The City As The Object of Architecture Author(s) : Mario Gandelsonas Source: Assemblage, Dec., 1998, No. 37 (Dec., 1998), Pp. 128-144 Published By: The MIT Press

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The City as the Object of Architecture

Author(s): Mario Gandelsonas


Source: Assemblage , Dec., 1998, No. 37 (Dec., 1998), pp. 128-144
Published by: The MIT Press

Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/3171359

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Assemblage

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1, 2. Max Ernst, The Master's
Bedroom, 1920; Kolner
Lehrmittelanstalt, detail of
teaching aid sheet

Mario Gandelsonas
The City as the Obje
of Architecture

Mario Gandelsonas is a professor of The fantasies imagined by European modernist urbanism


architecture at Princeton University (for example, Le Corbusier's architectural urban fantasy of a
and a partner in the design firm
city of glass towers on a park, with wide streets on a gridded
Agrest & Gandelsonas Architects.
pattern, where people walk on elevated walkways) depict the
This essay will appear as a chapter in
his forthcoming book X-Urbanism: impossible relation of architecture to the object-cause of its
Architecture and the American City desire, the city. The object of the fantasy neither exists in the
(Princeton Architectural Press, 1999). reality of the city nor can it be literally realized. Why would
architects fantasize a totally different city only fifty years after
the nineteenth-century rebuilding of the European cities
with a totally different strategy - monumental boulevards
defined by street walls cut through the medieval fabric? Be-
cause the modernist architect's desire was not for the existing
city, because more in general, desire is not something given:
urban fantasies construct architecture's desire itself by giving
its coordinates, by locating its subject and specifying its ob-
ject.' The construction of desire entails not just depicting a
future scene and designating its elements - the garden with
objects, the modernist grid, the Cartesian skyscraper - but
also designating the gaze that witnesses it. In the case of Le
Corbusier, a critical fantasy is directed against the classical
city. The gaze comes from the conservative architects and
politicians who want to preserve the old European cities as
reality and model, cities that, in Le Corbusier's modernist
eyes, were crushed by history, stuffed with old buildings with
Assemblage 37: 128-144 @ 1998 by Mario Gandelsonas dark interiors and paralyzed by congested streets.

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assemblage 37

The city has been the object of architectural desire from the Two architectural fantasies concerning the subject and the ob-
moment architectural discourse was established with Alberti's ject designate the elements that could not be integrated in the
theory: an articulation of two illegible texts, one written symbolic structure of architecture. The first is the artistic fan-
(Vitruvius's Ten Books on Architecture) and one built (the Ro- tasy where architecture establishes its place as an artistic prac-
man ruins).2 The constitutive moment represented by Alberti tice, defining a creative subject while occupying the place of
takes place at a time when, in Europe, the cities as a political the builder: it is a doubling of architecture that wants to be in
economic structure "come back."3 It is in this context that two places at the same time. The definition of architecture as
architecture is called into being in relation to the city as its the "mother" of the other arts obscures the reality of the dis-
other. This relationship was established on the basis of a turbing in-between that defines architecture as a practice
"shared" object, the building as the object of both practices. where the architect is neither an autonomous artist nor a car-

In fact, the signifier /building/ collapses two objects-the ur- penter building for a "client" in the context of the city. Corre-
ban building and the architectural building - as one. The lated to this subject, this fantasy defines an object that also
building, as part of the city, is "outside" architecture;4 it is pretends to be in two places at the same time: in the design,
simply a pile of stones. Beauty and ornament can transform which in this fantasy starts from scratch (devised through the
the stones into an architectural building, a transformation architect's own mind and energy), and in the body of the build-
that paradoxically requires a separation of the architect from ing (realized by construction). The effect of the doubling of the
the building, from its site, from its construction. object is the concealment of the apparatus of representation
and of the drawing as the space of architectural production.
The constitutive act establishes a difference, a distance be-
tween the architect and the builder, the urban building and The second object-subject fantasy is the urban fantasy:
the architectural building, that will result in a separation architecture's desire to domesticate the wild economic and
structured as a relation of subordination. From the position of political forces that traverse the urban body to impose an or-
domination, the architect will attempt to close the gap, to at- der. It is the doubling of architecture that wants to be within
tain that which was lost in the differentiation: the building. its own boundaries and to have an effect outside. The archi-
The lack is sutured by representing what had been excluded tectural-urban fantasy - an architectural universe of build-
in establishing its identity: the work of the carpenter, the con- ings in which the city is the largest building - fills out a
struction of the building with the hands instead of the mind. fundamental lack in architecture, the void left by the loss of
The architectural discourse that becomes an integral part the reality of the process of construction and of the building
of the practice will register the string of exclusions as the itself. The fantasy implies the reduction of the physical-spa-
nonmarked terms in an oppositional structure. Where the tial reality of the city to the status of the architectural build-
building, the builder, and the site are represented by discur- ing: the city as an object of architectural desire is the city as
sive "stand-ins," this oppositional structure will split the building.' The moment the architectural gaze hits the city, its
building into opposing sites (the architect's atelier versus the shapes become the focus, an opening toward a symbolic pro-
construction site), the skills into opposing practices (architect cess that eclipses the actions that take place in it, that shifts
versus builder), and the means of production into opposing the focus from the urban scene where "life" takes place to the
techniques (design versus building). stage itself, where real time recedes and space comes to the

