Threshold

RELATED TERMS: Liminality; Reception Theory and Reader Response Criticism

A threshold is the entrance to a building, or sometimes a transition from one space to another.

The threshold is the point at which we move from one space, state, set of ideas or view to another. Before we cross the threshold, we are outside. After we cross, we are inside. That is, we have entered a different world. Usually, but not always, when we stand at the threshold we can see what we are entering.

Thresholds are important in design practices, often asking the audience or participant to move from one world to another when moving from one space to another.

Thresholds and threshold moments have to be carefully designed as they are so important to the succeeding experience.

Flora Samuel (2010) discusses the use of thresholds, and their role in dis-orientating and re-orientating, by Le Corbusier.

References

Samuel, F. (2010) Le Corbusier and the architectural promenade. Basel, CH: Birkhauser.

Published by aparsons474

Allan Parsons is an independent scholar

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