The Interior Architecture Theory Reader
The Interior Architecture Theory Reader
The Interior Architecture Theory Reader
Edited by
Gregory Marinic
First published 2018
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
and by Routledge
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Marinic, Gregory, editor.
Title: The interior architecture theory reader / edited by Gregory Marinic.
Description: New York : Routledge, 2017. | Includes bibliographical
references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2017027053 | ISBN 9781138911079 (hb : alk. paper) | ISBN
9781138911086 (pb : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781315693002 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Interior architecture—Philosophy.
Classification: LCC NA2850 .I565 2017 | DDC 729—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017027053
ISBN: 978-1-138-91107-9 (hbk)
Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
2 A history of style and the modern interior: from Alois Riegl to Colin
Rowe
Sarah Deyong
4 Spatial therapies: interior architecture as a tool for the past, present, and
future
Ziad Qureshi
5 Inside out
Michael Webb
9 Fabricating interiority
Marc Manack
16 Oceanic interiorities
Sarah Treadwell
34 To dwell means to leave traces: modernism, mastery, and meaning in the
house museums of Gaudí and Le Corbusier
Georgina Downey
42 Puzzle
Rachel Carley
Index
Contributors
Nataly Gattegno and Jason Kelly Johnson are founding partners of Future
Cities Lab, an interdisciplinary design and research collaborative that has
developed a range of award-winning projects exploring the intersection of
design with advanced fabrication technologies, responsive building systems,
and public space. FCL’s work has been widely published and exhibited most
recently at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts and the San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art. Prior to teaching architecture at the California
College of the Arts, Gattegno and Johnson taught at the University of
Michigan, UC Berkeley, University of Pennsylvania, and University of
Virginia.
Susan Hedges is senior lecturer in Spatial Design in the School of Art and
Design, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand. Her research and
publication interests embrace an interest for architectural drawing, interior
architecture, notation, dance, film, and critical theory regarding drawing and
visual culture. These seemingly divergent fields are connected by an interest
in the relationship that exists between the body condition, surface, pattern,
architectural notation, and visual images.
Frank Jacobus is a registered architect and faculty member in the Fay Jones
School of Architecture at the University of Arkansas. After graduating from
The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in 1998, he
earned a post-professional master’s degree in Architecture with a Design-
Theory focus from the University of Texas at Austin in 2007. His research
centers on the impacts of emerging technologies on architectural practice
and production. His work has been exhibited and published widely in
conference proceedings and journals. Jacobus is the author of Archi-Graphic:
An Infographic Look at Architecture (2015) and Discovering Architecture:
Built Form as Cultural Reflection (2014).
Histories
Chapter 1
(Re)constructing histories
A brief historiography of interior architecture
Edward Hollis
The works under discussion here were not written by architects but by
studio teachers in art schools, such as Scott or Graeme Brooker, and
theoreticians and historians of design, such as Sparke, Rice, and Pile. There
was a political and professional dimension to their efforts. “Designers
disdained the elitist architects for their compulsion for purity and
maintenance of concept. Architects generally considered designers to be
frivolous with no philosophical base of knowledge to guide their work,”
explained Kurtich, but as Scott hinted, architecture was perceived to have a
hegemony that design did not possess.6
Graeme Brooker and Sally Stone’s Re-readings connected the
emergence of interior architecture to postmodernism, though not the
stylistic postmodernism of the 1980s. “The rise in the number of buildings
being remodeled, and the gradual acceptance and respectability of the
practice, is based on the reaction to what is perceived as the detrimental
erosion of the city and its contents by modern architecture.”7 The very title
of their book suggested a nod to literary postmodernism. “Many examples of
modernist architecture,” they wrote, “were the product of a formal system
that was essentially self-sufficient,” while the alteration of buildings offered
opportunities to explore the aesthetics of the incomplete, the incoherent, and
the layered.8 Books about interior architecture arose, their authors claimed,
in response to three main stimuli: the increasing volume of the practice on
the ground, a long-standing political conflict taking place between the
professions of interior design and architecture, and a “second wave” of
postmodern practice and theory.
for the private individual, the place of dwelling is for the first time
opposed to the place of work. The former constitutes itself as the
interior. Its complement is the office. The private individual, who
in the office has to deal with reality, needs the domestic interior to
sustain him in his illusions.14
Sparke continues to suggest that the modern interior has been formed out of
the opposition between “two spheres”: the domestic interior, characterized
by femininity, soft textiles, practices of decoration, and so on, and the public
interior, characterized by hard surfaces and materials, male occupations, and
architecture. “The boundaries between the ‘separate spheres’ were
fundamentally unstable, and it was that instability, rather than the
separation per se, that, I will suggest, defined modernity, and by extension
the modern interior.” Her history documents episodes in this long-running
boundary war: in the domestication of the public spaces of the hotel and
café in the nineteenth century, for example, or the victory of the
architectural interior in the Gesamtkunstwerk homes of the early twentieth
century. “Art School” interior design – a sort of soft modernism was, she
concluded, a sort of resolution between the two spheres that proved
temporary by the current rise of interior architecture.
Figure 1.1 The modern interior as architecture: the cover of John Pile’s History of Interior Design
(2009 Edition)
Image credit: Wiley
Figure 1.2 The modern interior as domestic occupation: the cover of Penny Sparke’s The Modern
Interior (2008)
Image credit: Reaktion Books
To compound the problem, the term “interior architecture” itself did not
widely come into existence until, as Kurtich wrote, “some progressive design
firms began using the term interior architecture in the early 1970s.”20
Historians of the domestic interior addressed this problem by writing
histories of a phenomenon created since the “separation of the spheres.” In
his critique of earlier “traditional” histories, which trace interiors from
ancient origins, Rice writes:
Figure 1.3 A composite building: Jan Kip and Leonard Knijff, “Hampton Court” (1708)
Image credit: Wikimedia commons
Notes
1 John Kurtich, Interior Architecture (New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1995).
2 John Pile, A History of Interior Design (New York: Wiley, 2000); Graeme Brooker and Sally Stone,
Re-readings: Interior Architecture and the Design Principles of Remodeling Existing Buildings
(London: RIBA, 2004); Fred Scott, On Altering Architecture (London: Routledge, 2008); Penny
Sparke, The Modern Interior (London: Reaktion, 2008); Charles Rice, The Emergence of the
Sarah Deyong
Notes
1 Gottfried Semper, Style in the Technical and Tectonic Arts, or, Practical Aesthetics, trans. Harry
Francis Mallgrave (Los Angeles, CA: Getty Research Institute, 2004).
