its economics (efficiency), and also so far as it is beneficial in spite of its myth remaining unresolved. A metaphoric domain prevails amongst certain class of people, who tacitly agree or have been socially or politically conditioned to accept such symbols to represent certain expressions, actions, etc. So metaphoric domains are impressions that are representative, immaterial, allegorical, pseudo, make-believe, or of 'virtual reality'.

DOMAIN: from Latin Dominicum or Dominium and old French Demaine or Demine, all meaning belonging to a lord. Here the domain is centred or focussed and its spread is tied to a lord. A domain is a sphere of activity, identity, concern, distinctiveness, exclusivity, knowledge, rulership, effectivity, communication, belonging, control, ownership, rights and conformity. It is territory over which rule or control is exercised.



Domains come into being through the coinciding effects of many factors, such as the nature of territorial markings (spatial quality, scale, shapes, materials, connections or networking, the environmental controls, etc.), its ambit (spread, area, volume), the individual (psyche, physiology), the owner and manner of ownership (individual or group) (governance / management), and the cultural pose (beliefs, experiences, inspirations, inhibitions, traditions, etc.).

A domain thus cannot be exclusively prescribed by its physical characteristics, through person/s who own (govern) it, or for pragmatic personal flavours it represents. However, some domains are seen to be 1. physically more defined, 2. metaphysically more effective, or 3. to be metaphorical that is notional or indicative.

Domains have two obvious characteristics: people who create it, and manage it to perpetuate the control over it, and a system of controlling barriers. The individual marks the ownership by occupation, signs, barriers that constitute an environment, and by including amenities to facilitate tasks. The domain 'constituting' individual could be a real or a metaphysical entity. The ownership is physical (of possession and use), contrived (made-up, an effect or conceptual) or metaphoric. And the barriers are also equally varied ranging from the real, virtual, antithetic, notional, make-believe, transparent, translucent, opaque, active, passive, benign, harmful, etc.

Physical Domains: The physical barriers mark the territory of a domain, scaled for the inhabitants needs and of certain environment. The territorial markings of the physical domains define a manageable space. A space that is: within the limits of human cognition, inside the ambit of nominal physiological capacities, and the extendible reach capacities (through devices). A physical domain becomes a very strongly defined behavioural setting, if it is supported by metaphysical elements (beliefs such as privacy, isolation, reverence, fear, autocracy, etc.) and if these (metaphysical elements) are metaphorically further implied.

Metaphysical domains: A metaphysical domain is rarely a singular entity, it is an accumulation of many influences in varying intensities. The influences arise from the psychological and physiological conditions of the individual, co-inhabitants and visitors. The influences pass from one generation to another, so seem to be either instinctive or a legacy. Metaphysical domains are stronger at the source -the believer or perpetrators of a belief and become diffused or less relevant with distance and time, i.e. have a receding zone of effectuality. The domains manifest mainly as a personal realm, but are more eminently seen in group behaviour, signifying approval of many. A metaphysical domain projects an entity that is reliable, secure, predictable, proven, acceptable to many, and less likely to pose a threat to survival.

The spread of a metaphysical domain seems to be contained by the barriers -the physical markings of a domain. In this sense the physical and the metaphysical domain converge. Thus for a metaphysical domain, areas distanced in time and space from the locale of origination can be re-strengthened, by controlling the dynamism (variability) of the environment in peripheral zones, by suitable space characteristics such as size, shape scale, the quality of barriers, illumination, sound reverberation, axis, orientation, etc. The weak or receding areas of a metaphysical domain can also be strengthened by use of metaphors. The weak areas are intentionally populated by 'hard-core' believers, so that their confirmative behaviour is emulated by lesser believers. Political meets have back seat 'boys' (rabble) whose over enthusiastic behaviour arouses the mood.

Metaphoric domains: The elements that form a domain become so obvious that their slight indication or their sparing presence initiate a set of effects. Such a metaphoric entity, an indicative or symbolic presence, is economical and efficient, as it occupies very little physical estate. Graphics, symbols, signage, languages, codes, gestures (body language), forms, proportions, colours, expressions, etc. are some of the allegorical presences.

Metaphoric domains are relevant to only a particular class of occupants. Others are unaware of it or intentionally ignore it. The symbolic representations often replace the reality so completely that one often forgets what the reality is, was, or could be. This happens when metaphors are tired under several layers of conversions.

Some spatial features and environmental conditions often occur in concert, and so presence of one, metaphorically triggers the other. Historical monuments, places of reverence (temples, ashrams), and memorials have such eminence. Nightclubs, amusement parks, exhibitions, public buildings like airports, also have abstracted elements.

Domains also derive their functional capacity by coexistence and dependence. Domains are tacitly interconnected, forming a network. Domains invariably occur in consonance with other domains, in contagious, overlapping or merged forms. Domains also occur as an antithesis, a contrasting element, as a real or notional (virtual reality) entity. Heaven contrasts with the real world, and also has an antithesis as hell.

A domain is an area controlled by a ruler or government. A domain as encountered from outside or inside but at a very close distance may not reveal its centrality or sphericality. Individuals together through an explicit or tacit understanding establish a domain. Individual or group based domains are generally spatial, though could be real or ethereal. A domain could be temporal that is occurring only occasionally when necessary conditions arrive.

Hargie & Dickson (2004, p. 69) identify 4 such territories:



1. Primary territory: this refers to an area that is associated with someone who has exclusive use of it. For example, a house that others cannot enter without the owner's permission.

2. Secondary territory: unlike the previous type, there is no "right" to occupancy, but people may still feel some degree of ownership of a particular space. For example, someone may sit in the same seat on a train every day and feel aggrieved if someone else sits there.

3. Public territory: this refers to an area that is available to all, but only for a set period, such as a parking space or a seat in a library. Although people have only a limited claim over that space, they often exceed that claim. For example, it was found that people take longer to leave a parking space when someone is waiting to take that space.

4. Interaction territory: this is space created by others when they are interacting. For example, when a group is talking to each other on a footpath, others will walk around the group rather than disturb it.

4 Domains and Spaces

Domains have three basic constituents: the Environment, the Formatted Space and the Individual/s. Various aspects of the environment permeate differently into a space depending on the spatial characteristics, such as the size, shape, sequencing, quality of barriers, etc. The changes in environment affect the interior space as much as its inhabitants. An individual perceives the environment and the characteristics of the space, collectively, as a singular happening. This perception is further coloured by beliefs, metaphors, and group behaviour dynamics.

Domains have different types of territorial markings, and some of these format spatial entities. Some domains yet may not have any spatial territory and could be a conceptual or an effect. An inhabitable domain is a spatial territory. At a very basic level it may have a single space form, but complex inhabitable domains consist of convergent territories, These territories are defined with markings of physical, metaphysical, metaphorical nature.

A domain is nominally a centric entity but could also be non-centric one. A centric domain has two distinctive zones: a core area where the chief activity is sited, and peripheral areas where some sub sections of the activity shift, few of the participants diverge, or the spatial qualities show a small variation. A non-centric space domain is formed by a directional attachment to a strong periphery or the surroundings. A non-centric space may not have any apparent core presence, i.e. has a void nucleus.

A house or colony against a fort wall or along a river coast is a linear domain, subsisting on the strong peripheral advantage and so apparently may not have core presence. Several office chambers along a corridor lack the cohesive work culture. A road side coffee house is an example of such non-centric domains.

