Yay! Another Architecture thread

I can contribute!! Sorry for a long post, I just have LOTS to say about this subject

Absolutely, architecture can be used to alter consciousness, "depict god", and to induce emotive states by using spatial drama. But there is more than just patterns to depicting spiritual spaces. It often deals with some underlying cultural values (basically what snozz posted)
To me fractals are a new area in architectural expression that is finding a way to create more organic geometries, that also have relation to the nature around us. This to me is a way of showing interconectedness. Not only that but the fractals have inherit structural strength that over powers any regular post and beam construction.
To offer another cultural perspective here is part of an essay I wrote on Zen Gardens and Architecture in response to a few readings I did for a class on Japanese Architecture
Japanese art has been influenced by Zen philosophy by ways of minimalism. The one corner style is a method in which painters who follow Zen try to convey the image with the least amount of brush strokes as possible. Wabi is to be not dependent on things, to be poor, one corner style embodies this by not being dependent on excessive detail, but trying to convey the entire emotion and scene in as little as possible. Also the celebration of the imperfection.
Wabi literally translates as poverty. The worship of poverty, the freedom from wealth, power, and social position was something that was translated in to several elements of Japanese art and architecture. One corner style being the embodiment of this in art, the simplicity and clearness of structure is where architecture see’s zen. Another element is our love for nature. Zen tries to capture this in as many ways as possible. In Japanese architecture it is the blurred line between inside and outside, the function of the tea garden as a spatial experience and the honesty of materials. Sabi is rustic unpretentiousness, in Buddhist terms this is the state of just “being.” When this is translated to architecture it is the simplicity of historical association, the imperfection in the materials.
The garden is designed as a mental experience, the tea ceremony has a spiritual experience culminating in a psychedelic experience, or an experience that manifests the soul (which is the literal translation of psyche-delos). The garden and the ceremony especially in post Muromachi Japan when soan allowed the guests to not just observe objects but the whole experience. The garden which seems like something natural is actually not, everything is carefully chosen to be an experience of human consciousness bonsai which is a human manipulation of nature, the selection of stones, resulting in the intention of making the guests focus on the sublime elements of the ceremony.
The first type of Zen garden is one that uses Chinesee Sung landscape painting, with elements that inspire the “three distances” (foreground, middle ground, and background) The elements that make up the garden are rocks a pond a bridge and an artificial mountain on the far side of the pond and the background is of the Arashiyama foothiils. A type of scenographic landscape.
The second type is a simple interoverted meditative gravel garden with rock groups in a rectangle. The gravel serves as a meditative focal point, conjuring the thoughts of sabi because of its irregular geometry of raked gravel.
The last type is the path that leads to a tearoom called roji and developed with Rikyu. The last type is specifically aimed at altering consciousness. The path is carefully thought out in terms of materiality, rhythm of pace, and enclosure. The stone path is irregular and has slight deviances is it, and also constricted to only allow one person at a time. This element of the roji transitions the mind from normal experience and remove distractions that exist in normal consciousness. “The roji is simply a path leading beyond this fleeting world” this quote talks about the transient quality of spatial experience, one of the elements of the psychedelic consciousness. Another element of psychedelic consciousness embodied through roji is the interconnectedness of suchness. The moss’s relationship to the tree, the relationship of the path to the tree, and the space in-between.
Now whats particularly interesting is the contrast between what makes spirituality in architecture in the east/west. Whether is mind bending raw god like spaces, or the blurred line between human dwelling and natural dwelling. I think the expression needs to be a melting of both.
Watch out for when I post my pre-thesis research on here

it is on the subject of Psychedelic Architecture & Urbanism; a concept I am developing.
Here's a few lines from my abstract.
" Spiritual architecture has been altering consciousness for many thousand years with varying philosophies on how to do this. The East focused on using natural elements such as the spacing of stones to alter consciousness before entering a tea ceremony, the West they showed the austere power of god through massive beautiful structures, producing feelings of ineffability and awe. Both of these techniques successfully elevate ones consciousness, however the West and a lesser extent the East both have exclusivity to them, creating spiritual segregation. In an era of increasing violence between religious groups, Psychedelia offers an end to segregation and encourages the exchange of ideas rather than the wiping out of them. "
Keep in mind I am redfining psychedelia to mean more than just our friendly teachers but a cosmic consciousness instead.
Creator help me live in a way that will make my ancestors proud.