2 Alois Riegl, Late Roman Art Industry, trans. Rolf Winkes (1901; Rome: Giorgio Bretschneider,
1985), p. 231.
3 For van de Velde, “The desire to see a standard type come into being before the establishment of
a style is exactly like wanting to see the effect before the cause. It would be to destroy the
embryo in the egg”. See “Werkbund Theses and Antitheses”, in Programs and Manifestoes on
20th-Century Architecture, ed. Ulrich Conrads (London: Lund Humphries, 1970), p. 30.
4 This point has been argued by Panayotis Tournikiotis, Adolf Loos (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
Architectural Press, 1994), p. 23.
5 Commissioned by the owners of Goldman & Salatch tailors, the Looshaus in Michalerplatz,
situated directly across from the Imperial Palace, was designed as an apartment complex with
retail on the ground floor. While the tailor shop was embellished with Doric columns and marble,
the façade of the apartments above was quite austere. In fact, it was so austere that Loos was
ordered to adorn the apartment windows with flower boxes.
6 For this and other references to gender and fashion, see Anne Anlin Cheng, Second Skin:
Josephine Baker and the Modern Surface (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 81–82.
7 “Ornament and Education” (1924), Spoken Into the Void: Collected Essays, 1897–1900 (Chicago:
Graham Foundation; New York: IAUS, 1987).
8 Furthermore, Merleau-Ponty noted, “The lived object is not rediscovered or constructed on the
basis of the contributions of the senses; rather, it presents itself to us from the start as the center
from which these contributions radiate. We see the depth, the smoothness, softness, the hardness
of objects; Cézanne even claimed that we see the odor. If the painter is to express the world, the
arrangement of his colors must bear within this indivisible whole, or else his painting will only
hint at things and will not give them in the imperious unity, the presence, the unsurpassable
plenitude which is for us the definition of the real.” See “Cézanne’s Doubt” in Sense and Non-
Sense (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1964), pp. 14–15. I am grateful to Yehuda
Safran for showing me this essay.
9 Van Doesburg’s influence on Mies van der Rohe is well documented. See, for example, Franz
Schulz, Mies van der Rohe: A Critical Biography (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985), p.
117.
10 Van Doesburg’s influence on Mies van der Rohe is well documented. See, for example, Schulz,
Mies van der Rohe, p. 117.
11 Kepes writes: “Transparency means a simultaneous perception of different spatial locations.
Space not only recedes but fluctuates in continuous activity. The position of the transparent
figures has equivocal meaning as one sees each figure now as the closer, now as the further one.”
Kepes, Language of Vision (Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 1944), p. 77.
12 The essay was written in 1955–56. It was published in The Mathematics of the Ideal Villa and
Quadrature
The joining of truth and illusion in the
interior architecture of Andrea Pozzo
Jodi La Coe
In 1693, Andrea Pozzo published the first volume of his treatise, Perspectiva
pictorum et architectorum, a pedagogical demonstration of his perspective
drawing method and projection techniques employed in creating interior
spatial illusions, quadrature.1 Pozzo, as both theorist and practitioner,
realized many of his immersive quadrature designs throughout Italy and
Austria, mainly in churches and convents of the Jesuit order to which he also
belonged.2 Unlike many perspective theorists who merely represented the
image of a person within a section through the cone of vision, Pozzo
positioned an embodied observer within the constructed illusion, extending
interior space through the joining of the real and the fictitious.3
In perspective theory, space was conceived as a homogenous
system in which vision was subject to mathematical laws. At the beginning
of the seventeenth century, Rene Descartes, who is credited with this shift in
spatial understanding, wrote in his Discours de la méthode pour bien
conduire sa raison, et chercher la vérité dans les sciences:
After Descartes, only the mathematically ordered gaze of the geometer could
objectively analyze natural phenomena fixed by coordinates within
Cartesian space.18 Perspective represented the world from a fixed monocular
viewpoint at a static moment in time, and as such, drastically simplified
visual experience.
The side walls contain seven bays which alternate between four
window bays and the three interstices. On the wall opposing the windows,
the bays corresponding to each window appear to be deeper than the others,
with two adult angels standing below a framed scene from the life of Christ
in each. The interstitial bays are less wide, accommodating a longer frame,
each containing a miraculous scene from the life of St. Ignatius. Under these
frames, fleshy putti are shown with vases of flowers, while above, many
fleshy putti with tiny wings occupy spaces within the ornate brackets
adjacent to painted stone putti. Some of the fleshy babes look down at the
viewer, while others display additional monochromatic profile portraits of
important Jesuits.
Figure 3.2 Ceiling of the hallway to the rooms of St. Ignatius depicting fleshy and stone putti
Image credit: author
Figure 3.3 Overlapping brackets in the corner of the ceiling of the hallway to the rooms of St.
Ignatius
Image credit: author
Notes
1 Volumes one and two of Perspectiva pictorum et architectorum were originally published by
Giovanni Giacomo Komarek in Rome in 1693 and 1700, respectively, and included both Latin and
Italian text. Only the first volume was translated and distributed widely. Komarek published two
translations of the first volume: Italian/German and Italian/French versions, both in 1700.