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Gandelsonas

Despite
foreground. But the reality of the city as a process, the impossibility of architecture to force a total
as an eco-
upon the urban play, despite the constant failure to re
nomic dynamo,6 a place of both physical and nonphysical
total of
exchange, has always resisted the suppression of time, order,
dif- since the Renaissance, architects have prop
ference, of the contingent, of its reduction to the totalizing
status of adesigns in Europe. Starting with the early arc
building; that is, to the spatiality and totalizing naturetreatises
tural of thesuch as Antonio Averlino Filarete's Treatise on
object implied by the architectural urban practice. Neverthe-
Architecture, these designs have depicted the configuration of
less, while the architectural urban fantasies will never
entire reach
cities, not just plans but also architectural buildings, a
notion that
their object, they will make possible the triangulation persists until the modernist urbanistic theories.
among
These
architecture, the European city, and the American architectural fantasies are realized in partial and frag-
city.'
mented ways: different degrees and kinds of architectural do-
The Object of the Urban Fantasy mestication and sometimes articulations between

architecture and the city have taken place in Europe as a re-


The city has always eluded the architect. It has been attainable
sult of particular political conjunctures (papal Rome, royal
neither in space (for instance, when the Renaissance city was
Paris, etc.) that made it possible. While the nonarchitectural
projected across the Atlantic) nor in time (when the Baroque
urban fantasies in America, the gridded city, the city of sky-
city was realized in the late 1800s).8 A major obstacle to archi-
scrapers, and the suburban city have always been realized,
tecture, which has always been dependent on totalizing notions
the difficulty of imposing an architectural order beyond the
- the city as building or the city as network of monuments -
plan has always been enormous." Yet the American context
is the city's resistance to the notion of a whole. The city pre-
paradoxically provides the conditions for one architectural
sents to architecture an open play of differences within a poten-
fantasy to be realized and to function as the exception: Wash-
tially infinite field of shapes. Since this field resists closure, the
ington, D.C., the city representing the Union." Washington
city stands as an obstacle to the architectural efforts to domesti-
is the only American city whose identity is defined by repeat-
cate this play, to impose a totalizing order. Another obstacle is
edly striving to inscribe a totalizing order. This effort, which
presented in architecture itself: it is architecture's resistance to
is staged apparently as a play of distorting mirrors reflecting
the temporal dimension where the urban processes take place.
the European city,'2 has the role of suturing in the physical
These processes always overflow the institutionalized frame-
reality of the city the successive voids produced: first by the
work of the practice of architecture, which, in its pursuit of the
political cut effected by the Revolution and then by the divi-
city, can approach it but never quite get there. Architecture is
sion and struggle among states that culminates in the Civil
too slow or too fast, it rebuilds the past or projects an impos-
War. The unique history of Washington has been deter-
sible future,9 but it can never insert itself into the contingency
mined by a double condition of"otherness": Washington, the
of the urban present. The movement of the choreography of
"internal other" of the other American cities, is an uncanny
desire flows from architecture to the city, from the architec-
refraction of its "external other," the European city."
tural to the nonarchitectural. But desire also flows back from

the city (the nonarchitectural) to architecture. It isThe


in resistance
this spacethat architecture finds in the American city is
where the imaginary and symbolic constructions that correlated to the resistance within architecture to consider the
architec-
American city in architectural terms. For hundreds of years,
ture fantasizes in its pursuit of the city are assembled.

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assemblage 37

since Alberti, architects had gone to Rome, not just to measure city. With the opening to the American city comes the chal-
the buildings themselves, but to expose the subject of architec- lenge for architecture proposed by the introduction of the
ture to the gaze of the ruins, of the built text that constituted skyscraper; a building type that deals with the extremely high
the practice. The American city, as opposed to Rome, was be- density but that also questions both the traditional city of
yond the architectural field of vision, not just because it was fabric, the traditional scene where architecture was always
considered an inferior version of the European city, but also staged, and the notion of type itself, which in the nineteenth
because of what was considered the deficient configuration of century came to occupy a prominent role in architectural
its gridded plan. This resistance weakens when the European theory and practice. The challenge presented to architecture
architects are subject to the gaze of the American city in the by the American city provokes and produces the urban muta-
late nineteenth and early twentieth century; that is, the gaze of tion introduced by the radical European modernist fantasies.
the modern city, the gaze coming from the future. The effect
of this "evil eye" is ultimately devastating for the architectural While the previous fantasies were rereadings of the Roman
status quo: a violent reaction takes place against classical archi- and Greek cities of the past - and the Baroque reaction
tecture and a new architectural universe is invented. against these readings - the new fantasies look at the scene
of the future, the American city. They do not, however, see
While the architectural gaze produces, in some instances,
the city of skyscrapers: the urban fantasy functions now as a
urban restructurings (that ultimately never coincide with the
screen that not only hides the antagonisms in the relation be-
architects' desire), the urban gaze produces traumatic effects
tween architecture and the city, but keeps the American city
on architecture. In looking back at "architecture from with-
out of sight or located in a blind spot.
out," the city interpellates architecture,"4 inducing sometimes
pathological urban fantasies. Pope Sixtus V's Rome, Bernini's
St. Peter's Square, Piranesi's readings of Rome, Ledoux's The Subject of the Urban Fantasy
ideal city, and Le Corbusier's Ville Contemporaine are not
Correlated to its object (the city), the urban fantasy provides
part of the "normal" discourse of architecture, but are symp-
the location of a subject, not very different from the "creative
tomatically excessive, out of place with respect to their discur-
subject" of the artistic fantasy.16 This subject is blind to the re-
sive contexts."5 Why? Because of the constitutive role of the
ality of a city always already present, the result of accretion, of
city in the establishment of the architectural practice and the
the overlapping of successive traces on a ground that retains
traumatic effect of any attempt to "reintroduce it" into archi-
them, a city that resists the notion of starting from scratch, of
tecture. Because of the historical failure in this repression of
being constructed by architectural fantasies on a blank piece
the city, which has both been contained outside architecture
of paper as a fact that has not yet been built, a city that resists
and represented inside architecture through urban fantasies.
being considered an architectural building. The creative sub-
The traumatic effects of the radical changes that take place ject of the urban fantasy inhabits a scene of production that is
in the early twentieth century are overdetermined by the almost fully occupied by a multiplicity of economic and po-
confrontation with new challenges due to the reversal in the litical actors, of practices other than architecture, and fails to
direction of flows in the historical triangular relationship recognize another possible location for the construction of the
among architecture, the European city, and the American urban fantasy scene: the space of reception."