In physical domains, elements like barriers create a dual space entity, the core and periphery. Both occur concurrently. However, a core need not be the focus, and the peripheries are not always wrapping or fully encircling regions. Physical domains are centric as well as non-centric. In a centric domain, core and the periphery identities gain strength when core and the geometric focus match.

Metaphysically defined domains relate to both, the persons and the emergent spatial character. Both are transient, persons could shift and the spatial character alters with the environmental changes. Metaphysical domains have a spread either going beyond the physical barriers or curtailed by it. The physical space and the metaphysical spread need not match in their extent or scale. A metaphysical domain can be seen as an effective realm of a belief or concern and the personal sphere of influence. The former emerges over longer period of time sometimes spanning several generations, where as the later is formed with the originator remaining relevant, (during the presence, and sometimes more emphatically during the absence), but still only for a short while.



Metaphorically defined domains are ethereal entities, and have neither the physical dimension nor the spread of effect. These entities are nodes, affective on their locations.

Domains' physical characteristics are perceived through the sensory system voluntarily or involuntarily. Domains' metaphysical nature may remain obscure forever or get confirmed intellectually and intuitively. Domains' metaphoric features require confirmation by a person or a group. (The capacity to confirm, and the scale of confirmation by the society, are two diverse quantities, so are uncomparable.)

The markings of the domains are characterized by the ambit of sensual perceptivity, communicable distancing, consistency of the spatial characteristics (coherent space and environmental conditions creating a unique space segment) and acceptability or confirmation by a section of the society.



Core zones:

A core area is an archetypical occupation of a space domain. In an unknown space the first occupant tries to position own self at the apparent focus or creates one by facing (orienting) or by being with some feature1, in a specific environmental situation, or on a location that allows either reach or control (visual, physical, notional, etc.). Other occupants, in addition also recognise the presence of an individual occupant or a group1, and place themselves distantly or join in.

In very large spaces adjacent walls, hedges, mid columns, flower pots, water fountains, lamp posts, flooring, ceiling, and such other patterns and objects provide the anchorage for space occupation. Spatial configurations like a stage, podiums, projection screens, speakers, singers, vivid objects, also hold interest by providing involvement.

In parties, hosts make a conscious effort to break such formations by removing or adding key or active persons, or repositioning and rescheduling the activities. In clubs and places of entertainment the environment (lighting, furniture, equipment) and programmes are reset to shift the focus off certain space segments. Group gatherings are designed to occupy different space segments (hall, terrace, lounge, library, garden lawn, etc.), variegated environmental conditions (bright vs diffused illumination, change of music, etc.) and diversions (toast by the host, magic shows, musical renderings, dancing, etc.).

Core zones are formed due to the barrier's marking the peripheral section. But a core zone without the physical barriers is formed by the reach extent (dimensional and cognition reach of the occupant) within a space entity. Such core zones are not dependent on the barriers, so can sustain themselves even while being away from it (the barriers). The reach extent also scales the space domain.

Core zones gain strength by the shape (form) of space. Concentric, conical, angular, convergent space forms have a focussed region which functions like a core zone. Core zones are centrical by nature, i.e. are stronger at the centre. Core zones may not be focussed in very large space domains. Such non focussed core zones often border extensive barriers or other large spaces. The dominant enclosure on one or few sides provides the inviolable shield, an identity of belonging, or a sense of orientation.

A core zone may not exist clearly where strong peripheral areas are formed by very vivid surroundings.

Outsiders (of other domain) perceive the essence of a domain to be its metaphoric focus. So a core zone is the focus of a single person's activities or for the intimately connected groups of people like family, trading, praying or chat areas, etc. Core zones also form at places of environmental advantages, such as chowks, verandahs, courtyards, otlas, etc. Core zones form for the use of an amenity. Such amenities are static because of their architectural or structural features and their over-dependence on various systems of the building for input-output connections. Core zones also form wherever appropriate spatial sizes, configurations and characteristics are available.

For a core zone many elements converge, both in time and space. For these reasons the core zone shifts from location to location or becomes occasion specific (temporary). This process also leads to search for demountable or relocatable amenities such as handy or mobile tools, multipurpose equipments, plug in tools, wireless gadgets, miniaturized appliances and modular and systems' engineering approach in design.

Historically a core zone of the 'Home' was the 'hearth' (literally meaning a focus) was considered safe, intimate and interactive for the family. The hearth was created often without any abutting elements like a cave wall or a rock face. The ambit of the core zone was determined by the climate, the scale of the space, number of participants and level of interaction, and the degree of personalization required. There was only one such zone in the dwelling.

The home in charge -the mother was master of the core zone. Her role and presence had become so obvious that 'the hearth, the mother and home' were synonymous. In tribal and aboriginal homes the core area is a female domain. The core zone was the natural centre of metaphysical spread 'the home' as much as the mother was de facto guardian of culture.

Today, however the hearth is not an inevitable element for safety, security or comfort. It is the quality of barriers and other gadgets that provide this. Dwellings now have many sub domains each belonging to an individual, smaller group, or configured for a set of tasks. Very few activities of the family occur at the one place and are scheduled in the same time slot. But the family members do share a lifestyle developed through metaphysical markings like beliefs (customs, taboos, etc.) and the metaphoric means.

Multiple core zones emerge in domains where a very large number of people communicate among themselves. And within such a domain maintain some exclusive levels of intimacy and privacy, so must divide themselves into 'communicative groups' of feasible sizes and numbers of participants. Two way (a person to person) communications and group meetings (many persons to many persons) require restricted space size in comparison to a discourse (one person to many persons). However, when all such formations overgrow in terms of extent or number of participants, sub groups get formed and multiple core zones emerge. These distinctive sub groups separate out primarily due to needs like physical accommodation, intimacy and communication, so do not necessarily seek a marked territory or qualitative space segment to anchor themselves. But a frequent occurrence tends to be associated with a qualitative space segment. Often such territories are distinctively (metaphorically and metaphysically) marked (like benches for ruling and opposition parties in a parliament).

Multiple core zones also seem to emerge where several overlapping or closely spaced domains operate in consonance as one master system. Several core zones seem to gel together, as these share the same spatial segment simultaneously or are programmed in same time schedule. Common or continuing elements are spatial characteristics, environmental features, participants, amenities, facilities, tasks and activities.

Arab tents have dual core areas within the basic form of the tent, one occupied by the women and used for main cooking and the other half is used by men and for preparing coffee, etc. These two sections are divided by a mass of stored elements, such as mattresses, floor spreads, etc. The side flaps of the tent are stretched out to create peripheral zones of various widths. The stretched width and the angle of the flap are conditioned by the sun's position, wind direction, nature of tasks to be conducted and the need for privacy.

Metaphysical entities like 'home', 'family', 'group' etc. come into being in a space where communication, exchanges and the intimacy occur more efficiently then elsewhere. Such space units are also home to many other different beliefs and notions. Metaphysical zones centring on a belief or remembrance of an event, person or entity are sustainable so far as believers, followers exist, conduct activities to further the belief or notion or, till a counter effect comes to be accepted.



Peripheral zones

Peripheral zones emerge as an antithesis or concurrent space segment of the core zones. These flourish on the edge and derive their functionality from the barriers, so abut them. A core zone is dominated by group's main and common activity, whereas the peripheral zones are distinctive escape areas and so have limited or specific utility. A peripheral zone is often relevant only for a while, to an individual, for an activity and for an expanse.

