Adjusted extruded cuts; added stairs & escalators
(All major elements now should be close to accurate.)
Leveled floors - without stairs
WITH stairs and escalators...
2. Reflect on the lecture to prepare a 250 word (maximum) statement on 'realism' as it relates to your documentation of the Town Hall Subway Station.
There are various ways in which we can interpret the word 'realism' - available to us through sight, smell, touch, taste and hearing. However, since our surroundings and knowledge from daily life have shaped our understanding of normality itself, things from outside our scale of understanding are thus not counted as part of 'reality' even if it is perceived by us (whether it is through a computerised environment or an artwork). >>Another word that might be more suitable to describe - 'surrealistic'<<
To present reality, it is crucial to fit the scale of presentation into the scale of our understanding. For example, a normal bedroom door height of 2meters would appear more realistic than a door that is 1m or 4m in height, but this leads to another question of HOW to make the audience perceive. Of course, the ways vary from a 2D sketch to a 3D environment. The major difference though, between a realistic presentation and a not-so-realistic presentation, lies within the quality of interaction between audience and the thing that is being presented. >>I believe that an excellent presenter should go one step further - they should be capable of guiding their audience unconciously to a certain direction of thinking.<<
As a summary of the statement above has been put into action, EXP2 (The Porosity of Subterranean Sydney) adopts the realistic interative game control into a prensentative technique, which gives our audience the chance to experience reality through movement. It is because of the process of walk through that enables them to recognise familiarities between the computerised model and the actual environment, thus making the presentation realistic.
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