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Gandelsonas

The displacement to the space of reception will taketoplace


overlap
at a with the architectural object. The urban build
and spaces
point when the traumatic urban restructuring in postwar Europeaddressed by Lynch at a point in history wher
ban
and America produces a break, a discontinuity, in the renewal destroys the center city are "innocent" - th
relatively
stable structures that organize the recognition of thehave
city.not
Theyet been hit by the architectural gaze, they are
of "reality,"
cities produced by the suburbanization of the American city and a stage where "life" and social actions take p
The
the postwar European reconstruction are illegible, an question addressed by Lynch is the "clarity and legib
illegibility
of the with
that particularly concerns the architect. The confrontation cityscape," the ease with which its parts can be re
the new city that emerges in the late 1950s and earlynized
1960s and
re- organized into a coherent pattern to provide c
sults in a theoretical production that accomplishes a to orientation.22
critical shift Lynch's desire, at a time when the cent
city is mutating
in the position of the architectural subject, from production to into something else, the center erased a
suburban
reception, from writing to reading."s This displacement city "taking over" the previous city, is not to k
will pro-
duce a major break in the mid-1960s with respect toand enjoy
1920s the form of the city, but to know how to reco
mod-
ernist architecture's failed attempt to produce a city and use the form of the city.23 Lynch's city is primarily a
by locating
itself in the traditional site of production. municational device, a "transitive" artifact intended to pr
directions, to point toward a destination.24
Reading the city presupposes a subject that is defined by a par-
ticular "quilting" that fixates the meaning of the multiplicity
Lynch's functionalist view constructs a city as a place of
of urban signifiers.19 The illegibility of the new city raises the
known trajectories, where the illegibility and the resulti
need to "quilt" the new and old floating signifiers, to fix their
opacity created by the restructuring of the city give way t
meaning, making the city legible again by introducing a major
transparent city. Paradoxically, when the totally clear an
signifier to structure the signifying field. This quilting was at-
ible city becomes a transitive and neutral vessel for conv
tempted not just by architects but by various observers who
information, we no longer see the city, in the same way
worked in the field of the social sciences and found their ob-
language becomes invisible when we are using it (as oppo
ject of study in the city, including behavioral scientists, soci-
to the opaque language of poetry, where language itself i
ologists, and planners; for instance, the disoriented subject and
the focus). Architecture is also interested in making the
the question of legibility in Kevin Lynch, the disembodied
"visible" and has therefore introduced opacity into the ci
exurbanite and the question of nonplace produced by the
throughout history, a gesture that was magnified by mod
new electronic technology in Melvin Webber, the passive
architecture. But this was an opacity that presupposed a
audience of a spectacular society in Guy Debord, and the
ible, transparent, and therefore invisible prearchitectural
prearchitectural (structuralist) urban reader in Michel de
So what is to be done when, for the first time in urban h
Certeau.20 What these different quiltings have in common is
this "natural," prearchitectural city becomes opaque, as
that they ignore and/or suppress the architectural view of the
case of Europe and America in the 1960s? As opposed to
city, and the questions of form and visual enjoyment of the city,
shocking "newness" of modern architecture vis-a-vis the
the flow that relates the nonarchitectural city to architecture.
cal city (which brings opacity to the level of expression),
postmodernist
Particularly relevant to our discussion is Kevin Lynch's 1960 architects of the mid-1960s produce an "u
cannyseems
text The Image of the City, because his object of study homeliness" and therefore opacity at the level of c

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assemblage 37

tent.25 This major restructuring of the theory and practice of ing the urban sprawl produced by the suburban city. In a
architecture is produced by the displacement in architectural strategic move, they align themselves with the vanguard
production from designing and "writing" a new city to reading culture of the 1950s and early 1960s. Particularly, they align
a "ready-made" city, and by a correlated displacement of the themselves with pop art (especially painting), subverting the
architect from the traditional position of creative agent to the boundaries of architecture, erasing the distinction between
new position of architectural observer who rewrites the exist- high (architecture) and low (sprawl); that is, proposing an
ing city. Aldo Rossi in Europe and Denise Scott Brown and equality and interchangeability of architectural and non-
Robert Venturi in America produce this displacement.26 architectural shapes. In Learning from Las Vegas, Venturi
and Scott Brown radicalize Venturi's position in Complexity
Rossi's Architecture of the City presents a theory involving the and Contradiction in Architecture by focusing on the new
persistence of form, the insistence of urban traces in the per- cityscape that results from the suburban mutation, instead of
manent process of differentiation that characterizes the histori-
on the permanent elements of the city. While Rossi's concept
cal city.27 Rossi proposes a displacement in the location of the of permanence alludes to the structural resistance to urban
architectural subject of the architectural fantasy, switching its amnesia, the Venturi/Scott Brown reading refers to the resis-
traditional location from the place of production to the place tance of architecture to the new observer, an observer that
of reception, from writing to reading. When the city and the breaks away from the traditional ambulatory subject to pro-
architectural building are seen in terms of production, "one is duce a reading in motion (from the car) of a city of signs, and
the product of the public, the other one is for the public" and
to the architectural resistance to the new configurations, both
therefore the only place available in the city for the architect lexical and syntactic, produced by urban sprawl.
is the place of the viewer.28 What allows this change of loca-
With Rossi and Venturi/Scott Brown, architecture is drasti-
tion is the extension of the architectural notion of type to
nonarchitectural buildings to the fabric of the city. By doing cally restructured and the object of architectural desire is dis-

this, Rossi subverts the constitutive distinction between archi- placed. What the architect desires in the mid-1960s is not just

tectural building and urban building, which is "brought into" the repertory of configurations and shapes given by a totaliz-

architecture. What allows this to happen is the notion of anal- ing architectural urban fantasy. The desire now is to produce

ogy, which in Rossi's theory occupies a prominent place. The the articulation of the temporal diachronic axis of architecture

effect of the analogical mechanism is a displacement of forms, - the closed space of architectural competence that stands

objects, and urban buildings that subvert the humanist notion as a challenge to the "formal disorder" of the city, architec-

of scale and the boundaries of architecture itself, opening its ture as "high art" - to the synchronic axis of the city - the

lexicon to include the city and the world of ordinary objects.29 cultural dimension that includes today the "low art" of the

