MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
The idea that people, working through consensus, can solve basic problems such as how to regulate public space, security and infrastructure is one of the most powerful spurs to current architectural thinking. Younger architects and planners are studying how people actually use space rather than adopting top-down design ideas fashioned by governments or urban theorists. A new sense of post-Utopian architecture is replacing older, modernist efforts to impose ideal order on the intractable city. After analyzing how people in Rio de Janeiro’s largest favela, or shanty town, respond to their harsh urban environment, the architects at Atelier UM+D (based in southern Brazil) proposed designs for an innovative skyscraper that would blur the lines between public and private space, organize residents around basic needs such as food and medical care, and allow for far greater adaptability than most carefully programmed urban buildings.
Comments
Have a lot of stuff going through my mind right now - and that includes the notion of liminal space which popped up in my mind in response to someone's comment. I was thinking of the psychological liminal space - but there is also the architectural notion of liminal space. There is deep connection between the two imo in terms of how people respond to their physical environment - one that I don't have the time to explore at the moment. But I think it also feeds back to the notions of horizontal and vertical structures of governance. One variant is the means by which we come to decisions on complex open-ended problems - ie no one right answer, and with problems that emerge as the result of any of the answers that are options. The question of time - the time it takes to make the decision - arises in consensus in part because the physical world continues to move forward without regard to whether a decision is made or not. Any how...
by Elusive Trope on Thu, 11/10/2011 - 2:59pm