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Gestalt Principles in Architecture: Achieving Design Balance

Gestalt Principles in Architecture: Achieving Design Balance

Maria Lorena Lehman Maria Lorena Lehman
2 minute read

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Architecture usually tries to achieve some sort of design balance, whether asymmetrical or symmetrical. In the midst of the design process, do architects consider certain laws or theories as relating to how humans perceive? Yes, architecture must take into account all of the senses – but can theories, like the Gestalt Principles, highlight why design works the way it does?

For instance, when viewing a building from almost all distances and perspectives, the observer may be pulling from one of the Gestalt Principles of visual perception. Such theories pick up on combinations of elements reflecting patterns like similarity, continuation, closure, proximity, and figure/ground. (Click here to see a great introduction on how such Gestalt Principles work.) When designing or viewing a building façade, for instance, I do think certain relationships surface between Gestalt Laws and architectural design.

Understanding how humans understand pattern and balance is quite an intriguing subject. Simply digging into why our brains are wired for symmetry can provide profound information for designers. How and why our brains consider all of the elements in a scene at once can help us understand why architecture is often “better than the sum of its parts”.

For architecture to achieve a certain kind of balance, designers must synchronize elements so each interacts with the other – eventually composing a kind of system. It is interesting to think that our brains can deconstruct such visual systems quite rapidly – although, at times, this may be a subconscious act. At its core, architecture is often made up of a rhythmic language that achieves balance through its use of elements. As architectural patterns fill the masses and voids of a spatial construction, some type of balance is usually an end-goal.

Because architecture is a composition of all the human senses, achieving a true design balance is a simple, yet complex, endeavor. By truly making such laws (like the Gestalt Principles) your own, architectural design success can become a groundbreaking and instinctive creative act.

Image Credit: © Maxialfaro | Dreamstime

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The Quantum Key — a private strategic membership granting access to MLL ATELIER’s design intelligence system. This is not a course, a club, or a consulting retainer — it is a gateway into a higher mode of environmental design innovation, available only to a select group of organizations each year.
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The Quantum Key — a private strategic membership granting access to MLL ATELIER’s design intelligence system. This is not a course, a club, or a consulting retainer — it is a gateway into a higher mode of environmental design innovation, available only to a select group of organizations each year.
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