Leon Battista Alberti, Mental Rotation and the Origins of 3D Computer Modelling

It is a fundamental assumption of modern architectural practice that all spatial relationships on a building are mathematically definable and can be systematically described by means of two-dimensional representations generated using procedures based on quantification. It is, for instance, this assumption that makes three-dimensional computer modeling possible. This paper analyzes the historical origins of this approach to visual communication about architectural works and its first explicit articulation in the work of Leon Battista Alberti.