Another German translation paired with the original Latin text was published in Vienna in 1706
by Jeanne Boxbarth and Conrado Bodenter. A Latin/English version, entitled Perspective for
Architecture and Painting, was published by John James of Greenwich (London, 1707). Giuseppe
Castiglione published a French/Flemish translation in Brussels, 1708. The Jesuits even translated a
copy into Chinese, 1737 (see Marina Carta and Anna Menichella, “Il successo editoriale del
Trattato”, in Andrea Pozzo, ed. Vittorio de Feo and Valentino Martinelli [Milan: Electa, 1996], p.
230).
2 From 1676 to 1680, Pozzo travelled to Torino, Milan, and Como completing a number of works.
Afterwards, he settled in Rome to paint his celebrated masterpieces from 1681 to 1702. These
included the nave, dome, and altar of the Chiesa di Sant’Ignazio, the Cappella della Vigna, the
refectory of Trinitá dei Monti, and the hallway to the rooms of St. Ignatius in the Casa Professa
adjacent to Il Gesú. While in Rome, Pozzo also painted several canvases and illusionistic side
chapels, an altar, and a false dome for the Chiesa del Gesú in Frascati. In 1702, Leopold I called
Pozzo from Rome to Vienna. As he travelled for two years, Pozzo made many more perspective
illusions in churches and palazzi in Florence, Trento, and Montepulciano. In Belluno, he designed
the architecture for a Jesuit college. Pozzo spent the final years of his life in Vienna designing
illusions in the Universitätskirche, Franziskanerkirche, and the palazzo Lichtenstein. In addition
to the college of Belluno, Pozzo witnessed the construction of his architectural designs in Ragusa,
Lubiana, Trieste, Montepulciano, and Trento. From his numerous designs for altars, he executed
the elaborate altar constructions for both Il Gesú and Chiesa di Sant’Ignazio in Rome (see
Vittorio de Feo, Andrea Pozzo: Architettura e illusione [Rome: Officina Edizioni, 1988] and
Roberta Maria Dal Mas, “La opere architettoniche a Ragusa, Lubiana, Trieste, Montepulciano,
Belluno e Trento”, in Andrea Pozzo, ed. Vittorio de Feo and Valentino Martinelli [Milan: Electa,
1996], pp. 184–203).
3 For contemporary perspective treatises, see Abraham Bosse, La manière universelle de M. des
Argues Lyonnois pour poser l’essieu & placer les heures & autres choses aux cadrans au Soleil
(Paris: Petreius, 1643); Jean Dubreuil, La Perspective pratique nécessaire à tous peintres, graveurs,
sculpteurs . . . (Paris: Melchior Tavernier and Franc̜ois L'Anglois dit Chartres, 1642); and
Ferdinando Galli-Bibiena, L’Architetture civile . . . (Parma: Paolo Monti, 1711).
4 Rene Descartes, Discourse on the Method of Rightly Conducting One’s Reason and of Seeking
Truth in the Sciences original edition, Discours de la méthode pour bien conduire sa raison, et
chercher la vérité dans les sciences, Leiden, Netherlands: Ian Maire, 1637; translation:
Philosophical Writings, trans. Elizabeth Ascombe and Peter Thomas Geach (New York:
Macmillan Publishing Company, 1971), p. 34.
5 Martin Kemp, The Science of Art: Optical Themes in Western Art From Brunelleschi to Seurat
Hegemony of Vision, ed. David Michael Levin (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press,
1993), p. 75.
12 Op. cit., p. 71.
13 Maurice Merleau-Ponty, The Primacy of Perception and Other Essays on Phenomenological
Psychology, the Philosophy of Art, History and Politics, trans. James M. Edie (Chicago, IL:
Northwestern University Press, 1964), p. 170.
14 Descartes, Philosophical Writings, p. 242.
15 Rene Descartes, “Meditations on the First Philosophy Wherein Are Demonstrated the Existence
of God and the Distinction of the Soul From Body”, in Philosophical Writings, trans. Elizabeth
Anscombe and Peter Thomas Geach (1642) (New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1971),
pp. 61–62.
16 Rene Descartes, Regulae ad directionem ingenii (Rules for the direction of the mind)
(unpublished manuscript, 1626–1628); translation found in Judovitz, “Vision, Representation and
Technology in Descartes” in Modernity and the Hegemony of Vision, ed. David Michael Levin
(Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press, 1993), p. 67.
17 Descartes, Philosophical Writings, p. 66.
18 Op. cit., p. 178.
19 Dalia Judovitz, “Vision, Representation and Technology in Descartes”, and Hans Blumenberg,
“Light as a Metaphor for the Truth: At the Preliminary Stage of Philosophical Concept
Formation”, in Modernity and the Hegemony of Vision, ed. David Michael Levin (Berkeley, Los
Angeles, and London: University of California Press, 1993), pp. 63 and 53, respectively.
20 Ibid. (Judovitz), p. 65.
21 de Feo, Andrea Pozzo, pp. 14–15.
22 Andrea Pozzo, Perspective in Architecture and Painting: An Unabridged Reprint of the English-
Latin Edition of the 1693 “Perspectiva pictorum et architectorum” (a reprinting of the London
1707 edition), trans. John James of Greenwich (Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, Inc., 1989), p.
73.
23 Ibid., p. 221.
Chapter 4
Spatial therapies
Interior architecture as a tool for the past,
present, and future
Ziad Qureshi
Future beginnings
Attitudes toward the future have varied throughout history, with a
consistent connection between these perceptions and resultant design
perspectives. Interior architectural design is an inherently productive and
constructive activity. During the transformative era of the Industrial
Revolution, mechanized society produced capital, manufactured goods, and
leisure time for the masses that directly impacted the built environment.
