Circulation
Circulation
space/journal//architectur
al-concepts-circulationWHAT IS
CIRCULATION?
Circulation: movement through space
Francis DK Ching in Architecture: Form, Space & Order
Before I began studying architecture, the word circulation meant very little to me, other than bringing
to mind science classes spent learning about the movement of blood around the human body.
In architecture, the concept of circulation isn't so different - it refers to the way people, the blood
of our buildings, move through space.
In particular, circulation routes are the pathways people take through and around buildings or urban
places. Circulation is often thought of as the 'space between the spaces', having a connective function,
but it can be much more than that. It is the concept that captures the experience of moving our bodies
around a building, three-dimensionally and through time.
In this article, I will look at what circulation is, and how you can design for it - using the rules and
breaking them too. I also touch on how architects represent circulation, often using diagrams, and how
circulation relates to Building Code Requirements.
Components of Circulation
Although every space a person could access or occupy forms part of the circulation system of a
building, when we talk about circulation, we typically dont try to account for where every person
might go. Instead, we often approximate the main routes of the majority of users.
To simplify further, architects typically divide their thinking according to different types of circulation,
which overlay with one another and the overall planning. The type and extent of these divisions will be
project dependant, but might include:
Each of these types of circulation will require different architectural consideration. The movement
might be fast or slow, mechanical or manual, undertaken in the dark or fully lit, crowded or individual.
The pathways might be leisurely and winding, or narrow and direct.
Of these types of circulation, direction and use are often critical to a building layout.
DIRECTION
Horizontal circulation might include hallways, atria, paths, entries and exits. It is also affected by the
furniture layout, or other objects in the space such as columns, trees, or topographic changes. This is
why architects usually furniture as part of a concept design, because it is critically linked to the flow,
function and feeling of the space.
Vertical circulation is how people move up and down within the building, so includes things like
stairs, lifts, ramps, ladders and escalators which allow us to move from one level to another.
USE
Public circulation is the areas of the building which are most widely and easily accessible. In this
guise, circulation is often overlapped with other functions, such as a lobby, atrium, or gallery, and is
enhanced to a high level of architectural quality. Issues of visibility, how crowds move, and clear
escape paths are key.
Private circulation accounts for the more intimate movements within the building, or the more ugly
ones which require a degree of privacy. In a house this might be the back door, in a large building the
back of house, staff offices or storage zones.
DESIGNING CIRCULATION
There are two rules of thumb when it comes to designing circulation. The key circulation pathways
should:
The reason for these two rules of thumb is fairly obvious: people want to be able to move around a
building with ease and efficiency, and without feeling or being lost.
In this way, circulation is also intricately linked in with Programme, or what activities take place,
another key Architectural Concept which we will touch on in this series.
Commercial office buildings and apartment buildings, for example, will typically seek to minimise the
amount of circulate space, and give this space back to the tenancies or apartment interiors which are
leasable, and thus, profit generating. In these cases, where the buildings are often tall, the vertical
circulation is often designed as a core at the centre of the building, with stairs and lifts packed tightly
together, and short corridors on each level leading away from this core to the individual apartments or
offices.
Expressed circulation, Pompidou Centre
In contrast to this method, where all the circulation is located centrally and often hidden, circulation
can be externally expressed and shown off of the faade or within the building. Even in smaller
buildings, such as houses, circulation areas such as a staircase can become architectural features of the
home.
A celebrated example of this technique is the Pompidou Centre in Paris, designed in high-tech style by
Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano. Here, you can see the translucent escalators with red undersides
snaking across the exposed faade of the building, the ever changing movements of people making the
building present and active in the square.
Although a critical part of design, circulation is often not directly represented in a final Architectural
Drawing Set - it is in the white space and gaps between structural elements. However, there are some
instances where exit pathways do need to be shown, such as in the design of a public building where
the routes people will take to exit the building in case of fire need to be clear for evaluation against the
Building Code.
Although at Architecture School, your design projects might not require you to spend days checking for
code compliance, this document can be a good place to start to at least get the angle of your stairs
looking vaguely legitimate, and to understand how wide hallways should be to facilitate different kinds
of movement - two aspects of your project which will be obvious to critics examining your project plans
and sections.