Just as the colors of an abstract painting or photograph can produce a certain mood, so can the colors of a building or room profoundly influence how the people using it feel. Physiologically, study after study has shown that blue light slows the production of melatonin, keeping people more alert or awake even at night. Psychologically, people associate certain colors with certain feelings due to cultural symbols and lived experiences – for example, they might perceive the color red as menacing or frightening because of its connection to blood.
Altogether, the way a room is colored can have complex effects on how its users feel, while a façade can be perceived in dramatically different ways depending on how it is colored. Below, we summarize the emotional associations of every color, assessing their differing effects as each is used in architectural space.
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Pantone Reveals "Inventive and Transformative" 2022 Color of the Year
Pantone has revealed its Color of the Year for 2022; 17-3938 Very Peri, a brand new color "whose courageous presence encourages personal inventiveness and creativity". The shade falls under the blue color family but with violet red undertones, illustrating the fusion of our modern times and how the digital world has morphed with our physical one. In architecture, shades of periwinkle blue and lavender have long been used in installations, commercial spaces, and lighting, instilling an overall calming, optimistic, and positive effect on the human mind.
https://www.archdaily.com/973451/10-projects-that-use-pantones-newly-revealed-inventive-and-transformative-2022-color-of-the-yearDima Stouhi
Hotel Encanto Acapulco / Miguel Angel Aragonés
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Architects: Miguel Angel Aragonés
- Area: 45931 m²
- Year: 2010
https://www.archdaily.com/181008/hotel-encanto-acapulco-miguel-angel-aragonesMegan Jett