Primitively the extent of the peripheral zone was determined by the concern for safety, warmth from the fire, the need for privacy, scale of the task-activity and distancing from elements (to reduce their intensity and reach). The barriers, where available formed the edge sections of the peripheral zone. These were also used for reclining, hanging personal items and for expression (artwork).

Peripheral zones are basically shaped by the quality of the core zone, but are more often affected by the nature of the periphery of other domains and happenings beyond. The edge areas allow a person to selectively taste the happenings of outside world even while remaining inside. Peripheral zones are flexible, i.e. can be stretched or contracted from their nominal spread.

Peripheral zones have two faces, so can be exploited by orienting a happening to either to the core area or away from it. For any other positioning one may require strong metaphysical reason.

Multiple core zones of space entity tend to gel together, but often get separated by strong peripheral areas. Cooking and dining once (and still do in many societies) belonged to a single core zone, but were separated as two concurrent core areas. These two core areas were further separated by a pantry area that was a peripheral zone to both. Entrance is buffered by a lobby, foyer, entrance hall, or vestibule from other sections of the house. Yards, verandahs, porches are used to separate out the building from the street.

Peripheral zones develop as an acutely specific section against the less defined core zone. Study nooks in bedrooms, coffee rooms with the dining area, hobby zones in kitchens, home offices with vestibules, retiring rooms in private offices, vaults in banks, store rooms with homes and offices, wardrobes, shower stalls, change rooms in boutiques, cashier's cabins, pilot or driver's cabins, reception counters, janitor area, services ducts, podiums in lecture halls, green rooms with a performance stage, ticket booths, telephone kiosks, are all examples of peripheral zones separated from the core zones.

Peripheral areas mark the end of one space entity and beginning of another one. Peripheral zones are thresholds to other space entities, and occur or are perceived to be an intermediate or buffer state. Thresholds are interactive areas, and alter (qualitatively) the elements transiting through it. Their activeness arises from their level of transparency and thickness (mass of the barrier) both of which control (rate, direction) the exchange. Thresholds also occur as an interstice on the overlapping barriers. Here simultaneously two effects are operative.



Size of a space

Size of a space is a prime physical mark. At absolute level we realize the relative difference in Length or Width of a space to be either a narrow or wide entity. The height bestows its own scale of narrowness or broadness to the space. Height accentuates or de-emphasizes the character of the space nominally contributed by the proportion between the Length and the Width.

At a relative level the size of a space is scaled to the body size of the occupants. Such a scaling of the space immediately confers certain functionality for the space. The nature of cognition, communication and exchanges are function of the space size. The level of intimacy, the loss of objectivity or subjective involvements that occur in a space is governed by its size (related to the body of the occupants).

Occupants relate the size of a space primarily to their body sizes, and to a smaller extent to the task and storage capacity of the space. A space unit is perceived to be small, adequate or large in terms of various tasks and in terms of responses it offers (such as echoes, reverberation, illumination, glare, vision) Same space may be seen to be of a different size depending on the past experiences. A person who has stayed in a very large house finds an apartment to be very small. Most people find hospital wards to be very large.

A change in size of a space domain immediately marks a change in its absolute character, functionality, environment, and so the behaviour of its users. The space sizes and potential functionality are notions that are difficult to separate out. This is further complicated as the peculiar environment also seems to manifest out of such notions. For a lay person the spaces within the known range are predictable and so manageable. Occupation of domains with unusual proportions (combinations of lengths, widths, and height) and sizes require extra efforts of accommodation.

A patient, in a large ward of a public hospital experiences the very large space to be strange compared to domestic (home) spaces, because the space size proportions are different, surfaces are harder and less absorbent (causing reverberation to be different), background noises are less passive, illumination levels are brighter during day and night, furniture and furnishings are unusual, in addition to sickness and weakened mental faculties.

Sub core zones are created with both, graduated and substantive changes of sizes. The size (and thereby the proportions) changes within a space facilitates different activities. The sub-core zones formed by building elements are static, but when formed by transient elements like the environment or realized through perception, are changeable. The perception of space size and proportion depends not only their predictability but also on the occupants' age, experience, mood, etc. The nature of variations (static dynamic, sudden, or as surprise) of sizes, proportions and their occurrence (sequence) in a space cause very marked shift in behaviour.

Space proportions, sizes, their placement and sequencing are very important tools of space design. Designers intentionally avoid or include such contrasts, but surprises do occur. Such spatial manipulations and surprises are further exploited by the users.

Small spaces are small absolutely and relatively. A space is considered small if one, two, or all of its dimensions (Length, Width, Height) are smaller in comparison to the occupant's body size. A space is considered small (narrow!) if one of its horizontal-spread dimension (either Length or Width) is proportionately smaller.

Small spaces are often considered 'intimidating' because the core zone nearly embraces the entire space. Small spaces have small core zones and often have no or very small peripheral zones. Small spaces with no or little peripheral zones are too changeable due to their adjacency of the core zone to neighbouring domains. Small spaces evoke overwhelming power of the barriers (e.g. no echoes, good reflection off the barrier surfaces). But conversely overwhelming barriers but of finite sizes (where the ends of the barriers are within the limits of cognition) may not be affirmed or recognised.

Small spaces show good recognition and so aid the intra-personal communication and exchanges. Small spaces are very intimate and acutely specific for one or few activities. Small spaces are efficient being manageable, but may not be functionally adequate. Even a temporary expansion of an activity is not permissible. Such spaces occur as attached modules of larger domains or have bulged peripheral zones.

Large spaces have large core zones and due to the distanced barriers and have an equally large peripheral zone. Extensive or diffused core zones (invariably part of large spaces) have poor recognition, communication and exchange capacity. In large spaces the distanced barriers are also less participatory in the quality of the core zone. A large space with fewer occupants may seem impersonal compared to small spaces that in some way infuse intimacy. Large spaces allow individualization, but group formation becomes uncertain. Large spaces confer power to the individual who can 'own' it. Large spaces are perceived to be 'imposing' as these enlarge both, the core and the peripheral zones.

Narrow spaces are functionally less adequate or have one of the floor (Width vs Length) dimension proportionately smaller. Stairs, passages, roads, corridors, etc. are considered narrow on either or both the counts. The functional adequacy could be physical, a carryover of the past experiences or a psychological condition. Spaces with linear (directional) characteristics due to graphical composition or movement (traffic) seem narrower. Ordered or repeated experiences on a narrow way enhances the sequencing, and so its narrowness. Taller spaces often seem narrower compared to a shallow (low height) spaces with the same floor spread. Narrow spaces have strong effect of the side barriers which must run without any break (gap) or termination for substantial length, extent and duration. Narrow spaces discipline the movement. Narrow spaces allow formation of small groups. Linear distancing between them provides privacy and some intimacy. Narrow spaces have multi-core spaces, and each formed due to the specific conditions available locally. Examples are doors, windows, benches, niches, public address systems, illumination, air movement systems and ventilation nodes (fans, air conditioners, heaters), stair entrances, junctions (cross corridors, floor cutouts), signboards, parapets, ash trays, etc.

Wide space is an ambiguous term. All large sized spaces are considered wide spaces, and so have both dimensions of the floor functionally more than adequate. A corridor is long (so essentially narrow) element but could have generous width, making it a wide corridor. A space seems wider if it is less occupied and sparingly furnished (a vacant hall). Shallow spaces (low height) seem wider and larger. Wide spaces have distanced barriers and so mid space elements like mid columns, mid space furniture, floor cut outs, etc. gain importance. A space may seem wide if its barriers are see-through, allowing vision, movement, etc. across it. Wide spaces allow group formation. Individuals and groups have intimacy and privacy due to inter group distancing. Wide spaces if adequately dimensioned permit sub-core activities near their peripheries.

