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The Heavy Anchor: Why the Hearth Lost Its Flame but Retained Its Spatial Power

The modern fireplace presents one of the strangest contradictions in domestic architecture. Millions of homeowners spend thousands on fireplaces they never intend to use. Developers install them in homes with sophisticated climate control systems. Designers build entire living rooms around them. Buyers still ask for them during property searches. The practical need vanished, yet the spatial authority remained. A visitor from the fifteenth century would understand the layout of many twenty-first-century living rooms almost instantly. The visitor would recognize the central wall. The visitor would recognize the arrangement of seating. The visitor would recognize the social geometry that directs attention toward a single point. What would confuse that visitor involves the absence of necessity. Nobody needs the fireplace anymore, yet everybody still treats it as if they do. Some architects dismiss the phenomenon as a habit. They argue that builders inherited a design template and never aba...

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