Social and environmental transformations were experienced on an
unprecedented scale, resulting in variant attitudes about the future direction
of design. Industrialization, technological development, urbanization, and
social change resulted in fundamental questions on how to reconcile mass
production with human culture. Designers’ reactions ranged from nuanced
romanticism, to traumatized post-war expressionism, to unabashed
futurism. While the romantics of the nineteenth century proposed the
sublime landscape as a counterpoint to mechanized rationalism and
scientific understandings, illustrated by luminous works such as Pugin’s
Contrasts and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Italian futurists such as architect
Antonio Sant’Elia violently resisted the limits of the past. Sant’Elia
celebrated the potential of the machine alongside revolutionary change,
restlessness, and the ephemeral conditions of a modernity.
Contemporary discourse has once again echoed this historical
precedent, with design working as before to express varied philosophies
reacting to fundamental social changes in technology, production,
consumption, and connectivity. The recurrent theme of structural economic
and social change via technology was discussed by theorists such as
sociologist Daniel Bell in the 1970s. In his seminal essay, “Teletext and
Technology,” Bell makes the case that structural change is inevitable and
relevant to the past, present, and future. He posits that lessons may be
learned from history that can be applied to the future. Bell claims that
human society has consistently adapted through “creativity and surprise” in
face of great challenges.1 Supplemental to this perspective, optimistic
contemporary futurists such as Ray Kurzweil, Director of Engineering at
Google, have embraced a social vision of human needs satisfied by
unprecedented abundance, enabled by innovative new technologies from
cognizant computing to driverless vehicles and cloud-based data analysis.2
Figure 4.1 Burning Studios: Bloom Installation (2009) in Temple Works Mill (Bonomi Brothers –
1840), Leeds, UK
Image credit: Jim Moran
Consumptive crossroads
The continual restructuring of contemporary consumptive patterns
represents a profound challenge to society, the economy, and space.
Fundamental changes in retailing have occurred inclusive of a shift of
consumers to shopping online, declining overall consumption levels, and a
shift from physical to digital goods inclusive of 3-D printing at home. These
conditions have created a large supply of underutilized commercial space in
our urban landscape, embodied by the closure of countless major and minor
retailers in the last decade. These activities reveal the emergence of a
potential “post-retail” reality. An estimated one billion square feet of
retail/commercial space is currently vacant in the United States alone,
evidenced by environments marked by obsolete malls, big box stores, and
strip shopping centers. Traditional retail environments in the context of the
United States have been and will continue to be in steep decline.6 The
inherent strategies of interior architecture enable potential responses to this
crisis. Simultaneous to its decline, this unfolding “post-retail” era has opened
up a variety of new design opportunities for spatial reuse and reinvention by
means of interior architectural practices.
The reinvigoration of obsolete retail and commercial spaces
through adaptive reuse has the potential to bring these environments back to
social and economic relevancy, reconnecting the preexisting and historical
with new purposes. Architect and social theorist Victor Gruen envisioned
the essential importance that retail space would achieve in the post-war
American (and eventually global) consciousness, with the regional shopping
mall described by him as “the Heart of the City.”7 Building on Gruen’s
innovative designs, for post-war America the mall became a social center
and cultural icon deeply ensconced in national identity via spatial form.
Invoking Gruen’s original ideas, Rem Koolhaas chose to engage shopping as
the essential means to understand urbanity in his Projects for the City series.
He proposes that retail spaces remain profoundly important to the city
despite the emergence of the “dead mall” condition.8
In the midst of a profound and critical change, the reinvigoration
of obsolete retail space is an interior architectural exercise that can
transcend simple adaptive reuse and inspire critical perspectives on social
history and heritage. The reinvention of post-retail space is a vibrant
contemporary issue that remains grounded in the shared history of the past,
considering new needs with retrospective meaning. Underutilized retail sites
have already been transformed into civic, municipal service, healthcare,
education, and other spaces. An example of the direct expression of the
ongoing change from physical retail to digital activity is the proposed
adaptive reuse of Sears Auto Centers, discrete retail pad sites often located
next to “dead malls” that are spatially and infrastructurally ideal for interior
redevelopment, by Ubiquity Critical Environments, as internet data centers.9
The adaptive agency of interior architecture allows for a more nuanced
response that enables economical, sustainable, and historically contiguous
environments for potential futures.
Digital directions
As we proceed further into the twenty-first century, newly emergent digital
technologies are transforming the spatial expectations of our environments.
Beyond the post-industrial developments at the end of the previous century,
further shifts illuminate the dichotomy between the physical and the digital,
with the increasing presence of a “post-analog” reality. In a world that
prioritizes time as a premium, fundamental changes in consumptive and
productive patterns are leading to a deprioritization of the physical –
profoundly changing social conventions and representing an existential
crisis for architecture. New technologies, such as consumer level 3-D
printing, geospatial mapping with GPS, autonomous aerial drones, and
virtual reality, have already begun to impart a profound shift in perceived
necessities and the role of the physical, as well as a general reassessment
regarding need for physical space. New generations that identify with
internet-based identities demonstrate a growing preference for online
personas that are both spatially and perceptively virtual – fundamentally
redefining the very idea of “space” and buildings. Mobility, efficiency, and
transportability enable the search for increasingly fleeting economic
opportunities, further distancing the connection with the physical. In this
current environment, designers are being presented with a challenging
reality that raises fundamental questions about the role of physical space.
This new charge provides for innovation and fresh opportunities that interior
architecture is naturally poised to envision and mobilize.
Figure 4.2 Victor Gruen – Brookdale Center, Minneapolis MN USA, 1965 (Demolished 2011)
Image credit: author (2009)
As critical questions emerge about the nature of the exclusively
physical, interior architecture again uniquely offers potential design
strategies for response. Inherent to interior architecture is its application of
technological innovation, particularly through digitally produced fabrication
of interior installations and the application of advanced material specificity
at a level which is often not realized in other design disciplines. Building on
the ideas of media theorist Marshall McLuhan, architect and materials
expert Blaine Brownell discusses the idea of “disruptive application,” where
conventional solutions are unexpectedly replaced by new ones leading to
innovative and advantageous developments.10 The contemporary shift from
the physical to the digital, as well as the critical interface of interior
architecture with fabrication and material design strategies, represents this
disruptive potentiality. As we transition toward an increasingly digital
future from the physical past, in both occupancy and
fabrication/construction, the blended coexistence in both realms has become
typical. Interior architecture presents a perspective where other forms of
spatial hybridization have been the norm, and it is ripe for the disruptive
application of digital technologies fomenting innovation and advantage.