Rossi's notion of permanence in the long duration of the con- urban building, of the developer, and of mass culture, which

stantly changing city, a reading in which he articulates the city challenges and opens up the limits of the architectural. This

to Ferdinand de Saussure's notion of langue,30 allows him desire has been present since Alberti, when he described the

metonymically to place architecture in the space of writing. architect as someone who needs to master not only specific
architectural knowledge but knowledge of various cultural
In America, Venturi and Scott Brown perform a similar op- practices. The impossibility of realizing this desire for an ar-
eration of displacement of the architectural observer by read- ticulation between architecture and the other cultural prac-

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Gandelsonas

tices - for a "balance" between them, because of different


intervention and the production of alternative configurat
specificities and historical developments, and, ultimately, an actively changes the way we read the city in
This process
antagonism between the two axes, the fact that the articula-
first moment in an effort to change the city. This is a pr
tion will always, in the end, fail - sustains the citythat
as an
opens up the play of form frozen by both the global ci
object of desire. The diachronic axis is the space where
capitalhis-
and an architecture inhibited by the enormous we
torical returns take place even when they appear asof
a modernist
break.31 architecture; a play of form where form is no
The postmodernist articulation that takes place inthe
theperceived
1960s shape of the city's physical configuration b
with Rossi and Venturi/Scott Brown produces a historical
textual re-
construction (visual-discursive).34
turn that does not necessarily imply a literal repetition, but
The textual metaphor opens up new questions about the
rather the establishment of the ground where "formal inven-
architecture, and the problematic of their articulation.35
tion is redeployed, where social meaning is resignified, and
What is the city if it can be represented by a text? And w
where cultural capital is reinvested.""32 While attempting to
kind of text is the city? The textual metaphor opens up t
articulate itself to the urban field, architecture produces
question of the city as memory (of its people); that is, th
and develops new forms, not just the known forms of its own
as inscription of both permanent traces and the possibilit
"local" architectural forms, but also marginal forms by which
their erasure. The city not just as another form of writin
dominant forms are resisted and/or subverted.33
(writing itself being a supplement to memory) or as a sup
ment to other cultural texts, but more specifically as a w
Architectural Readings of the Urban Textmechanism, similar to the "mystical pad," the topograph
model that Freud constructed as an articulation of writin
The X-Urban mutation of the American city in the 1980s and
and the unconscious.36 The displacement of this "topo-
1990s presents new difficulties for the articulation of architec-
graphic" model to the urban text allows us to account for
ture and the city. But it also opens new opportunities - and
simultaneous and contradictory requirements of perman
not just for a relationship between the city and architecture
and erasure that characterize the city. What justifies this
where the city remains unchanged while architecture changes
placement is that, at one level, we are dealing in the city
itself in an attempt to celebrate the X-Urban city, paralleling
buildings and spaces that are always open to changes, wi
Venturi's celebration of the suburban city. The present urban
level that has an unlimited capacity to transform. At ano
conjuncture also presents opportunities for an articulation; that
level, we are also dealing with the urban plan, which can
is, for the development of a politically resistant form of urban
seen as the ground where the traces are inscribed and in
architecture that transforms itself while it questions, and trans-
nitely retained while everything else changes.37 But ther
forms, the status quo of a system committed solely to profit.
also a third level, one of social and cultural forces, of pra
The strategy presented here points in this direction.tices and institutions, that reconciles the other two, that
It attempts
makes possible the realization of the individual building
to "radicalize" the restructuring of architecture accomplished
the just
in the 1960s, in particular, the reading of the city, not collective
by ground, the transformation of time into sp
of history
looking away to the nonarchitectural urban buildings but by into geography. The city as the object of arch
tural of
displacing the gaze to the plan, by opening up a process desire is the one that embodies the two contradicto
relative autonomy as an investigation of alternativelevels and
spaces of their possible reconciliation.38 There is no pla

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assemblage 37

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Gandelsonas

architecture either in the city of memory (which would be a IIGI-;i

dead city, a museum, a tableau, and where articulation is im-


possible) or in the city of constant change (where nothing _-i~ii

remains). In fact, these extremes designate the limits of the


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~S~ggglC~ll(p~l~i?Liii~~ .:':.-
-il_ :::-I:,
:I;i :,::_
-:i3i- .:. .

with the reproduction of the text (historical preservation) and


:::j--::::::: :-:::
:::-::-:
::

:::_i:i :::- ....::: ::-::-:


ends with its deletion (tabula rasa). These two extremes are :-:::-
::::-::

:-::-
:_i ::::-::-
B? ?" :-::::
the boundaries where a multiplicity of strategies and tactics
::~::::
:::,:
_iDi
ilil:
i'liii:iiiib:i-: ::-:::-
isi: i
':i ::::--: -
define the reading mechanism.39 This strange confrontation ii8iiii -::::::?? .'.. -i:-:::::-
:-:i:_:: -i-z-:- :-:::::--:::-w::_:::-.-:: :;--- :::--::
-i~?~~: :::~ :::::_:_:: :-z:::-
----1:i-:-- -' :::,i.r-:::: :::::s:::: ::~-?~:i:- :-i-i-:
::~::--
:_-I:::
j-
.':. :

~ii --::-:.:ii-ici:i::- :iiii~i:i-:


rr:::: : ::--:-:: :::j::: :::i:::

~-L_:
of architecture's reading with urban writing generates ? Di'::
the ::::::- -Q--- ::-~:
-i-i:,-:-P-::::- --:=i:i
....
:i:-::
i- i-:
' -- ?
space of articulation, a space where the city resists architec-
::