Tall and Deep spaces relate to the height or depth of the space, often a matter of reference (point of view). Tall and deep spaces seemingly have a modest footprint or section. Tall and deep spaces have strong surrounding barriers, restricting its apparent size experience but not necessarily its functionality. Chowks, cut-outs, light wells, stair wells, under sides of domes, etc. are directional (vertically stretched) and static (non changing) spaces. These are considered ideal for non diversionary activities like study, meditation and prayer. Exhibitions, museums emulate this effect, by spot lighting the displayed items. Tall and deep spaces or vertical tunnels have very little background noise (nearly absorb all the reflected sound, allowing only the direct waves).

Forms of Spaces affect the spatial qualities and human behaviour. The form of a space is relevant, if only, it has peculiar ergonomic, functional and sensual (visual-depth, audio-reverberation, touch proximity) size. The form and size, both emerge due to the barriers. For a very large cubical or circular space to be of any relevance the occupants must be placed near the barriers. The barriers here either sustain the activities or affect the occupants very strongly (as in narrow, tall, deep spaces). Balanced or perfectly shaped spaces like square, cubical, rectangular, triangular, circular, spherical, pyramid, etc. have a centre, and if it is also the focus of space occupation, one becomes acutely aware of the shape of the space. The shape is also revealed if it controls the movement, as for example: convex - concave curvatures, spaces with movement in clockwise and counter clockwise movement, circular - parabolic curvatures, planes falling or opening in - out, right-left turning spirals, convergent or divergent (opening - ends) forms. The nature of activities in a space helps highlight or de-emphasize a shape.

British parliament has opposite benches in long rectangular room, signifying one is either for the government (ruling party) or in opposition. Many other parliaments in multi party democracies have segmental circle forms, with speaker occupying the cut end. Equal participation seminars are held in square or circular rooms. One way affairs, like press conferences were once held at the smaller end of a rectangular room, but are now held with a wider end as backdrop to facilitate video shooting. Lectures, discourses are focussed to the speaker. Fashion shows use the long axis of a rectangular space to be with the spectators.

In Olympic's main stadium is a multi function entity, where events like opening - closing ceremonies get a highly defined shape - form, but smaller items of athletics get a de-emphasized (nonspecific) shape entity.

Monuments designed for posterity (historic buildings - memorials), government buildings, institutions associated with discipline (army training, hospitals, research laboratories) overwhelmingly have cubical shapes or regular circular forms. A square or a circle exist by them and seem to survive in all types of conditions and times. Inversely a free - irregular shape may not last unless it is properly oriented, and made to fit well in a setting. Geometry of a form is transmittable across cultures.

Overhead closed in forms like dome, pyramid, tents, etc. seem to provide greater cover and so protection compared regular cubical or flat roofs. Sloped roofs and floors not only indicate an orientation but enforce concentration (or dissipation). Slopes indicate a gradual change whereas stepped forms show a sequential change. Slopes have been used to merge different domains and steps to demarcate the divisions.







Environment is conditioned at desired locations. Such efforts include shading devices, erection of barriers, reflectors and receptors, insulations, time delay mechanisms, etc. Spaces are endowed with dual or multiplicative elements. Such multi-functional spaces offer variations in sizes, shapes and other characteristics. Multi-functional spaces do not have a holistic flavour, so help develop multi core zones.

Cooking and dining, were activities occurring close to the hearth, but cooking preceded the dining. These allowed them to be separated. Similarly, family get together were substantial part of the dining schedule, but presence of guests disturbed the intimacy of the family. So cooking, dining and social gathering spaces separated from one another as sub-core zones. In single room houses such territories are metaphorically identified, flexible in size, and relocatable. In large buildings these are physically marked as rooms and have metaphysical associations.

5 Interior Spaces

All beings show a prime behaviour towards possessing a space. The behaviour has an immediate function, of continuing the occupation (a tactic of perseverance preservation) and an ensuing intention of effecting the inhabitation (a strategy of domesticating). There are many other categories of behaviour that in some indirect manner facilitate the inhabitation (such as expression, communication, etc.).

Behaviour occurs in an environment covering a very vast area, a small section of which is conditioned as the Inhabitable Realm. The inhabitable realm is a finite space defined through many operants like: Physical elements (barriers), Metaphysical elements (beliefs borne out of instincts, concepts, experiences, etc.), and Metaphoric expressions. Inhabitable entities are also formatted by Group behaviour mechanisms (web of interconnections or inter personal relationships).

A space segment that allows a set of activities can be called a habitable space. Habitable spaces are controlled or 'domesticated'. The domestication could be a recognition of some inherent features or inclusion of such elements that facilitate task conduction. Habitable space as a designated spatial entity is a finite zone for occupation and activity, an 'internal' space. The space is called 'internal' when referenced to an 'external segment' that is less-fit for occupation and possession due to the later's uncertain character and infinite size. Habitable spaces (or internal spaces) are more efficiently defined when contrasted with the less-habitable realms (or external segments).

We perceive an interior space to be bounded or an enclosed entity. The bounding is evident as physical elements like: edges, banks, walls, roofs, awnings, curtains, partitions, ceilings, etc. The metaphysical elements like concepts, beliefs, taboos, etc. also have a spread that signifies within and without. The metaphorical elements are declarations that mark the qualitative change and are often used to compensate the territorial presence of physical and metaphysical nature.

The exterior and interior spaces are nominally adjacent to each other in real space and time. An 'indoor space' is valid by being adjunct to the 'outdoor world'. But it is not always necessary for the internal space and external segment to be concurrent in time and space. One can conceive the Interior or Exterior alone, without the other being in time and space proximity. The virtual immediacy of the two realms is achieved by carrying across the impressions of the other. The duality of the interior and the exterior is like an antithetic zone to the other.

One can also replace the physical presence (manifesting in time or space) of the Exterior or Interior realms through their notional representations. The Internal and External spaces, any of it can occur as a 'metaphoric concept' to the other.

The heaven and the hell are two surrounds of the earth. Egyptians have dummy doors (drawn or carved) in their tombs. A Garbha Griha in a temple is an inner sanctum. The Japanese gate Mori is placed anywhere, in a vast open land or sea, to mark a divide. Lakshman Rekha was a notional boundary.

An internal space though substantially adjunct to the external segment, however, has deep within it a core area that could be realized as insulated and less affected by the external segment. The metaphysical elements like concepts, beliefs, taboos, etc. that reflect the essence of the inhabitation are stronger at the core. Whereas metaphorical elements like signs, symbols flourish towards the exterior segment.



Threshold Areas

Exterior and the Interior spaces are intimate because where an interior terminates the exterior is effective (however, the exterior being infinite, will not end, unless an interior occurs). Immediacy of the exterior and interior spaces does not occur as a clean sharp edge divide, but many intermediate or 'grey zones' occur, where both (the exterior and interior) are effective. Adjacency area or the threshold zone is the place to realize both (the exterior and interior).

The threshold zones contain the 'physical barriers' that condition the shape and size of the space and the interior environment. The barriers have their many grades of qualities (thickness, mass volume, size, absorbency, transparency, etc.). An interior space could spread much beyond its physical barriers, and the exterior may penetrate the bounded interior area.

