"On the Nature of Architectural Design: Drawing, Creativity, and Contemporary Praxis" asks a prior question to the one most often posed in architectural culture: not simply how architects design buildings, but how they become the kind of practitioner capable of judgment, discernment, and responsible form-making.
At a moment when architecture is often dominated by image, speed, technological process, and performance, Henrique Houayek argues for a deeper account of the discipline: one grounded in attention, memory, drawing, temporality, and the gradual formation of architectural intelligence. Creativity, in this view, is not spontaneous novelty detached from discipline, but the fruit of cultivated perception, embodied practice, and decisions made under real constraint.
Bringing together architectural theory, phenomenology, design pedagogy, cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and chronobiology, On the Nature of Architectural Design develops a powerful account of design as a formative, epistemic, and ethical practice. It traces an inner journey: how perception is educated, how creative repertoire is formed, and how both are translated into architectural judgment. From hand drawing and memory to circadian rhythm and the design process as cosmogram—a way of bringing daily life into meaningful order—the book reorients architecture toward meaning, responsibility, and human flourishing.
For architects, educators, students, and thoughtful readers interested in design, craft, and culture, this is a book about buildings—but even more, about the formation of the architect.
"On the Nature of Architectural Design: Drawing, Creativity, and Contemporary Praxis" asks a prior question to the one most often posed in architectural culture: not simply how architects design buildings, but how they become the kind of practitioner capable of judgment, discernment, and responsible form-making.
At a moment when architecture is often dominated by image, speed, technological process, and performance, Henrique Houayek argues for a deeper account of the discipline: one grounded in attention, memory, drawing, temporality, and the gradual formation of architectural intelligence. Creativity, in this view, is not spontaneous novelty detached from discipline, but the fruit of cultivated perception, embodied practice, and decisions made under real constraint.
Bringing together architectural theory, phenomenology, design pedagogy, cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and chronobiology, On the Nature of Architectural Design develops a powerful account of design as a formative, epistemic, and ethical practice. It traces an inner journey: how perception is educated, how creative repertoire is formed, and how both are translated into architectural judgment. From hand drawing and memory to circadian rhythm and the design process as cosmogram—a way of bringing daily life into meaningful order—the book reorients architecture toward meaning, responsibility, and human flourishing.
For architects, educators, students, and thoughtful readers interested in design, craft, and culture, this is a book about buildings—but even more, about the formation of the architect.
Henrique Houayek
Architectural education Design pedagogy Studio-based learning Architectural judgment Decision-making under uncertainty Design creativity Expertise development Attention training Drawing as thinking Circadian design Embodied cognition Cognitive science of design