Antonino Saggio 
                  I Quaderni
              
                
Informazione
                  Spazio
                  Spazio-Informazione
                
          
        
(by the way we Made other ten books in Italian )


AS, INFORMAZIONE MATERIA PRIMA
          DELL'ARCHITETTURA
          Op. Cit. n. 118, September 2003
          (pp. 5-10).
          Anche
            in rete
          
        

L'atto del nominare
          è  atto umano pel rompere il caos dellìuniverso. Per
          Trasformare l'ndistinto nel distinto attraverso
          un'azione  che gli psicologi definiscono "inserire nella
          sfera del desiderio".
          
        
        
1. a datum is the minimum element that modifies a previous situation (the land “was” brown and now has a white circle).

Now I can proceed to the second formulation:
2. a datum is the objects of multiple conventions. This means a datum must be associated with a well-defined convention in order to have any meaning.
Applying convention to a datum begins the “formation” of a world. This word “formation” is important and leads us to the center of the problem and the third formulation:
3. information is the application of a convention to a datum.
Now Look this picture
and let’s ask “What is it?”

Depending on the convention we choose to adopt, that oval could be: a group of smaller points; a letter of the alphabet; the number 0; an oval (mathematically defined); the two-dimensional projection of a volume; a whole note; a “sprite” in a montage; or even a symbol for something else. All this “depends” on the convention. Our definition functions excellently in this second meaning.
The fundamental passage is that the world of information technology is a world already formalized from the start! In other words, the earlier question, “What is it?” (referring to the small drawing of the oval) is inconceivable because in information technology “we know right from the start the conventional system within which we are moving.”
So here is the fourth formulation:
4. in information technology, data do not exist, but instead only and always information.
Information technology has a well-known, close relationship with the electrical data of the computer that are in fact “data”: either they are there, (On = 0), or they are not there, (Off = 1)
5. if in information technology, data do not exist but only information, then in information technology everything is information. This formulation touches on the crux of the problem and takes into account that information is truly “in formation,” in constant, dynamic, inexhaustible moving and becoming! It also defines the territory where this occurs as precisely the electronic territory.
At this point, it is
          useful to refer to the Oxford English Dictionary: “inform”
          means “put into form” and information is the “action” of this
          putting into form.
          From this definition comes a new decisive proposition. If, in
          information technology, everything is “in formation,” then 6.
          the taking shape of information is defined as modeling and
          finds its expression in the creation of models, a term we will
          discuss shortly.
          Thus, the model is the form assumed by information, the form
          into which information becomes “modeled.”
Raw Material
          Many families of models exist in information technology. The
          simplest is represented by the spreadsheet that links pieces
          of information to one another via mathematical formulas,
          allowing constant updating of all values based on variations
          in only one piece of information. This invention has had
          consequences in a broad field of activities, from financial to
          construction. Above all, it represents the advent of a
          generalized way of thinking “What … if” or rather “What”
          happens in my model “if”? For some time, “spatial and
          architectural” models have existed that dynamically link the
          geometric, spatial, constructive, and even performance
          information of a project so that varying one datum makes it
          possible to verify “in a cascade” what will happen in all the
          interconnected areas of information in the project system.
          In this context, as we will see more clearly, a design project
          tends to function like a group of equations representing
          specific sub-areas of the project. Defined forms are not
          designed, but instead “families of possible forms” that can
          vary within several parameters, substituting the geometry of
          Euclidean absolutes with topological families. Architectural
          design and thought thus moves within a network of these
          fluctuating, moldable bits of information like a system of
          interconnected equations that pass data back and forth between
          each other. To day more and more architects work with
          scripting first and visual programming after to produce a
          representation that is geometrical and mathematical at once.
          The infos resulting at the end of the process can be send to
          computerized machines to electronically produce concrete
          components of construction. This process tends to reverse the
          type of thinking that was usual for the architects of the
          past. A script generated form can be interrogated to
          understand what constructive, functional, bioclimatic
          characteristics it can effectively support. A cyclical process
          of hypotheses-test is generated in which the manipulation of
          the mathematical information are indeed the “raw material” of
          a radical new conception of architecture.
          The new generation of architects is working to understand how
          these mutable, interconnected, dynamic models representing the
          heart of the IT Revolution could transmigrate into an
          architecture that would be their reification. If this research
          constitutes the horizon of a new phase of architecture, its
          raw material, the wellspring that feeds the research and moves
          in waves, whirlpools, eddies, and waterfalls, is called
          information, the raw material of a new phase in architecture.
Sul Concetto di Spazio Pieno
      
