quailitative
openness
A more useful understanding would be that architecture is concerned with the careful planning of the relative locations of things in space; of objects, materials, openings, and so on, and their respective proportions and proximities. This is more accurate. After all, walls, ceilings, floors, doors, and windows are the material facts of any building and are therefore the components used to create them.
But this view of materials and objects as ends in themselves is also limiting. One may feel a sneaking suspicion that these elements are simply tools for shaping another, more primary goal.
It is this qualitative openness that architecture is capable of initiating. This perspective allows for the possibility of shaping and enhancing the human experience in and through the built environment. Seen this way, buildings and gardens and other constructed spaces are not merely containers for activity but are active participants in shaping how we feel, move, and interact. We may choose then to see architecture as an open invitation to a relationship between our bodies, our selves, and that which is near to us.