Physical markings (that may not have any symbolic meaning) like a tree, lamppost, milestone, statue, barricade, edge, etc. define a space entity by locating, shaping (form) sequencing, contrasting and imparting functionality. By embedding elements that help scaling (sizing), orientation (directionality), expression (declarations, signs) or associations markings are achieved.

Revered spaces, shrines, historical sites, haunted buildings, buildings without utilitarian functions or commercial purposes have a strong metaphysical genesis. Beliefs are metaphysical elements but help to create entities as effective as the real spatial ones. Beliefs borne out of instincts, concepts, experiences, etc. are rooted to the core area (the non threshold zone). In threshold areas these have thinner effect, so are impacted with beliefs flourishing in the neighbourhood. Inhabitants' beliefs also form as a reaction (antithetic) to the neighbours' conditions, and in such cases may not have any internal roots.

Threshold areas are interactive areas. Neighbours and visitors have their first communication encounter here, so become an ideal space for metaphoric declarations. Metaphors occupy very little or no estate, and are interpretable by only a class of people. Both of these properties are exploited in creating acutely functional and very exclusive interior spaces. 'The metaphors provide exclusivity to the space and economics of expression'.

A change in floor or ceiling though a physical marking, can metaphorically declare a change in the purpose of a space. A floral design vs a geometric pattern in flooring or trellis conveys a different attitude. Vernacular interior spaces, heritage buildings and 'master piece' architectural creations (created by acknowledged masters) abound with metaphors.



Group behaviour mechanisms

'Group behaviour mechanisms' show up as a web of interconnections of interpersonal relationships. These webs may not have any spatial occupation within an interior space entity, yet show up in various forms and places. In a threshold area or the 'outer circle' such webs are very active in contrast to the 'inner circle' or core zone which is 'an area of tranquillity'. The core section has least environmental disturbances so affords privacy and also becomes an area of intimate relationships and commitment. The peripheral areas are more public, vibrant and noncommittal.

Bars, restaurants, coffee houses, convention halls and such other participatory spaces offer varied zones for interpersonal activities. Homes have many zones that are physically defined, metaphysically endowed or metaphorically declared. In public areas like prayer and cinema halls people occupy different places (the front, the aisle or middle or the back rows) for inclusion or seclusion in the activity.

A physically defined space begins to be a dwelling when endowed with metaphysical elements and becomes a home for the family with metaphoric declarations.

Space zones or segment such as toilets, kitchens, are physically defined (ergonomically sized, shaped and provisioned with facilities) to be acutely functional. Bedrooms, study areas, office cabins, etc. are very personalized space segments. These are associated with a person or group, and so have a strong metaphysical character. Such spaces are often exclusive and irrational and have emotional flavour. Such space segments are personal belonging but can be made to be static as well as shifting with the person. Many such space segments are adorned with metaphoric declarations. These declarations are interpretable by the individual alone, exclusive class of people, or public, and so are conditionally relevant. Such declarations overcome the shortcomings of other space qualities

Followers of a sect may revere whatever place their leader occupies as it is metaphoric representation and strengthens the metaphysical essence. Wherever the most senior family member (a grand father / mother) sits creates an aura of respect or reverence. Character of the office cabins, size and nature of chairs, dining table positions (protocol of seating in gathering) all have a metaphysical as well as metaphoric purpose. The body odours, scents (perfumes) also denote an occupation possession of the space.

An interior space is a very complex entity. The environmental barriers, such as walls, roofs, awnings, curtains, partitions, ceilings, etc. form a space that is more or less focal, precisely defined at the core. Yet the barriers do create segments that are more strongly defined close to their body -the periphery. The barriers, however, are always prone to change from outside effects. There are two distinct places for group mechanisms -the focal and the peripheral sections.

Lecture halls, bed rooms, modern kitchens are single activity and so focussed units, but road side cafes are peripheral. An older style kitchen sourcing its services off a wall was more peripheral, whereas modern kitchens have island workstations. A drawing room like the dining area is focussed for an activity, but a family room is multi functional and so less focal. Fire was the focus of the primitive home, and TV has become the current focus of home gathering. A physical feed-based work station is peripheral, but a wireless notepad computer offers flexibility of being anywhere.

The beliefs as a metaphysical factor cast a space that is sharper at the point of the origin, and prone to diffusion elsewhere. But often for belief to survive and gain strength peripheries are necessary. Churches, temples, Ashrams have strongly defined territory through peripheral structures like gates, walls, gopurams, etc. The space styling, adornments, etc. physically and metaphorically help strengthen the metaphysics of the entity.

The group behaviour mechanisms exploit the space characteristics to infuse emotional and social functionality. Group behaviour depends on individuals as well as interactions amongst such individuals. An individual projects psychological and sociological responses. The group behaviour though erratic has a degree of commonality -the cause of formation of the group. The common approach of the group is an assurance that the peculiar behaviour is not an aberration but a probable happening.



Accommodation of Environmental changes:

An Interior space though bounded, finite and well-defined remains ever changing, with the environmental changes outside. The inhabitants have to develop a dynamic approach to sustain their occupation of the space and continue the inhabitation.

Fundamentally the minor changes are accommodated at personal and passive level, i.e. recasting of the lifestyle, body posturing, metabolic activity, rescheduling, etc. At micro level the changes are absorbed by activities like repositioning of the furniture and facilities, establishing improved amenities, etc. At macro level the changes are assimilated in terms of additions, alterations, renovations, etc. in the built form. At a radical level the changes may force recasting of the group-dynamics (treaties, friendship, divorce, etc.), or migration to new locations.

The accommodation of environmental changes delays and disturbs the inhabitation but always equips one with better skills and greater efficiencies. Self-help buildings follow an inherited regimen that is well set and fail-safe in the community. The community here ensures the consistency of the locality and social behaviour. This contrasts with inhabitation attempts by migrants who at one end have no vernacular heritage to rely on, and at the other extreme are trying to establish their 'footprint' into a new setting.

A professional interior designer forms an interior space, incorporating all the conceivable variables, so as to make it as widely relevant (and also static) as possible. Designers also endeavour to instill certain 'life style' into the inhabitants (often as a design statement). Such professionally designed interiors, however do not escape the effects of changing environment. In spite of the best of intentions and efforts very often the user fails to behave as perceived, or responds ambiguously to the interior space. Interior space behaviour remains incredulous.

In public housing a standard design is exploited differently by various families. The same modular offices, cabins or hotel rooms arouse different feelings. Personalization of interior space is a continuing activity of the user. Long used or familiar spaces, because of personalization seem very secure and comfortable. Whereas in new spaces, a user seeks familiarity of form, utilities, equipments, furniture, furnishings, environment, and presence of known participants or co-habitants.

An Interior space is designed by professional designer for a certain life style (behaviour standards). The primary intention is to create a setting that inculcates a specific response. The user may or need not be aware of such intentions. Interior spaces are also devised to alienate users from the expected set of things. Such diversions are designed to excite, to register the change (end of old and arrival of new), and also to destabilize the users.



Make-believe:

Interior spaces result as an organization of spatial configurations for specific conditions of environment, beliefs and group behaviour dynamics. However, for circumstantial reasons, it is not always feasible to achieve a perfect set in required time, given space and for the available technology. To overcome such deficiencies Interior spaces are endowed with make-believe inputs or effects. The 'make-believe' is an economical (time, extent, money, effort) substitute of the original or hypothetical entity. The 'make-believe' also offers an exciting tool for creation of new experiences. (More on make-believe in later chapters).

