Reframing the Body–Space Relation in Architecture: A Trialectical Perspective
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Body–Space in Architectural Discourse: Literature Overview
1.2. Research Aims and Questions
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- How can the relationship between body and space be reframed through the simultaneous reading of different representational dimensions, when historical continuities and epistemological ruptures are taken into account?
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- What methodological contributions are made possible by reframing the concepts of body and space for architectural research and design practice?
1.3. Scope of Research
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Trialectical Frameworks
- Representational dimensions [object–image–definition]: enables a single entity to appear simultaneously in three different modes of representation [material object, visual image, linguistic definition], thereby opening a plural field of reading that moves back and forth between these planes.
- Semiotic distinction [syntactic–semantic–pragmatic]: divides the process of meaning formation into three lines of reading: the syntactic level, which focuses on form and configuration; the semantic level, which foregrounds perception and processes of meaning-making; and the pragmatic level, which points to use, context, and performative consequences.
- Relational modalities [distance–togetherness–plurality]: organizes bodily–spatial encounters along three interpretive axes: distance, which emphasizes separation grounded in measure and form; togetherness, which describes perceptual and affective proximity; and plurality, which indicates relational patterns that proliferate through practices and discourses.
2.2. Analytical Mapping Scheme: Three Modalities × Three Levels
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- Distance—syntactic level—object [the chair itself];
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- Togetherness—semantic level—image [the photograph of the chair];
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- Plurality—pragmatic level—definition [the linguistic description of the chair].
2.3. Path of Analysis: Narrative Flow Across Three Semiotic Distinctions
- Syntactic level—Distance strand: in the first step, the body–space relation is read through measure, proportion, formal composition, axiality, constructed distance, and techniques of representation. The focus here is primarily on “the chair itself”, that is, on the objectified and distanced condition of space; in this configuration, the body appears mostly as an external reference point that observes, measures, and positions. From a semiotic perspective, this strand corresponds to the syntactic level, where what comes to the fore is not what the signs mean but the formal relations, ordering principles, and logic of configuration between them.
- Semantic level—Togetherness strand: in the second step, the analysis shifts toward perception, atmosphere, affect, association, and processes of meaning-making. Here, body and space are approached as a jointly constituted field of experience in which they coexist; through “the image of the chair”, the study traces how modes of representation are articulated to lived experience, memory, and cultural codes. This strand overlaps with the semantic level in semiotics, moving beyond formal arrangement to examine how images and spatial associations are interpreted by the body and gain experiential intensity.
- Pragmatic level—Plurality strand: in the final step, the body–space relation is examined in its multiple and negotiated manifestations within practices of use, institutional settings, digital interfaces, social discourses, and everyday habits. “The definition of the chair” is read here as a field of meaning that circulates among different actors and contexts, is rewritten, and proliferates. Semiotically, this strand corresponds to the pragmatic level; meaning is understood not as the property of a fixed sign system, but as a process that is continually reconstructed and negotiated through action, use, and discourse in varying contexts.
2.4. Methodological Evaluation and Limitations
3. Relational Dynamics in Body–Space
3.1. Distance
3.2. Togetherness
3.3. Plurality
- Virtual—“Not physically existing as such but made to appear so; existing in essence though not in actual fact”.
- Shadow—“A dark area or shape produced by a body coming between rays of light and a surface”.
- Mirror—“A polished or smooth surface that forms images by reflection”.
4. Results
4.1. The Layeredness of Body–Space Relations
- Distance, which corresponds to the syntactic level, where the body is defined through measures and proportions and space is stabilized through normative arrangements.
- Togetherness, which corresponds to the semantic level, where bodily perception, phenomenological intensity, and sensory experience establish body and space as co-constructors of meaning.
- Plurality, which corresponds to the pragmatic level, where social, cultural, and linguistic codes generate horizons of meaning that are unstable, non-fixed, and continuously reproduced.
4.2. Horizons of Possibility and Fields of Contact
4.3. Synthesis of Key Findings and Conceptual Outputs
5. Discussion
5.1. Summary of Scientific Contributions
- Theoretical contribution: The study addresses the long-standing fragmentation between phenomenological, semiotic, and epistemological accounts of space. By situating distance–togetherness–plurality within a trialectical structure, it enables theories that typically speak in different registers, formal, experiential, and discursive, to be read within a shared scheme. This makes it possible to compare how different traditions conceptualize the body–space relation without reducing them to a single vocabulary.
- Methodological contribution: The model offers a structured procedure for reading architectural cases and texts through the combined lenses of modality [distance–togetherness–plurality], semiotic level [syntactic–semantic–pragmatic], and Kosuth’s object–image–definition relation. Researchers can employ this alignment as a step-by-step guide: identifying how a given work or discourse positions the body, how it frames space, and how these positions shift when analyzed through different levels of representation and meaning. In this sense, the framework functions as a transferable analytical scaffold that can be adapted to diverse typologies, media, and contexts.
- Practical contribution: For designers and practice-oriented researchers, the approach foregrounds how spatial configurations, atmospheres, and representational strategies co-produce bodily experience and plural meanings. By working with the articulated layers of the model, design processes can deliberately experiment with distancing and intensifying relations, with different modes of togetherness, or with multiple forms of plurality in digital and everyday environments. This opens a pathway for research-by-design and experience-centered inquiry that treats body–space relations not as a background assumption but as a central design problem.
5.2. New Insights
5.3. Limitations and Future Research
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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| Periodization and Epistemic Framework | Body–Space Relational Orientation | Epistemic Critique and Expansion |
|---|---|---|
| Antiquity and Renaissance— Classical Proportions and the Universal Model | Space conceived as fixed and geometric; the body functions as a unit of measure and universal regulator. | Experiential dimension and individual differences are neglected. |
| Modernism and Its Critiques | The body as a universal standard; space as functional, standardized, and representational. Constructed through surveillance, transparency, and visual regimes. | Sensory and multisensory experience excluded; the body is rendered secondary. |
| Phenomenology—Lived Experience | Space constituted through sensory perception, lived experience, bodily orientation, and atmospheric qualities; the body as both perceiving and perceived. | Critique of visual primacy; emphasis on multisensory wholeness. |
| Social and Political Readings | Space produced through social relations, practices, representations, and dispositifs of power. | Shift from representation toward process and encounter. |
| Late Modern/Postmodern Critiques | Technology, acceleration, and representational networks render space fluid, fragmented, and hyperreal. | Images and consumption dominate over direct experience. |
| Cognitive and Environmental Approaches | Space discloses affordances for bodily action; perception and cognition emerge through interaction with the environment. | Critique of representational perception models; emphasis on dynamic interaction. |
| Enactive and Digital Approaches | Space reconstituted through bodily participation and digital mediations. | Physical/representational boundaries surpassed; plural realities generated. |
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© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Kalay Yüzen, R.; Kaymaz, S. Reframing the Body–Space Relation in Architecture: A Trialectical Perspective. Buildings 2025, 15, 4391. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15234391
Kalay Yüzen R, Kaymaz S. Reframing the Body–Space Relation in Architecture: A Trialectical Perspective. Buildings. 2025; 15(23):4391. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15234391
Chicago/Turabian StyleKalay Yüzen, Reyya, and Senem Kaymaz. 2025. "Reframing the Body–Space Relation in Architecture: A Trialectical Perspective" Buildings 15, no. 23: 4391. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15234391
APA StyleKalay Yüzen, R., & Kaymaz, S. (2025). Reframing the Body–Space Relation in Architecture: A Trialectical Perspective. Buildings, 15(23), 4391. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15234391

