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Original scientific paper

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The Room as a Starting Point in Architectural Design: Childhood Memory and the Formation of Spatial Understanding

By
Jelena Stanković Aćić ,
Jelena Stanković Aćić
Contact Jelena Stanković Aćić

Faculty of Architecture, Civil Engineering and Geodesy, University of Banja Luka , Banja Luka , Bosnia and Herzegovina

Diana Stupar
Diana Stupar

Architecture, Faculty of Architecture, Civil Engineering and Geodesy, University of Banja Luka , Banja Luka , Bosnia and Herzegovina

Abstract

This paper portrays the room as the fundamental beginning of architecture, exploring how our earliest spatial memories shape the way we perceive and understand architectural space. Drawing on Louis Kahn's philosophical reflections on the room as architecture's elemental unit, the insights of Peter Zumthor and other architects on childhood memories, and empirical evidence from 78 architecture students' representations of their earliest spatial recollections, this paper explores the formative role of early spatial perception in the development of architectural consciousness. Our analysis identifies seven recurring themes in spatial memory that resonate with Kahn's theoretical framework: the primacy of light and openings, the significance of haptic experience, child-scale perception, the room as a refuge, the integration of organic elements, spaces defined by movement, and rooms activated by human presence. These findings suggest that architectural theory is rooted not merely in intellectual construction but in universal human experience. The room emerges as a complex constellation of memory, identity, and embodied experience—an elemental starting point from which architecture evolves both individually and collectively.

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