-i:::: :i:
18- _::-::-
ture's desire to transform it and where architecture insistsion:-:-::-:
:.:: i::::
--::--
__--::-_
:-:;::,::::::_
::: I: ii

..:.: -:::-::::
'-- .'---'--
::':::: :jiTI
-:::~::
=.-

its transformation.40 This very essay represents another itera-


tion of this insistence. 5. Los Angeles: grid puzzle

The architectural reading mechanism is a historical construc-


tion, constantly restructured by different optical regimes. It is
first described by Alberti as "standing in front of the building"
as a mathematics of imaginary additions and subtractions but
also transformations, which at that point in history do not dis-
tinguish between the reality of the building and its representa-

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assemblage 37

tion.41 A different notion of reading is at work in Andrea In this first level of reading, the plan - a two-dimensional
Palladio's Four Books of Architecture. With this publication of section through the city seen as solids and voids that elimi-
his designs (as opposed to the representation of the buildings), nates the familiar images of the vertical dimension and their
Palladio shows the effect of the optical regime instated by the sequential perception in time - is framed by the reading
camera obscura that separates the building and its projection.42 mechanism providing the entry into the urban text, cutting
The same effect is evident in Giovanni Battista Piranesi's fic- through, fracturing the unlimited perceptual surface of the
tional drawings for the Campo Marzio, where not only the dif- X-Urban city. How is the frame established? By gravitating
ference between drawing and building but also the autonomy toward the areas of "scriptural density," the areas of the urban
of drawing is reaffirmed. With twentieth-century modernism, field that present the maximum intensity of tension between
and in particular with Le Corbusier, the identification of per- permanence and change, where two or more layers of rewrit-
ception and object ends and perception itself becomes the ob- ing have left indelible traces. Within this frame, the analyti-
ject of the reading mechanism. According to Le Corbusier, cal drawings emphasize graphically the elements of the plan
architecture should only be concerned with that which is ac- that deviate from the neutral grid. For instance, they frag-
cessible to the eye. The reading mechanism constructs its ob- ment (New York) and delayer the plan (Boston) and the
ject as a systematic structure of oppositions that organizes fabric (New Haven) to depict the modes of coexistence or
movement in a sequence propelled by the perception of fore- multiple gridded and nongridded configurations (Des
ground versus background, shadows versus light, vertical ver- Moines). They examine the discontinuities in the grid (Atlan-
sus horizontal, and so forth.43 tic City). They reintroduce and delaminate the grid in its
constituent directions (Chicago). The vertical dimension
What is the object of the reading mechanism at work in the
given by the buildings complements and/or supplements this
urban drawings presented in this text? The question of desire;
analysis in the cases where it plays a significant role, for in-
that is, the question of the "urban unconscious" in the pro-
stance in the representation of the typological transformations
cess of articulation of architecture and the city. The process
of Wilshire Boulevard (Los Angeles).45
of reading that breaks away from the modernist perceptual
model, still pervasive and determinant in most contemporary The reading of the second level is guided by a floating atten-
readings, takes place on two levels. The first level is accessed tion. Here, as opposed to the first level, the reading drifts and
through a differential analysis based on the plan, which is proceeds without knowing, retroactively determining the defi-
seen as part of the architectural apparatus.44 This view of the nition of the frame.46 This framed plan as a field of events mo-
urban plan radicalizes the timid modernist extrusion of the bilizes a "half desire" of the order of "liking" and not a "'full
urban plan as opposed to the modernists' view of the archi- desire' of the order of loving" mobilized by the symptom.47
tectural plan as a battlefield where the antagonism between Symptoms appear as disturbances of the plan (the anomalies
"preexistent ideas" and the intention motrice is deployed and that disrupt the order) and the discourse (they cannot be la-
fought. The plan is approached with a multiplicity of reading beled within architectural discourse, they need to be named).
strategies that range from architectural determination implied Whereas the construction of the first level presupposes a con-
by the modernist notion of "the plan as generator" to the pure scious investment in the field, the symptoms that punctuate
contingency embodied in the American city, where the plan the field rise toward us to enter our unconscious. The urban

plays with or against the architectural sections that rewrite it. drawings result from this symptomatic reading where the

