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Hasell, Jo – Journal of Architectural Education, 1979
Because of the complexity of large-scale projects, teams of experts have become the new designers of the built environment, with clients, decision makers, and buildings' users demanding inclusion in these teams. The Grand Frame Game is described as a technique for including people in decision making. (MLW)
Descriptors: Architectural Education, Architecture, Communication (Thought Transfer), Community Involvement
May, Hayden Barkley – Journal of Architectural Education, 1979
Gaming-simulation in professional practice, education, and research is discussed. Simulation assists in exploring and resolving incongruent values and interests of clients, users, and architects; conveys complex interactive systems students are trying to understand; and elicits responses to alternative actions and contributes to theory development…
Descriptors: Architectural Education, Architecture, Community Planning, Conflict Resolution
Summers, Luis H. – Journal of Architectural Education, 1979
Operational gaming techniques that are permeating the architectural profession are used to: elicit user needs, represent architectural realities in the classroom, understand the rationale behind complex design decisions, and model decision environments at many levels with coarse or refined data. (MLW)
Descriptors: Architectural Education, Architectural Research, Architecture, Construction (Process)
Bonta, Juan Pablo – Journal of Architectural Education, 1979
Playing simulation games is seen as having obvious educational value with players learning through personal involvement. Several games are described, including Communication Networks, Heating and Air-Conditioning (HAC), Construction Management Game, Semiotics, Awards, Blocks, Would You Like to Be an Architect?, POLIGRIP, and PASS. (MLW)
Descriptors: Air Conditioning, Architects, Architectural Education, Building Design