We strongly associate entities like materials, technologies, spatial scaling (size, proportion), or temporal skewing (enhancing or delaying the event) with specific experiences. However, for make-believe, such experiences are created by substituting the nominal entities with different materials and technologies, spatial scaling or time skewing. This is done to replicate the same effects economically (in terms of effort, duration, spread). For example, our nominal experience tells us that dark spaces are cooler and quieter, and conversely bright spaces are noisier and warmer, but such expectations are sought to be replaced in maze and adventure tunnels of children parks. Night clubs are darker but noisier and prayer areas are brighter and yet quieter.



6 Behaviour in Interior Spaces

Behaviour in Interior spaces is conditioned by Three major factors: The Absolute qualities of the space, the Environment formed within, and the Inhabitants.

Space: The space as a physical entity is a networked system of forms. Many different forms together constitute a spatial entity. These forms have singular as well as multilateral functional identities. Shape is an absolute function of the space, though has many different configurations. Size is a relative (to the human body) function of the space. Sub units of a spatial entity have many different types of interrelationships: such as proportions, analogy, sequencing, proximity, etc. And all these are absolute functions. Sub units of a spatial entity, coexist with their individual identities but are merged, contagious or noncontagious. Inhabitants of a space transit effortlessly through such sub units of a spatial entity.

Shape configurations are closed or open ended. Some show potential of growth through swelling and others are open to attachments. The shape expansion is linear, planner or volumetric, and directional or haphazard. A spatial shape reflects the constituent forces, so a shape could be mutable or consistent.

Size is fundamentally scaled to the human being, but it also represents capacities of retaining, spreading and distancing. These capacities also reflect the effort and duration required to possess, occupy, use and even dispose off (de-possess, de-occupy) an entity.

Environment: Environment characterizes a space. A spatial entity becomes relevant to the inhabitant for the domesticated environment it offers. The space has little significance without the environment. Since environment is ever evolving and so varies the space continually. As the space changes with time, so does the behaviour of its inhabitants. The same space could be depressing or inspirational at different times, because the environmental conditions are changed, and because the bio system of the inhabitant gets set to a different mode. The space has a subjective significance to its inhabitants.

Inhabitants: The human behaviour results from many individual factors, such as the cognition system, the metabolism, past experiences, etc. Our perception of things and happenings around us results from our cognitive capacities, physiological needs; are further moulded by the inherited (intuitive) and learnt (intellectual) faculties. The inhabitants behave in response to the presence of other beings as well as the nature of communication (expression and its perception).

A space is thus a setting where physical elements form an environment for the inhabitants to play a certain role. Though sometimes, our beliefs make us perceive an environmental happening even in absence of the space forming elements, and the inhabitant play their roles in such a metaphysical world. Similarly presentation of metaphoric or symbolic elements suffices to initiate a full scale happening. Stage-performances (dance, drama, mime shows) use physical elements like stage props, lighting, sound-effects, masks, dresses to metaphorically create space entities.

Our responses to a space-setting can be categorised as: Physiological, Psychological and Sociological. The Physiological responses at a very basic level relate to survival, health, well being and comfort. (At other levels physiological responses include expressions, movements, reaches, etc.) The Psychological responses include the body (perception capacities), intuitive (inherited) and intellectual (learnt) faculties. The Sociological responses involve 'group behaviour dynamics' and communication. These responses together define the spectrum of human behaviour.

Physiological Responses to the environment develop as the immediate and historical effects of the climate. The physiological responses also include the spatial occupation representing the 'dimensional manifestation of the human-body' and its 'task functionality'. Physiological consequences also depend on the supportive means available: for controlling the stability and mobility, for achieving comfort, for increasing the efficiency and productivity. The supportive means extend the basic sensorial functions like vision, hearing, touch, taste, etc. Physiological responses are also affected by age, sex, level of adaptation, familiarity, consistency, variability, limb capacity, body-limb coordination, etc.

Psychological Responses relate to perception, cognition, and the reaction mechanism. Perception is a process of becoming aware of the environment around, including other human beings, through the sensations of sight, hearing, smell, touch, and taste. Cognition is the mental processing by thinking about, remembering, or evaluating the sensory information. Response mechanisms are concurrently active, even as the perception and cognition are occurring. Response mechanisms may activate further mental processes, or at some stage reflect the physiological change. The physiological changes due to response mechanisms are both automatic or voluntary, or instinctive to intentional.

Sociological Responses of human behaviour relate to the social needs of the occupants and awareness of their implications. The space, environment and the occupants together foster a social-contact mechanism.

Human behaviour is apparent at three distinct levels: Behaviour of lone occupants of a space, Behaviour of individuals in a group and Group-based behaviour (collective behaviour).

Behaviour of a lone occupant of a space primarily depends on personal factors like the pre existing psychological condition, physiological make up, nature of the space+environment setting, experience, sequencing, personality build-up, cultural background and the tasks being handled. Secondarily the behaviour is the result of social responses as seen in habits, routines, customs, taboos, etc. Behaviour of a lone occupant is in consideration of other present and absentee human beings.

Behaviour of individuals in a group of is basically formed by the individual or personal factors like degree of social familiarity, commonality of purpose, similarity of age, sex, physical features, notions of intimacy and privacy, etc. It is also a role locus formed by the personal comfort (adaptation or acclimatization), familiarity of space and the environment make up, the duration of space occupation, the sequencing of experiences, the capacity, means and opportunities of expression, etc.

Group based behaviour is generated from many complex factors. It is a cumulation of individualistic behaviours affective as mass hysteria, a set of divisional affinities or a loner's rebel. Group based behaviour at one level occur within the same space and environment setting, but at other level it can simulate individuals or sub groups dwelling in isolated space and environment settings through various means of communication. Group based behaviour in the same space and environment setting is affected to a substantial extent by the proximity and positioning of the participants, but modern audio-video and other virtual reality modes can simulate intensely identical behaviour in individuals that are separated not only in space but also in time. The space and environment settings are exploited by smart individuals to enhance their presentations (expression).



Interior space is a finite well-defined entity, but requires continuous interventions to keep it a 'personalized space'. Some have called the process as 'enriching' a built form. The process could be very slow for financial, desire (motivation) and such other reasons, or delayed due to circumstantial causes. The process is both opportunistic as well as intentional one. In the former case one takes the advantage of the situation as it arises, and for the later strategies are planned as aspirations accumulate and realizations manifest. The opportunistic changes are slow to sudden and minor to substantial. The occupants are often not aware how and when the changes are occurring, and become aware of it when on an accumulation pause a disastrous effect or when in retrospect one realizes the quantum of change that has occurred. The strategic or intentional changes occur under a spectrum of expectations.

Greater personalization of an interior space affords efficiency but also leads to intensive possession of the space. The intensive possession ultimately becomes so saturated that changes are detested and avoided. The habitable space becomes set with many metaphysical elements, and lots of metaphorical elements emerge in the living space. The reluctance to change is challenged by many factors such as: environment, ever-changing age and relationships profiles of the occupants, need to repair or replace the space making elements, the desire to impress and win-over others with the sheer efficiencies of the inhabitable realm, compulsions to make a radical start off a failure or shock (death, sickness, an accident, a calamity, break up in relationship), etc. Technological developments present better ways of doing things. Environmental changes relating to climate, terrain and developments in the neighbourhood force unavoidable change. New friends, relationships, neighbours, etc. provide impetus for change. Developments in means of communications (telephony, intranet, travelling, etc.) have affected how people conduct their life.