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Gandelsonas

6. Chicago: diagonals
destabilizing the service alleys

7. Chicago: diagonals
destabilizing the grid

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assemblage 37

architect's gaze confronts the failures, the "lapsus" of the ur- tween the apolitical architectural commitment to object-fetish-
ban text,"4 which undermine the surface of the first level, lift- ism and the hopelessness of an urbanism that clings to the past
ing the architectural boundaries that block the access to other as a way to obstruct the future.52 "It is both about freedom"
readings.49 Taking the plan as a point of departure for the ur- (the possibility of inventing a new articulation between city
ban drawings as ready-made establishes a link with the opera- and architecture) "and about duty" (the necessity of traversing
tions developed by Max Ernst in what critic Rosalind Krauss the city if we are to deal with its historical suppression through
calls his "overpaintings." In particular, in Ernst's Master Bed- architectural fantasy), and not about the affectivity of desire.53
room, "the mechanism of the Mystic writing pad finds its ana-
The displacement to the scene of reading as the starting mo-
log in the underlying sheet of the (ready-made) teaching aid
ment for the process of architectural rewriting - where reading
page ... while the top sheet appears in the perspectival cover-
the city is not aimed at an accurate representation but at start-
ing produced by the gouache overpainting."50 In the urban
ing the process of forging a new city - opens up new questions
drawings the underlying sheet is the urban plan and instead of
about the scene of writing, about its historical location, about
an overpainting, a process of deletion - manual or elec-
the need to build a new site. The first architectural urban site in
tronic, as in the Chicago and Des Moines computer drawings
the American city is the foundation plan, an ever-expanding res-
- "deliminates" the plan to create layers that can be over-
ervoir of urban configurations, originally modeled by the Euro-
lapped in different combinations to produce sequences of
peans after architectural plans for the colonial city. The second
drawings. The drawings are written as a dialogue between two
site, at the beginning of the twentieth century, is the city plan
discourses, the ready-made plan that acts as a background
that aims to restructure and/or to regulate urban growth. In this
against which the architectural writing is inscribed. The float-
second moment that culminates with the City Beautiful move-
ing attention fluctuates between depiction and rewriting (or
ment, from the Burnham Plan of Chicago (1908) to the New
writing subordinated to reading or reading as writing), blur-
York Regional Plan (1929), the initiative comes from architec-
ring their differences. It is a process where architecture and
ture, which aggressively attempts, and partially succeeds, to
the city occupy and switch the positions of analyst and
restructure the city. The third moment represents the starting
analysand (the one who is being analyzed), an alternation
point for the continuing shrinking of the site. The reaction of
where each practice traverses the "other" discursive surface,
the planners in the 1950s against the consideration of the city as
where architecture traverses the urban discourse, where the
an architectural object and their emphasis on process radically
city traverses the architectural discourse.
alters the situation concerning the stage and the actors. In the
name of "process," activities are seen as the dominant urban
force that denies the relative autonomy of configuration and the
Rewriting the City
possibility of an articulation architecture-city, closing the stage
The will to rewrite the city is not the architectural desire to to architecture and opening it up to economic-political plan-
write the city - it is the only way out of desire.51 It is the way ning. The spectatorial position taken by architects (as approving
out of the closure defined by the historical relationship be- or critical spectators) who abandon the active urban interven-
tween architecture and the city, a closure represented today in tions that characterized the previous period overdetermines the
the opposition between avant-gardism and traditionalism, be- lack of impact of their projects.

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Gandelsonas

8. Des Moines: topographic constellatio


with city grid

!! " :

---- -- - -- -- - -- -- - .. . ... . - - -

;.. :, '

...: ....... .......I- ... .

9. Des Moines: to
with names

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assemblage 37

To build a new architectural site in the X-Urban city, a Notes 8. In implementing some Baroque
principles (albeit in a very different
change will be necessary in the space now occupied by the 1. See Slavoj Ziiek, The Sublime
historical context), the nineteenth-
Object of Ideology (New York:
master plan, the legal instrument that deals with the long- century capitals produced a city as
Verso, 1989).
term functional and physical processes that determine the different from the Baroque as the
2. This has allowed for multiple re- images produced by photography
configuration of a town or a city. The master plan's role is to interpretations of the original texts. were from Renaissance figuration
regulate these processes but also to fill a void, to mask the See Pollio Vitruvius, The Ten Books - despite the relationships be-
on Architecture, trans. Morris Hicky tween the photographic mechanism
absence of architecture.54 The shapes determined by its (New York: Dover, 1960). and perspective. However, the
regulations (which are answers to social/economic/political opening of the new boulevards in
3. Actually the cities have been back
Haussmannian Paris allowed the
questions), in the place of architecture, render the void in- since the 1100s. See Leonardo
fiction of the urban observer of the
visible and obscure the fact that architectural form is absent. Benevolo's The History of the City,
camera obscura to remain viable,
trans. Geoffrey Culverwell (Cam-
in a way paralleling photography's
From the initial moment when decisions about urban con- bridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 1980).
recreation and perpetuation of the
4. Leon Battista Alberti, On the Art
figuration take place, the displacement of the master plan subject of perspective.
of Building in Ten Books, trans. Jo-
opens up a space where architecture can play an active role
seph Rykwert, Neal Leach, and 9. See Franqoise Choay,
L'Urbanisme: Utopies et rdalitis
in its engagement with the X-Urban city. The Des Moines Robert Tavernor (Cambridge,
(Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1965).
Mass.: The MIT Press, 1988), 156.
Vision Plan, for example, represents a possible strategy for
10. The combination of democracy
5. ". .. for if a City, according to the
building a site in this space.55 This "vision plan" designates and capitalism produces an extraor-
Opinion of Philosophers, be no
a process of reading and rewriting that abandons the tradi- more than a great House, and, on dinary resistance to any attempt to
inscribe an architectural order.
tional discourse and practice of urbanism, the scale of the the other Hand, a House be a little
City .. ." (Alberti, On the Art of 11. Or, perhaps we should say "al-
architectural building object, its formal and symbolic strate- most" realized since Pierre-Charles
Building, 23).
gies, the principles of unity, continuity and homogeneity, L'Enfant was fired when he refused
6. Fernand Braudel, The Structures
to accommodate to various eco-
and begins the construction of a new imaginary where the of Everyday Life: The Limits of the
nomic-political constraints. See
cultural/aesthetic implications of urban form are articulatedPossible, vol. 1 of Civilization and John William Reps, The Making of
Capitalism: Fifteenth-Eighteenth
to the contemporary restructuring processes of the global Century (Berkeley: University of
Urban America: A History of City
Planning in the United States
city.56 Every one of the sites - the gridded foundation plan,California Press, 1992), 479.
(Princeton: Princeton University
the City Beautiful movement, the planner's notion of pro- 7. The separation of the two fanta- Press, 1965).
sies
cess as a critique and the city conceived as an object - pro- is a theoretical construction,
12. In doing so, Washington also
since they always work in tandem.
vided new opportunities that widened the possibilities for strove to transform an order that was
The separation makes it possible to
initially conceived as a physical set-
an articulation with architecture and expanded the urban perceive the changes in their role in
ting for autocratic forms of govern-
the long duration. For four hun-
play in multiple and even conflicting directions. The site ment.
dred years the artistic fantasy had a
built in the scene of reading confronts a past as a source of dominant role, and it is only in the 13. This doubling repeats at every
last
"suggestions of how to make the future different." The read- hundred years that the urban level. Washington's own history
fantasy has become dominant. This starts with a split caused by the dis-
ing of the city implies not preservation and protection, but change is overdetermined by the agreement over its location (North
rewriting as "discord to be resolved in previously unheard speed of urban growth, by the accel- versus South) and the compromise
eration in the rhythm of urban mu- that consolidated a single capital.
harmonies."571
tations, and by the reversal of the The survey of the new district was
flows from America to Europe dur- commissioned to Andrew Ellicott,
ing the last century. and Major L'Enfant (whose father

