claim
active
claim:the-west-dean-building-was-worth-about-one-and-a-half-times-what-the-client-paid-compared-to-conventional-practice-due-to-program-budgetingThe West Dean building was worth about one and a half times what the client paid compared to conventional practice, due to program budgeting.
Empirical claim about the efficiency and value gain of the integrated cost process.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Concepts (1)
concept
- West Dean Visitor's CentresupportsThe test-bed project where innovative brick, concrete, flint, and stonework were developed, informing the Mary Rose Museum.
Chapters (1)
chapter
- The working unit chapter that presents Alexander's method for generating large public buildings through living process, illustrated by six major projects.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- Author's concluding claim about the building's broader significance.
- Alexander's account of emergence in architectural design: a major structural element was discovered on site, not pre-designed.
- Finding from the West Dean project demonstrating that critical structural elements can only be properly specified through direct experience of the emerging whole.
- Empirical finding from full-scale on-site testing: the correct proportions for intimacy were discovered through experiment, not calculation.
- Empirical design result: the cross-wall intervention was the specific transformation that completed the West Dean building
- Alexander's explanation of why the apparently insane column proportions produced the correct being-nature for the building.