Part of the way up

"Mid Aerials as typically done when the area in front of the building needs greater emphasis"
Getting higher than a building can places unwanted emphasis on roof top, the great expanse beyond the building and typically flattens the experience by moving the viewer higher and further away from the actual building. A mid aerial brings you into the building, elevates enough to show that which can't be seen from the ground level point of view as a important descriptive means though typically cannot be experienced unless you have a viewpoint, balcony, hillside to see the view from. If done well the perspective be just as dynamic and interesting as a ground level. Multiple view are looked at from various height to determine and accessing that which is gain by elevating vs that which is lost in terms of intimacy.





