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Gandelsonas

was a court painter in Versailles)


writing since Alberti. The new situ- 22. The metaphor of the urban 27. We could say that, in an indirect
was commissioned first to drawation
the produces not just a reversal of landscape invoked by the term way, The Architecture of the City is a
ground and the plan of the city.
this position but also, as we will dis- "cityscape" produces the sense of an radical approach to the question of
The structure of the plan over-cuss, the blurring of the difference architectural connection. "A legible the European city through a reading
lapped two different strategies:between
"a production and reception. city would be one whose districts or of the American city. The original
regular distribution with every 18.
street landmarks or pathways are easily version and its translations in Eu-
See Aldo Rossi, The Architecture
at right angles . .. and diagonal av- identifiable and are easily grouped rope ignore the question; however,
of the City, trans. Diane Ghirardo
enues to and from every principal into an overall pattern." The prob- with his English translation, Rossi
and Joan Ockman (Cambridge,
place . . . giving them reciprocity of lem being the construction of orien- acknowledges the book as an effect
Mass.: The MIT Press, 1982), and
sight and making them thus seem- tational organizations within the of the gaze of the American city.
Robert Venturi, Complexity and
ingly connected" (Reps, The Mak- visual chaos of the modern city by
Contradiction in Architecture (New 28. Rossi, Architecture of the City
ing of Urban America, 256). York: Museum of Modern Art and means of the reduction of the city to
(emphasis mine). There is a strong
the same five elements that "de-
Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday,
14. For this use of interpellation, connection between the reader of
scribe" their image: path, edge, dis-
see Louis Althusser, "Ideology 1966).
and the architecture of the city in Rossi
trict, node, landmark. See ibid.
Ideological State Apparatuses," in and the surrealist conception of
19. I refer to Zifek's idea of quilt-
Lenin and Philosophy and Other 23. The social sciences could help the artist as an "agonized witness"
ing, which states that by sewing ur-
Essays, trans. Ben Brewster (New us recognize certain trajectories, to (Andre Briton in Nadja of 1928
ban configurations and meanings,
York: New Left Books, 1971). facilitate the flow of movement [New York: Grove Press, 1988]),
the structured system of oppositions
15. In turn, as we have seen, these
that make the city understandable
throughout the city. and the "surprised viewer" (Giorgio
de Chirico in Meditations of a
andthe
fantasies are introjected back by recognizable are produced (that 24. The Image of the City is a pre-
Painter of 1912). See Hal Foster's
is, streets/squares; monuments/fab-
city that is constantly restructured; structuralist reading that presupposes
in Baroque Rome when the entire ric; attached structures/detached reading of surrealism in Compul-
an inherent meaning carried by signs
sive Beauty (Cambridge, Mass.:
city rather than the Church became
structures; low-rise buildings/high- defined by a one-to-one relationship
The MIT Press, 1993).
a sacred space, in the Enlighten-
rise buildings; public buildings/pri- between signifier and signified.
ment when a new political-eco- 29. It also cancels the notion of
vate buildings; 25. These architects obviously pro-
nomic order was institutionalized,
Sublime Object ofetc.). See Zi.ek,
Ideology, passim.The scale and therefore a number of
duce opacity for the architectural
at the beginning of the twentieth rules of appropriateness.
20. See Kevin Lynch, The Image reader at the level of expression
century when the pressures of the
of the City (Cambridge, Mass.: since they introduce nonarchi- 30. The nonmotivated relationship
industrial city forced the restructur- between form and function that be-
Technology Press, 1960); Melvin tectural configurations as if they
ing of the old urban structures, and
M. Webber, "Urban Place and belonged to the architectural "lexi- comes obvious in the long duration
now again with the radical restruc-
Nonplace Urban Realm," in Explo- con." Here I am using "expression" of the "urban facts," as opposed to ar-
turing brought by the global infor- chitecture where the short duration
rations into Urban Structure (Phila- and "content" as in Louis Hjelm-
mational city.
delphia: University of Pennsylvania slev's model of the sign. See Louis provides the illusion of motivation.
16. Modernist architecture's notion
Press, 1964); Guy Debord, The So- Hjelmslev, Prolegomena to a Theory 31. We have to remember that a
ciety of the Spectacle, trans. Donald
of objet-type starts to weaken the of Language (Madison: University of historical return was constitutive of
creative subject with the idea ofNicholson-Smith
an (New York: Zone Wisconsin Press, 1961). the practice of architecture itself.
anonymous collective subject. Books,
But 1994); and Michel de 26. Rossi and Scott Brown/Venturi
perhaps as important as that is Certeau,
the The Practice of Everyday
32. See Foster, Compulsive Beauty.
reflect in their work what Jacques
idea of an autonomy of architec-Life, trans. Steven F. Rendall (Ber- 33. The articulation of Piranesi's
Derrida has called the "anxiety
tural form, of an architectural keley:
signi- University of California Press, Campo Marzio, where the urban
about language and the question of
fier that locates the architect as1984).
its forces subvert architectural form,
the sign" that characterized the
subject, as determined by it and not with Foley Square in Manhattan, or
21. Lynch's "settlement form" is 1960s. Derrida refers in particular
determining it; in other terms, the Le Corbusier's linear projects for
the spatial arrangement of persons to French structuralism and in gen-
site of production becomes reduced Latin American cities of the late
doing things, the resulting spatial eral to "thought in all its domains."
and passive. 1920s, or Wilshire Boulevard in Los
flows of persons, goods, and infor- See Jacques Derrida, "Force and
Angeles are examples of this strategy.
17. While the space of reading was mation and the physical features Signification," in Jacques Derrida,
always integral to the dimension of that modify space in some way sig- Writing and Difference, trans. Alan 34. See Mario Gandelsonas, The
architectural competence, it has al- nificant to these actions. See Lynch, Bass (Chicago: University of Chi- Urban Text (Cambridge, Mass.:
ways been seen as subordinated to The Image of the City, 48. cago Press, 1980), 3. The MIT Press, 1991).