The translation of spatial installation and material innovation by
digital means has begun to manifest itself on a larger scale with the
development of consumer-level augmented reality. Currently utilized by
first-generation prototype products such as Microsoft’s HoloLens and
Google’s Glass, augmented reality projects hybridize and amalgamate the
preexisting context with new spatial installation. Unprecedented
applications of hybridized digital/analog space, no longer solely defined as
adaptive reuse by existing context and new installation in the solely physical
sense, reveal an emergent potentiality in augmented reality and interior
architecture that is neither alien nor outside the normative practices of the
discipline. The vision of augmented reality to hybridize imposed digital and
existent analog space, and even the past/present/future via their dynamic
combination, can be enabled with strategies of interior architecture as a
bridge between these worlds. As technologies and the discipline move
toward the future, augmented reality represents a realm of possibility and
potential offering solutions to ongoing change.
Notes
1 Daniel Bell, “Ch 2: Teletext and Technology: New Networks of Knowledge and Information in
Postindustrial Society” (1977), in Daniel Bell, The Winding Passage: Sociological Essays and
www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2012/11/is-this-grade-school-a-cult-and-do-parents-
care/265620/ (last modified 30 November 2012).
4 Michael Rundle, “Musk, Hawking Warn of ‘Inevitable’ Arms Race”, Wired Magazine,
Inside out
Michael Webb
Or, “the smoochy couple dancing to the music of the radio in their parked
convertible have created a ballroom in the wilderness (dance floor courtesy
of the highway department).” This latter vision of rapture in the wilderness
presumably dissolves when the couple return to their car and the dance floor
turns back into a length of highway … and silence replaces the sound of
music. We now know what a drive-in movie theater or dance hall looks like
… a flat piece of ground, etc., but what might a drive-in house look or
behave like? Maybe this is a drive-in house (Figure 5.2).
Figure 5.2 illustrates a horizontal section cut through a house
(shown here by its sectioned spherical roof with rudimentary floor beneath).
The purpose of the drawing was solely to explore the mechanics of how a
car might be rotated into the house (via an intake tube) while at the same
time maintaining seals that would prevent hot or cold external air from
entering the house. At the time of the drawing’s execution, the design of the
house itself had not been considered and is therefore depicted in
rudimentary form. Solid material cut through is shown in grayscale. The
house is nestled into the side of a hill.
The drawing is tripartite, comprising sequential images numbered
one, two, and three – in dutiful compliance with that convention of
architectural representation which requires placing the main entry of a
building along the bottom edge so that our eyes can enter “up” into the
drawing. Here, our eyes must be usurped by the driver’s Cyclopean line of
sight, his center of vision, which is likewise “up” in all three phases, meaning
that the building must rotate around the driver, rather than the driver
around the building. By such faithful adherence to the conventions, the
original intention was to aid readability.
In part 1, the car has been driven through the intake tube into a
clockwise rotating drum. The driver’s center of vision remains steadfastly
vertical. A curving yellow line marks the path of the sun across the spherical
roof. In part 2, the drum has rotated further, the volume of air contained
within the drum warming or cooling to the internal temperature of the
house. The driver’s center of vision remaining steadfastly vertical, the intake
tube and the room must therefore follow and swing round. In part 3, the
drum has rotated yet further so that its internal walls now align with those
of the house. The car has become the gorgeous object within.
Figure 5.2 Michael Webb, Drive-in house. Horizontal Section Cut. 3 phase depiction of the rotation.
Airbrush, Color-Aid paper and Solar Path diagrams. (1995)
Figure 5.3 Michael Webb, Drive-in house. Roof Plan at night. Photostat with added Pantone color.
(1985)
Notes
1 The airliner’s ceiling, while invisible, is very much an actuality … so is Tyrell’s ceiling.
2 The cone has been sectioned horizontally, thus making its top surface a parabola.
3 Taken from the prefatory poem that begins Alice in Wonderland.
4 The smart, self-driving car (rentable version only): drive it, leave it at the entrance to J.C. Penney
and there’s another waiting for you when you exit … sure … after a 10 minute wait … at least has
the potential for eliminating those pressed metal deserts more completely than ever the drive-in
could.
Part two
Territories
Chapter 6
Symbiotic spaces
Decolonizing identity in the spatial design of
the Museum of Macau
Emily Stokes-Rees
In other words, the physical space of the museum can be seen not simply as
a lifeless container to hold objects and visitors, but as a dynamic participant
in the interpretation of culture and the experience of identity. At the same
time, the organization of the built environment affects the people who
experience it – their feelings, behavior, and relationships with others.
