The Indicator: Nobody Puts Buddha in the Corner

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A while ago I was talking to someone about designing a Buddhist temple. I began to think about the subject of sacred spaces: their configuration, their meaning, and most importantly, how people use those spaces to give their religious practice meaning. I realized that designing sacred space is a pretty unique endeavor. And given the nature of commissions these days, the chances that people are unfamiliar with a particular religion is pretty high.

So here’s a hypothetical for you: imagine someone unfamiliar with Christianity has been commissioned to adaptively re-use, say, a building for a Catholic church (L.A is full of such storefront churches). And this person has discovered from an online source that of central importance is the altar and the altar table. But, if that person is not a practitioner, it’s possible that s/he might think, given the limitations of the pre-existing structure, that the altar could be placed in one corner and the altar table in another.

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Cite: Sherin Wing. "The Indicator: Nobody Puts Buddha in the Corner" 15 Aug 2012. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/263554/the-indicator-nobody-puts-buddha-in-the-corner> ISSN 0719-8884

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