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assemblage 37

35. Besides opening up questions, tential of new technologies and 45. The drawings do not always pro- the urban rewriting; that is, the eco-
the textual metaphor, like all meta- programs. vide a "realist" representation of nomic-political mechanism at work
phors, closes the discourse by ori- solids and voids. In fact, most times
in the urban processes where every
41. "When we face some other
enting it and fixing the "results" of they represent solids as voids and city rewrites the previous one.
person's building, we immediately voids as solids.
the investigation. In this case, the
look over and compare the indi- 54. See Mario Gandelsonas, "The
textual metaphor has a strategic role
vidual dimensions, and to the best 46. We only recognize the logic at Master Plan as a Political Site," As-
in our pursuit of the articulation of work in the definition of the frame
of our ability consider what might semblage 27 (August 1996): 19-21.
the city and architecture, since it when we read the second level.
be taken away, added or altered" 55. See "The Des Moines Vision
leads to the question of reading and
(Alberti, On the Art of Building, 4). 47. Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida:
to our tactical mode of reading the Plan," in Agrest and Gandelsonas:
city (the urban drawings). 42. See Andrea Palladio, Four Reflections on Photography (New Works (New York: Princeton Archi-
Books ofArchitecture, trans. Isaac York: Noonday Press, 1982), 27. tectural Press, 1995).
36. Jacques Derrida, "Freud and
Ware (New York: Dover, 1965). 48. "How to read: watch out for the 56. Why would cities open up to ar-
the Scene of Writing," in Writing
The commentaries, however, reveal breaks in continuity, for the frontier chitecture? At a cultural level, be-
and Difference, 199.
that the attention of the mecha- zones. Be alert to the moment when cause of the increasing search for
37. The monument, which "rep- nism is placed on the actors and the shapes change,... be on the local urban identity (as a counter-
resents" as a building the immut- their actions and not on the con-
lookout for divergences, contrasts, balance to globalization); at an
ability of the plan, has been figuration of the architectural stage. breaks, frontiers" (Fernand Braudel, economic level, because the visual
traditionally the preferred site for
The Identity of France, trans. Sian configuration of cities is becoming
the articulation of a writerly archi- 43. The description of the house
of the Casa del Noce in Pompeii Reynolds, 2 vols. [London: Collins, an asset in their competition to at-
tecture and the city. 1988-90], 1: 51). These incidents
shows the modernist mechanism at tract tourism; at a political level,
38. The city, as the object of archi- are the expression of the residual because of the possibilities of con-
work. Le Corbusier wrote: "Again
tecture, is always a rewriting of a force of the city that cannot be si- sensus related to a local sense of
the little vestibule which frees your
previous city. lenced by the geometry of the grid. pride. The relationship among
mind from the street. And then you
are in the atrium; four columns in 49. Where do these failures take drawings, identity construction, and
39. This multiplicity resonates with
the middle (four cylinders) ... but place? In the margins, where the tourism provides a strong argument
the dimensions of permanence and
at the far end is the brilliance of grids collide, and within the grid, for the restructuring of the notion
change that define the urban writ-
the garden seen through the peri- when it encounters the force of pre- of master plan, incorporating a first
ing mechanism.
style which spreads out this light vious inscriptions (history and geog- moment of "vision planning" that
40. The confrontation usually fails provides the formal conditions for
with a large gesture .... Between raphy) that cannot be completely
to produce an articulation. For in- the radical rewriting of the city.
the two is the tablinum, contract- obliterated by the grid.
stance, while eighteenth-century
ing this vision like the lens of the 57. See Richard Rorty, Achieving
urban drawings had an important 50. Rosalind Krauss, The Optical
camera. On the right and on the Our Country (Cambridge, Mass.:
internal role in the practice of ar- Unconscious (Cambridge, Mass.:
left two patches of shade. ... You Harvard University Press, 1998).
chitecture, in their subversion of The MIT Press, 1993), 57.
have entered the house of a Ro-
the language and the restructuring 51. It is perhaps, as Derrida, "Force
man" (Le Corbusier, Towards a
of the practice as a response to the and Signification," has put it, "a
New Architecture [New York: Do- Figure Credits
new city of nineteenth-century way out that can only be aimed at,
ver, 1986, reprint of the 1931 En-
capitalism, they did not have an 1, 2. Rosalind Krauss, The Optical
glish translation of the thirteenth without the certainty that it is out-
immediate effect on that city. In a Unconscious (Cambridge, Mass.:
French edition], 169-70). The text side the affectivity of desire."
symmetrical way, while nineteenth- The MIT Press, 1993).
is organized symbolically by a se- 52. I am referring to those projects
century drawings had an important
quence of interrelated oppositions: that take a cultural and formal tabula 3-9. Drawings courtesy of Agrest &
role, external to the practice of ar- Gandelsonas Architects.
small/large, private/public, hori- rasa as a "plane" of departure as well
chitecture in the restructuring of
zontal/vertical, light/shadow, front/ as to the "new urbanism" represented
the European capitals, they repre-
back, interior/exterior, etc. by Seaside and similar projects, in-
sent the conservative aspects of
cluding Disney's Celebration.
architecture compared to the con- 44. The plan interpellates us, as,
temporary architectural work pro- in a similar way, the "ready-made" 53. See, again, Derrida, "Force and
duced not just by architects but by was selected by attracting the Signification." This decision to re-
engineers who investigated the po- artist's attention. write the city is also different from

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