Throughout history, the museum has been an “emblem of Western
cultural tradition, [a] formative tool of modernity, a means to reconfigure
colonial pasts” and a lure for tourists.3 As Douglas Davis has put it, “no
building type can match the museum for symbolic or architectural
importance.”4 Tony Bennett, for example, examines the political uses that
governments have made of museums as sites for social reform, carefully
constructed public spaces through which state objectives can be achieved.5
He describes museums at the turn of the twentieth century as monumental
institutions built to simultaneously represent enlightened thought, political
unity, and evolutionary continuity. The imposing facades and entrance halls
of many museums were designed to be inspiring and uplifting (perhaps
intimidating), their internal layouts echoing the discourses of science,
culture, and power presented within.6 Resembling historic ceremonial
monuments, their architecture was comparable to Greek or Roman temples,
cathedrals from the Middle Ages, or Renaissance Palaces. Not only did their
architectural characteristics make these historic museums reflect ancient
sites, their settings also emphasized the building as a site of contemplation
and learning. To this day, museums are often set apart from other structures,
approached by an imposing central flight of stairs, or set back from the street
and nestled into parkland. In constructing buildings in this style, a ritual
process is experienced by visitors to the museum: the climb up to the door
feels like entering a church or cathedral, for example, and individuals are,
therefore, psychologically and culturally prepared to respect the “civilizing
rituals” of museum visiting.7 Traditional museums like the Smithsonian or
the British Museum immediately spring to mind, where temple-like
architecture sustains the image of the national museum as a spiritual
repository representing all human achievement.
While the traditional form of the museum has continued to be an
important feature in many nations throughout the twentieth century, it has
also acquired several new roles. Michaela Giebelhausen’s edited volume of
essays explores, for example, the ways in which the modern museum
building helps to “unlock urban memories [and make] visible the city’s
hidden histories.”8 She cites the example of the Centre Georges Pompidou in
Paris (1977), which was conceived not simply as a museum, but as a
multipurpose cultural center designed to “enliven the city.”9 Other museums
have taken on more commemorative roles, and still others are the products
of urban regeneration projects, reusing abandoned or neglected landmarks
and transforming them into new museums. As Giebelhausen argues, “The
museum building again is being conceived as an evocative entity that is in
dialogue both with its content and urban context.”10
When such expressions of identity are influenced by postcolonial
politics, this task becomes increasingly complex. Lawrence Vale has noted
that in states liberated from colonial regimes, building design has been used
as “an iconographical bridge between preferred epochs, joining the misty
palisades of some golden age to the hazy shores of some future promise.”11 In
other words, architecture in a postcolonial context can play an important
role in the enforcing of political control, often under the guise of creating a
“national style.”12 Whether one believes the destruction of physical traces of
colonialism will alter the history of the nation, or whether one chooses to
build upon the memories of that past through the reappropriation of colonial
buildings, the construction of new museums remains an important debate in
many formerly colonized nations.
Figure 6.3 Introductory exhibition hall in the Museum of Macau, with European material on the left
and Chinese material on the right. Depicting the parallel development of European and Chinese
civilization is important in constructing Macau’s postcolonial sense of identity.
Image credit: E.S-R (2002)
They wanted to choose bits from the Chinese way of life and the
Portuguese way of life and show how the two blended and
balanced to live in a peaceful way. They didn’t want to talk about
different versions of this history or different opinions … so, the
museum reflects this throughout the building.20
Thus, this introductory gallery has the effect of bringing objects from
different cultures and time periods together to convey a message of Macau’s
history as a product of the convergence of two great civilizations. It
highlights the theme of cultural flow and symbiosis carried through the rest
of the museum.
This type of exhibition reinforces the passage of time; it is a long
history, and it is a history that has steadily and linearly progressed through
time, reminiscent of Smith’s observation that “the central idea of modern
society is that of progress, because modern, industrial society lives on and is
sustained by perpetual growth.”21 The physical structure of narration is
characterized by interiority and the progression from a beginning to a
finishing point, calling attention to the performative acts of moving and
viewing, of the ordering of one’s experience of history as a continuous,
unified story. Through the spatial construction of the narrative, the
relationship between the prehistory of the nation and modern, developed
Macanese society is interpreted as “natural” – a past in symbiotic relation to
the present.
In the transition from the first to the second floor – further
illustrating the symbiotic relationship between structure and narrative – a
passage was built through an intermediate mezzanine floor where a historic
street scene is recreated. Here, the exhibits were adjusted to incorporate
existing interior architectural elements of the fortress, such as an old cistern
uncovered during the excavations, which has been restored and fit into an
exhibit recreating the environment of Macanese fishermen. In another area,
the displays incorporate original fortress walls, linking past to present and
adding to the narrative of Portuguese/Macanese “cultural symbiosis.”22 What
is on or separated by the walls is less important than what is occurring
within the museum’s spaces; the architecture is not a passive entity but
something of constant notice; the fortress is as much an artifact of the
narrative the museum articulates as any other object displayed within. The
effect of these techniques is also to turn the gallery into a parallel in situ
archaeological museum, and the building itself becomes an integral exhibit
object. The juxtaposition of colonial history and postcolonial present –
respect for colonial spaces adapted for museum use after independence –
thus becomes instrumental in redefining the nation. The museum is
symbolically intertwined with the fortress and hill, becoming a unique and
powerful blend of interior and landscape.
This cultural symbiosis of form and function is carried through the
displays with representations of symmetry between East and West. In one
gallery, a Portuguese and Chinese cannon stand side by side, and between
them a pile of stone cannonballs that could be used in either one. In another
area, an explanation of the symbolism of the nearby Sao Paulo Church’s
facade emphasizes its bicultural imagery and that it was a cooperative effort
between the Western Jesuits who designed it and the Eastern craftsmen who
built it. A text panel about the church reads:
There are statues of the Virgin and saints, symbols of the Garden
of Eden and the Crucifixion, angels and the devil, a Chinese
dragon and a Japanese chrysanthemum, a Portuguese sailing ship
and pious warnings inscribed in Chinese.23
Notes
1 Tan Hock Beng, “Reconstructing Memories”, in Between Forgetting and Remembering: Memories
and the National Library, ed. Kwok, Ho, and Tan (Singapore: Singapore Heritage Society, 2000),
pp. 67–75.
2 Denise Lawrence and Setha Low, “The Built Environment and Spatial Form”, Annual Review of
Contexts (Manchester: University of Manchester Press, 2003), p. 1; also Carol Duncan, “Art
Museums and the Ritual of Citizenship”, ed. Ivan Karp and Steven Lavine, Exhibiting Cultures:
The Poetics and Politics of Museum Display (Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1991),
pp. 88–104.
