Quote:
Originally Posted by johnliu
These renderings aren't in technical manuals. They are being used for sales and PR purposes. They should be more true to life.
"When those tools are misused, the resulting visualizations can lack clarity, or worse still, they can be downright deceptive." https://architizer.com/blog/practice...ng-7-mistakes/
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If you're curious about the conventions of architectural drawing I'd advise you to go pick up a copy of
Architectural Graphics by Francis Ching. The practice of drawing buildings in 2-point perspective has been around since the Renaissance.
The distortion in the above image is entirely because it's a tall building, and the architects chose to do one image that both shows the buidling from street
and shows the entire height of the building. Have a look at the renderings for
140 SW Columbia. All of the renderings are either drawn from mid-way up the building or are drawn from the ground level and cropped a few stories up. If they'd chosen to portray the entire height of the building in the renderings done from ground level you'd see the same effect.