THE LANGUAGE OF SPACE



Space, and that which encloses it, are much more central to all of us in our everyday lives than purely technical, aesthetic or even semiotic interpretation would suggest. Space is both that which brings us together and simultaneously that which separates us from each other. It is thus crucial to the way our relationships work. Space is the essential stuff of a very fundamental and universal form of communication.

The human language of space, whilst it has its cultural variations, can be observed all over the world wherever and whenever people come together. In particular in this book we are interested in the space created in and around architecture. Architecture organizes and structures space for us, and its interiors and the objects enclosing and inhabiting its rooms can facilitate or inhibit our activities by the way they use this language. Because this language is not heard or seen directly, and certainly not written down, it gets little attention in a formal sense.

However, we all make use of it throughout all of our lives as we move about in space and relate ourselves to others. Perhaps we tend only to notice this language when it is in some way abused. When a person pushes in front of you in a queue, you feel offended not just because you are one place further back but also because they failed to respect the rules. In most situations where we queue there are almost token signals from the physical environment that we should behave in this highly artificial way. The rope barriers sometimes used to form queues in public places are hardly able to contain a crowd physically, and yet without them the crowd would probably push and shove in a chaotic and possibly aggressive manner.

When we talk to each other, the space between us is part of our communication. We probably all know a friend or colleague who habitually stands too close when conversing, touches you just too much for comfort, and generally seems rather more familiar than feels appropriate. The verbal language might well be at odds with the communication through the language of space, and we feel uncomfortable. We can get remarkably irritated by strange, insensitive or just thoughtless failures of other people to use the language of space properly the stranger who comes and sits at your table in a cafe even though other tables are empty; the newspaper boy who fails to shut the front gate after delivering the morning newspaper; the neighbor who habitually parks in front of your house rather than hers; the chairman of a meeting who arrives late and finds someone already sitting in the chair most suited to running the meeting.

Comments