4 Quoted in Giebelhausen, ed., The Architecture of the Museum, p. 2.
5 Tony Bennett, The Birth of the Museum: History, Theory, Politics (London: Routledge, 1995), p.
100.
6 Gillian Rose, Visual Methodologies (London: Sage, 2001), pp. 171–172.
7 Carol Duncan, Civilising Rituals: Inside Public Art Museums (London: Routledge, 1995).
8 Giebelhausen, ed., The Architecture of the Museum, p. 2.
9 Ibid., p. 6.
10 Ibid., p. 7.
11 Lawrence Vale, Architecture, Power and National Identity (London and New York: Routledge,
1992), p. 321.
12 Vale, Architecture, Power and National Identity, p. 53.
13 Both the Sao Paulo Church and Jesuit College burned down in 1835, and today only the facade of
the church remains; Project Team of the Museum of Macau, A Museum in an Historic Site: The
Monte Fortress of St. Paul (Macau: Museum of Macau, 1999), pp. 79–95.
14 Project Team of the Museum of Macau, A Museum in an Historic Site, p. 84.
15 Moreno quoted in Anastasia Edwards, “Macau’s Rich Past Given a Future”, The South China
Morning Post, 17 April 1998, Weekend Entertainment Section: n.p. MoM museum clippings.
16 For a detailed description of the construction problems and process, see Project Team of the
Museum of Macau, A Museum in an Historic Site, pp. 115–159, 162–172.
17 Bennett, The Birth of the Museum, pp. 186–187.
18 This can also be observed in history museums in Canada, Australia, and Hong Kong, for
example.
19 Museum of Macau, museum text, 2002.
20 Barreto, personal interview, MoM, September 2002.
21 Anthony D. Smith, “History and Modernity”, in Representing the Nation: A Reader (Histories,
Heritage, Museums), ed. David Boswell and Jessica Evans (London: Routledge, 1999), p. 46.
22 Project Team of the Museum of Macau, A Museum in an Historic Site, p. 150, 172.
23 Museum text, “Sino-Western Cultural Interchange”, MoM, 2002.
24 Mary is the central female figure of Catholicism (Christian), Tin Hau is the Taoist Goddess of
Mercy, and Guan Yin is the Buddhist name for the same figure.
25 Rose, Visual Methodologies, p. 183.
26 Ibid.
27 Cathryn Clayton, “Imagining Macau: Local Identities in Transnational Formation”, PhD Thesis,
University of California at Santa Cruz, 2001, p. 276.
28 Giebelhausen, ed., The Architecture of the Museum, p. 2.
29 Ibid., p. 2.
30 Levin quoted in Giebelhausen, ed., The Architecture of the Museum, p. 2.
31 Paul Connerton, How Societies Remember (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1989).
32 Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett and B.S. Frey, “The Dematerialization of Culture and the
Deaccessioning of Museum Collections”, Museum International 54, no. 4 (2002): 59.
Chapter 7
Shape shifting
Interior architecture and dynamic design
Mark Taylor
The term interior architecture, as noted by Sashi Caan, has been around
since 1924, but over the past twenty years it has gained new currency.1 Since
the early 2000s, interior architecture has been closely aligned to ideas of
adapting existing buildings to contain new functions. Brooker and Stone
established a conservationist approach that revolved around themes of
preservation, restoration, renovation, and remodeling.2 Their methodology
aligned case studies with an analytical examination that sought coherence
and symbolic association between the new and old parts of the building.
While Brooker and Stone take a more rational approach to understanding
the interior through materials, form, geometry, and so on, Caan recognizes
that atmosphere, feeling, and spatial presence are factors affecting the
perception of an interior. What might be called “interiority,” which from its
early inceptions in philosophy and latter preoccupation by writers, offers a
connection to psychological life, memory, closeness, and intimacy.
In recent years, the relationship between interiority and interior
architecture has been affected by advances in digital, electronic, and
interactive technologies, particularly the way real-time interaction alters
physical and psychological engagement with built space. The anthropologist
Marc Augé’s book, Non-places: Introduction to an Anthropology of
Supermodernity, for example, provides an analysis of the “customer’s” silent
Intelligent systems
In both exterior and interior spaces, media connectivity is having an
important impact on domestic architecture, “resulting in spaces that are
mediated yet somehow remote from our senses.”10 Weinstock argues that the
home has become a terrain vague, lying somewhere between the digital and
physical worlds, between the infinite extension of data worlds and the
decreasing experience of personal space. Through utilizing distributed
intelligence and responsive material systems, he suggests it should be
possible to change “internal parameters and performances in relation to the
life of their inhabitants and events in the external world.”11 Two examples
are offered in order to frame a discussion of the domestic relative to non-
domestic environments. The two examples, Aegis Hyposurface by dECOi
and the Freshwater Pavilion by NOX, indicate how walls can interact
spatially with the environment, either by physically responding to data as a
deformable surface or by altering a virtual real-time model in relation to
movement of people within the space.
The Aegis Hyposurface, conceived by Mark Goulthorp of dECOi
Architects, is the world’s first responsive architectural surface. It was
designed as an interactive artwork to be located outside the foyer of the
Birmingham Hippodrome Theatre (UK). An array of sensors, such as video
cameras and microphones, send data to a network of pistons that activate
the surface in order to bring “Aegis into a conversation with whoever
triggered a response.”12 It is a dynamically interactive surface, with
significant surface variability, which Mark Burry once described as a
movement that, at first, makes one feel a little seasick. Perhaps it is because
the effect is so spatially disturbing, while questioning the seeming solidity of
the Aegis Hyposurface’s metal surface. There are, however, other surfaces
such as tent canvases and soft skins that also have spatial variability. The
temporary T-Room (2005) designed by Japanese architect Kengo Kuma for
the Alternative Paradise exhibition held at Kanazawa 21st Century Museum,
for example, utilizes an air-filled translucent membrane structure that was
animated by variations in air pressure. This project, however, did not use
stimulus/response networks to effect change, but operated on a movement
cycle which nevertheless forced a more intimate relationship between
bodies, as well as between body and architecture.