Migration has been a very active agent for recasting of interior spaces. Migration for economic, political or tragical reasons forces one to adopt new terrain, environment and neighbourhood. A migrant may keep an unbiblical connection to the place of origin or one may not have any kinship. Migrant with no ethnic roots accepts new conditions easily but may not have the skill to tackle a new situation or crisis. Whereas one with some affinity will have ways and means (necessary skills and legacy to handle the unusual conditions) to transpose the old values and styles.

Behaviour in Interior space occurs in a very shifting situation due factors like personal attitudes, group behaviour mechanisms, metaphysical effects, interpretations of metaphoric elements, environmental changes (routine and unpredictable events); also in a fairly ordered setting where the family is consistent, reliable and predictable, the built forms are fairly long lasting, and the interior 'enrichments' such as the furniture, furnishings and amenities are functional and well chosen. The space occupants, now inhabitants project a cohesive and consistent style of living -a life style. The style is resilient so accommodates vast range of variations. Furniture, furnishings and amenities are the first to get changed, and these tend to be variable, relocatable or have multiple functionally. Such variable elements are also used to reformat the spatial qualities.











7 Privacy and Intimacy

People inherently discern their relationship with others in terms of distances or spaces between them. In other words certain distancing from others is required to conduct tasks.

Proxemics involve the ways in which people in various cultures utilize both time and space as well as body positions and other factors for purposes of communication. The physical distance or closeness maintained between individuals, the body heat they give off, odours they perceive in social situations, angles of vision they maintain while talking, the pace of their behaviour, and the sense of time appropriate for communicating under differing conditions all determine the degree of intimacy.

Edward T. Hall defines four distinct distances at which interpersonal transactions normally take place: Intimate, Personal, Social, and Public. Sociological determinants such as group dynamics and communication also affect personal interactions within an environment.

1 An individual has a very intimate area close to the body, within which it is possible to have physical touch, non verbal communication and emotional interactions. To gain such an intimate position one needs to be familiar with the other person or coerce. Even in the intimate space close to the body, the nature and level of intimacy is affected by the attitudes of the persons involved.

2 There is an area immediate to the body that marks the zone of regulated and selective participation. This is an area where one can reach out through projection (expression), channels of communication, physically (through body limbs) or stretch out with gadgets (walking stick, stethoscope, etc.). Here intimacy is regulated but not a private affair unless some real screening barriers are used to achieve the privacy. One can dwell in a culture or state formed of metaphysical elements (beliefs, customs, etc.), to achieve the same.

3 There is a zone of varying proximity. The proximity is governed by the position and duration of eye contact, pitch and language shout or call-in, olfactory sensation and body heat perception. The zone of proximity is affective in space distancing and time duration. The distance and duration are used alternatively to compensate the other.

4 Beyond the body related zones are areas marked by reach of the expression and communication. Such areas could be located within a domain or in other merged, linked or contagious domains. Here intimacy or privacy of personal nature is not available, yet one can announce it through metaphoric presentations.

5 The spaces beyond the current domain like the street, neighbourhood, and such public areas where 'privacy' is afforded by the familiarity of the surroundings. These areas have intimacy of the distance, within the visible range, in reach of shout or call, and the odour. These are part of the 'home' setting. Such public areas foster non-intimate group behaviour.

6 The inter domain spaces have personal relevance so far as there is a link active in time and space. This makes it a place for a sporadic encounter, the effects of which could persist as a remembrance or experience. Frequent occurrences belie a consistency or permanency. It functions like a networked zone (web) where something relevant is always available. So no matter where a person arrives, it begins to manifest familiarity or is pregnant with possibilities.

Individualization is an important force in determining the need for privacy and intimacy. Individualization is not just a matter of isolation or distancing from others, attitude of behaviour or a style of space occupation, but results from subtle factors like social conditions, expression, communicability, etc.

A person or group carves own space by different territorial markings. The territorial markings such as of physical, metaphysical, metaphorical nature present spaces of many different characteristics. Territoriality is a means of achieving a desired level of privacy. It involves creating and maintaining an exclusive control over a space by an individual or group. This control implies privileges and may involve aggressive actions in its defence. For the individual, territorial control provides security and identity, and is communicated through personalization and definition of the space. For the group, territorial control, is the cause of their being an entity, and is expressed through the common behaviour.

Hargie & Dickson identify 4 spatial territories:

1. Primary territory: this refers to an area associated with someone who has exclusive use of it. For example, a house that others cannot enter without the owner's permission.

2. Secondary territory: unlike the previous type, there is no right to occupancy, but people may still feel some degree of ownership (belonging) of a particular space. For example, someone may sit in the same seat on a train every day and feel aggrieved if someone else sits there.

3. Public territory: this refers to an area that is available to all, but only for a set period, such as a parking space or a seat in a library. Although people have only a limited claim over that space, they often want to exceed that claim, to show their interest in it. For example, it was found that people take longer to leave a parking space when someone is waiting to take that space.

4. Interaction territory: this is space created by others when they are interacting. For example, when a group is talking to each other on a footpath, others will walk around the group rather than disturb it.



Privacy is a process by which persons make themselves more or less accessible to others. A person or group could achieve insulation through physiological posturing, and mental isolation by controlling sensorial perception, communication, recognition, etc.

One requires many different types of privacy: Physical privacy › against someone making a close approach (touch or near approximation), Visual privacy › to limit others' view of oneself, Audio privacy › insulation against being overheard and interference from background noise, Olfactory privacy › limiting to reveal ones own physiological state or experiencing someone else's such a state (hormones-odours). Other privacy parameters include the body temperature, breathing rate, heart beats, pulse rate, vibrations of the body, sweating and perspiration.

Visual privacy addresses the ability to limit others' view of oneself. Inherent in human behaviour is the tendency to avoid situations in which one can be watched without being aware of who is watching. Visual privacy can be achieved through the use of furnishings, partitions or walls. In a private space or an office, people will often orient their desk in order to visually control the doorway and achieve a visually private space on one side of the desk. Similarly, people prefer to sit with a protected back, controlling the area they cannot see directly. In restaurants, the first seats to be filled are usually those along the walls. In outdoor spaces, people tend to sit against or beside objects such as trees and bushes rather than in the open.

Privacy is reflected in degrees of accessibility a person or group offers to others. The accessibility depends on the need for expression, communication, physiological requirements and sense of belonging for group behaviour mechanisms (common purposes, beliefs). Definition of an individual's interaction levels is one mechanism used in achieving a desired level of privacy.

Crowding occurs when personal space and territoriality mechanisms function ineffectively, resulting in an excess of undesired external social contact. Sociologically, people respond to crowding in different ways depending upon the situation. Sometimes humans tolerate crowding, though it may be unpleasant, because they know it is only temporary. In some situations crowding may be considered desirable, it may even be sought after if it is perceived as "part of the fun" or the expectation within a social setting. In either situation, however, psychological discomfort may be experienced if the crowding is perceived as too confining.

Intimacy is linked to Privacy. Intimacy is also a matter of physical distancing and isolation (insulation) from others. Intimacy is an attitude, mental conditioning or mental posture, one takes with another person or group of persons One can be intimate to another person or group of persons without the apparent need for privacy. So intimacy is not always a function of physical proximity. One can feel close to a person who is long dead -an illusory presence or through notional links (clothes, odours, recorded sounds, etc.). Distancing could be also be a matter of time, like remembrances.