      
Overview Il Cambiamento del Concetto di
          Spazio:
          Spazio Organo, Spazio Sistema, Spazio Informazione
Spazio al Centro
        
 

        
Lo Spazio Organo

Lo Spazio Sistema

Lo Spazio Informazione

        
Marcos Novak "The invisible Space"
          Installation Greek Pavillon, Biennale of Venice 2000
        
 
    
Spazio  come informazione
      
8. Spazio come informazione
Marcos Novak, Invisible space, Venice Biennale >
Does color really exists?

a. perception of colour. Psycology of perception
Contestuale

this refers also to transparency


Walte Gropius Bauhaus, Dessau | Jean Nouvel, Cartier Foundation, Paris
2. Fisiologico

Picture by Andrew Davidhazy
3. Cognitivo.
      What colour is the ice?
        What color is the sky?
To Italy
Who knows the land where
      the sky
      of inexpressible blue colours itself? ....
Inesprimibile Blu
All’Italia
Chi conosce la terra dove
      il cielo 
      d’indicibile azzurro si colora? 
      dove tranquillo il mar con l’onda sfiora 
      rovine del passato? 
      dove l’alloro eterno ed il cipresso 
      crescon superbi? dove il gran Torquato 
      cantò? dove anche adesso 
      ne la notte profonda 
      i canti suoi va ripetendo l’onda? 
      la terra ove dipinse Raffaello, 
      dove gli ultimi marmi 
      animò di Canova lo scalpello 
      e Byron rude martire ne’ carmi 
      dolore, amore effuse e imprecazione? 
      Italia, terra magica, gioconda 
      terra d’ispirazione! 
Aleksandr Puskin
Now let's make a decisive step: but if the colour does not exist in reality and it exists only contextually, we should understand that the colour is one type of "information". True information!, as we have already defined that is: "application of a convention to one data". In this case the data is the electromagnetic radiation, while colour is nothing more than a psychological, physical and conventional use of information! Red wants to say stop, green go, but only in some contexts and some conventions.

8. Spazio come informazione
Now look at this picture
What about radio signals ?

And air jet routes


Santa Sofia
Space is information we can design and change its properties, values and characteristics, and we can also manipulate it to have some kind of projection of other dimensions

    
Steven Spilberg, Minority
      report
    
    
 
    
Spazio Informazione cala "anche" nel parametrico
        in Architettura
      

Leggi la
        tesi in forma di relazione tecnica
    
Vedi 
    


The Pisa Per comprendere
      lo sviluppo di questa importante parte passo la parola
      all'architetto Gaetano Dde Francesco che segue con me la didattica
      a Sapienza
      come Assegnista di ricercatore e professore idoneo  Icar 14.
    
      
    
      
    
1. Antonino Saggio, "Informazione Materia Prima dell'Architettura", Op. Cit., # 118, September 2003 (pp. 5-10). >
2. _____________, "Tempo. Tempo prima dimensione dello Spazio",Il Progetto, # 19, March 2004 (pp. 64-67). >
3. _____________, The search for an Information Space, In Kas Oosterhuis Lukas Feireiss (eds), Game set and Martch II . Episode, Rotterdam 2006 (pp. 214-219)
4. Osvaldo Da Pos, Trasparenze , Icone editore, Padova 1989
5. _____________, "Fenomenologia dei colori trasparenti", in Effetto trasparenza , (eds L. Bortolatto e O. Da Pos), Le Venezie, Treviso 1996
6 Antonino Saggio, "Nuove Soggettivita' L'architettura tra comunicazione e informazione", (Italian Translation of New Subjectivity in Digital | Real Catalog), Op. Cit. , # 112, September 2001 (pp. 14-21). >>
7 ____________, "Interactivity at the center of Avant-Garde Architectural Research", Architectura Design vol 75 #. 1 jan/feb 2005 (pp. 23-29). special Issue 4dspace: Interactive Architecture ed. L. Bullivant >>
8 Timothy Goldsmith, The Biological Roots of Human Nature: Forging Links Between Evolution & Behavior , Oxford Univ. Press, 1994
9 _______________, "Come vedono gli uccelli", Le Scienze, Italian edition of Scientific American, # 460, December 2006
10 Antonino Saggio, Architettura e Modernità. Dal Bauhus a La Rivoluzione Informatica, Carocci, Roma 2010