2005 年 70 巻 597 号 p. 9-14
For studying dwellings, it is essential to experience the place. Without this, it is hard to understand lifestyles, which are self-evident for the dwellers. Therefore, it may be presumed that there are 'default values' which are hard to be read from drawings. Setting our final purpose in generalizing these values as rules forming 'natural space', the aim of this paper is to investigate how to distill the values. To accomplish this, we analyzed Roji and Machiya in Kyoto as a case study and compared them by means of Space Syntax. As it turned out, a part of the values can be distilled by the spatial configuration analysis and the comparison revealed common rules and different tendencies. The analysis makes it possible to read the drawing from another viewpoint.