Meaning of intimacy varies from relationship to relationship, and within a given relationship. Intimacy has more to do with rituals of connection. Intimacy is both the ability and the choice to be close, loving, and vulnerable. Intimacy requires identity development. You have to know yourself and your inner self in order to share your self with another. Knowing yourself makes it possible to stand for yourself in an intimate relationship without taking over the other or losing yourself to the other. The ability to be separate or together is called self-differentiation.

Intimacy can have two main forms: emotional intimacy and physical intimacy. There could be other forms of empathy like cultural, intellectual, spiritual, social that are akin to intimacy in some conditions. Strategic relationship developed to take advantage of anyone could be very close but it is a make-believe intimacy.

Eye contact could be both intimate and non-intimate. A direct eye contact allows better nonverbal communication (empathy), but a direct eye contact also subdues the other person and thus is less-intimate. Persons meeting lonesomely (alone) are more intimate than their encounter in public presence or a gaze.

Virtual proximity such as a chat on telephone or mobile, web chatting, videoconferencing, are forms of being intimate. Intimacy is also achieved by entering into some one's private domain like home, a bedroom, toilet, study area. Homes and work places of great persons provide illusion of physical intimacy.

A person projects privacy and intimacy in various proportions, whereas the space facilitates various levels of physical closeness, isolation and insulation. The mental needs ultimately define the degree of involvement. The culture defines the acceptable or inappropriate types of intimacies. A crowded elevator or bus is not an intimate contact and a shake hand or hug nominally has no sexual meaning. Intimacy could be a display or an expression with physical touch (proximity) but with no apparent mental feelings.

Two persons or members of a group can talk in whispers and give out an impression of intimacy in spite of the apparent distance between them. Conversely talk-discussions in high pitch could be used to present bonhomie and thereby a close-knit entity. Politicians and celebrities talk in whispers to state things that need to be made public and talk loudly things that need not be public, both ways they draw the attention. A public orator changes the pitch from normal to very low or high to draw the attention of the audience and thereby register a point.

Privacy and intimacy are factors of environment for conducting certain tasks. In appropriate environ ingress, distraction and unwanted participation by others are controlled. These are achieved in several ways: by placing required types of barriers, by physical and metaphorical declarations of the territorial markings, by suitable space planning and style of space occupation. Privacy is personal as well as group requirement, but intimacy is intra personal. The nature of a group behaviour mechanism defines the nature of privacy and degree of intimacy that is required.

The need to be alone or be part of a group arises from factors like personal (psychological and physiological), intra-personal (communication, exchanges) and group behaviour mechanisms (sense of belonging, sharing, participation, confirmation).

For an individual the space that 'distances' own-self from others allows privacy. Whereas for a group, spaces that allow easy communication and recognition (without any aids or extra strain) are of nominal scale. Such 'reasonably' sized space provides intimacy for the group but do not allow personal privacy.

Enclosing space forms (corners, cones, concaves) force individuals to be closely spaced and be intimate enough to form a group, or join an existing group.

Crowded spaces force intimacy of coexistence. The coexistence may force an individual to mentally barricade own-self or open-up.

Some environmental and other effects are highly focussed (illuminated spot, under the fan area, sunny patch, breezy path) and so help format new group sharing the same space segment.

Contacts between persons involve verbal and nonverbal communication. Verbal communication involves bodily movements mainly of the mouth and gesturing. Hall (1959) has stipulated that spatial separation also serves an expansive function. He made a study of the spatial relations that seem appropriate to various kinds of interactions. They vary with intimacy, they depend on the possibility of eye contact, and they vary with the culture.

One can easily distinguish strangers from friends in an airport lounge. Strangers will keep a distance taking alternate seats wherever possible. Friends tend to form clots, and families even pile one on the top of another. Total strangers will comfortably seat themselves only inches apart if the seats are back to back, but friends and the members of the family never arrange themselves in this way. Eye contact invites interaction and so is sought to the degree that intimacy already exists. (Hall E. T. 1959 The silent language).

Hall argues that there are spatial zones appropriate to various types of interactions. Impersonal discussion, for example, takes place at 1200 to 1500 mm; cross the inner boundary of this zone and one's interlocutor will retreat; cross the outer boundary and he will advance or subtly change the manner in which he behaves adopting the pattern appropriate to the new distance. -Spatial zones of Social interactions (Hall 1959) (for American culture). Hall identified four ranges of distance based on the nature of the relationship between individuals: 00-450 mm is intimate distance; 450-1200 mm is personal distance; 1200-3600 mm is social distance; and 3600-7500 mm is public distance. Although, these ranges appear to be supported for face-to-face interactions. Distances for virtual communication technology mediated interactions have yet to be examined. Hall has shown that South American needs much closer distance for impersonal information than a North American desire or is accustomed to.

Very close 75 to 150 mm Soft whisper, top secret

Close 200 to 300 mm Audible whispers, very confidential

Near 300 to 500 mm Soft voice, confidential

Neutral 500 to 900 mm Soft voice, low volume, personal subject matter

Neutral 1300 to 1500 mm Full voice, impersonal information

Public 1700 to 2500 mm Slightly over-loud, information for others to hear

Across the room 2.50 to 6.00 mts Loud voice, talking to a group

Hailing privately 6.00 to 7.5 mts Indoors, Loud voice departures

Hailing public 30.00 mts Outdoors, Loud voice shouting, departures and calls

One can move from impersonal discussion to personal matter by reducing the distance, or to a non personal information exchange by increasing the distance. TV anchors do the distance trick on their show. For an intimate question the anchor pushes forward the body (Larry King of CNN ) but as soon as the question sinks in with the guest, the anchor withdraws not just to the nominal position but little further backward. These distancing movements allow the guest to deliver the answer more objectively and the camera frame the guest alone for such a 'heroic effort'. However, a host may intimidate the guest by doing exactly opposite of this.

The chairs for personal meeting of two important (equal status) personalities (e.g. Presidents of two nations) are upright single seat units (placed parallel but very slightly askew). But we still find dignitaries taking on different 'positions' by moving towards or leaning on one handrest, sitting cross way (diagonally), leaning forward or backward. The reasons are: one is trying to enlarge or reduce the distance, take postures that imply affability, propriety, esteem, etc. However, the sitting arrangement between two unequals, like a president and a prime minister (or a prime minister and a foreign minister) has two unequals (size, form, style) seats. The person with higher status sits in a single seat unit, whereas the other party is made to sit at a right angle and on a wider seat (double or triple seat sofa or even stiffer - upright seat). The furniture arrangement, the angle and the distance between them are regulated by set of rules or 'protocol'. In spite of the strict protocol people through minor posturing do subconsciously express their real attitude. The body language reveals the nature of the encounter. The body language is just one facet of behaviour.

Coffee house and pub tables are small, so that people sitting across maintain intimate distance of 600 mm or less. Banquet tables are 1200 mm to allow talking across the table, but a wider table 1500 mm or more discourages the personal interactions and makes the occasion more formal. Important personalities use office tables of 900 mm or more depth to create a person to person (face to face or eye contact) distance of 1600 mm, which makes the interaction formal and noncommital.

Living rooms of economic housing schemes are 3000-4000 mm wide. The eye contact or person to person distance for such sofas across the room is 2400-3400 mm, just adequate for social or non intimate chat. However, for a living room width of 5000 mm, the interaction distance becomes (for sofa across the room) 4400 mm. This is not conducive to social interaction, unless one can makes own-self herd by talking loudly, or seating forward -at the edge. In such wide rooms chatting is more common with persons sitting on the side sofas.

Ms Vinita Mathur
Interior Design Department Head &Principal
Dezyne E'cole College