With this in mind, Weinstock suggests that “housescapes will
require distributed intelligence and active material systems,” and while these
advances utilize digital technologies, some buildings have other forms of
sensors that manipulate environmental conditions, but may not be regarded
as “intelligent.”13 The question of building intelligence has been addressed by
cyberneticist Ranulph Glanville, who observes that the oldest likely example
is thermostatically controlled central heating (or cooling), in which the
internal environment is conditioned by a sensor switch attached to a heating
or cooling system. He suggests that once such systems might have been
thought of as intelligent, but only when such “behavior seemed wondrous.”14
Relative to Turing’s test for intelligence, Glanville concludes that these
examples “perform tricks,” since they do not offer anything that is remotely
interactive, but are stimulus-response actions. Although the smart fridge
that tracks products and offers menus is closer to an interactive device, it is
not truly interactive and is probably closer to a servicing device. Glanville
proposes that “the buildings and devices we currently have are nowhere
near interactive, let alone intelligent. They are merely built to include clever
tricks that allow them to react, often in ways designed to retain a static
stability.”15 Despite Glanville’s observations, these new forms of interactive
technologies, principally operating through the Web of Things, connect
activation with performance. Reciprocal relationships between data input
(stimulus) and surface change (response) are affected in many ways, not
only through digital screens, but also through mechanical systems such as
those used in the Aegis Hyposurface.
Network infrastructure
The means of achieving any spatial or environmental change, in real time, is
dependent on how technologies are coupled to not only enhance our
experience, but also how they reconnect space and time with the interior.
Our presence in the physical world, which was once marked by seasonal
changes of temperature and light, is now mediated by constantly unfolding
data – whether this is through social media or technologically derived data
(what we might call “big data”). This suggests that lives exist between digital
and physical environments. Supportive technologies, such as the
development of wearable technologies, also means that interaction with the
device no longer need occur through graphic interfaces, but “through tactile
and direct contact with the instruments located on the body.”16 Such
advances mean that the artificial or constructed environment might
reconfigure itself depending on the social dynamics that are occurring.
Whether we want to inhabit this world or not, what is clear is that
the introduction of mobile digital and electronic technologies into everyday
life, and the development of new materials and controllable structures,
emphasizes the distance between inhabitable space as a fixed architecture
and as a flow of information. Now capable of dialoguing with variable
environmental conditions, including the emissions of sounds, smell, climate
data, and so on, architecture is a complex adaptive robotic system of
interacting installations. One example is the proposed Digital Pavilion Korea
(2006) by ONL, the office of Kas Oosterhuis, in which the Voronoi cell
structure of the pavilion was controlled and kinetically manipulated using
actuators in the beams of the structural system. This use of actuators
operated in a similar manner to the earlier Muscle (2003) experiments by
ONL, in which infrared motion and proximity sensors “detect people’s
movements in the surrounding area prompting the Muscle to react slightly,
while touch sensors induce a stronger reaction.”17
Given these developments, how might the interior respond to such
challenges as ideas are transferred across domains, and how might these
affect previous notions of interiority? Moreover, if the super modern interior
continues to absorb technological innovations, it will cease to exist in its
current format. This situation forces consideration of alternate locations,
sites, and environments as potential receptacles for interiority and dwelling
of the individual.
The technologically driven animate architectural interior that is
not constrained by built form as the precursor to design intervention (in a
Brooker and Stone sense) or fabricated in response to a psychological intent
(in a Caan sense) offers a dynamic exchange that changes both form and
feedback such that no single reading is possible. This mode of engagement
with the built environment through information technology and
connectivity is, as Ole Bouman argues, challenging the classical worldview
of architecture as a static, built placemaking device. Under this paradigm,
architecture is no longer about people engaging with built architecture or a
place, but is about wireless embedded technologies that “reach you
directly.”18 It is a form of architecture that questions the idea of timeless or
classic architecture which, in a traditional sense, is conceptualized as the
desire to represent oneself beyond the present. In a social sense, this
recurrent process of time measured from the past through to the present
anticipates a predictable future informed by stability. The data-driven
environment, however, is inherently unpredictable, as its “stability” is ever
changing.
To this extent, where monumental architecture has become the
signifier of the ability to transcend death, because it seems to be eternal and
claims durability and imperishability, the responsive environment has an
immanent relationship to lived space that, if not “intelligent,” is beginning to
collect data and respond to patterns of use within a real-time scenario.19
Under this conceptualization, the relationship between interior architecture
and interiority is dynamic and mobile, and ultimately aided by the
inhabitant’s response to the interior environment – and vice versa. As a
means to structure social interaction, it “enables individuals and groups to
sustain shared concepts of changes in meanings and values,” such that “time”
is now inherently bound to design thinking, in the manner that an entity
establishes dynamic associations with its environment as well as within
itself.20 That is, it opens space for the transitory and transformative to resist
traditional paradigms and ideologies.
Notes
1 Sashi Caan, Rethinking Design and Interiors: Human Beings in the Built Environment (London:
Laurence King Publishing, 2011), p. 188.
2 Graeme Brooker and Sally Stone, Rereadings: Interior Architecture and the Design Principles of
Extending the Role of Architectural Representation, ed. Phil Ayres (Hoboken, NJ: Taylor and
Francis, 2012).
13 Weinstock, “Terrain Vague”, p. 50.
14 Ranulph Glanville, “An Intelligent Architecture”, Convergence: The Journal of Research into New
Media Technologies 7, no. 2 (12–24·June 2001): 17.
15 Glanville, “An Intelligent Architecture”, p. 17. See also Ranulph Glanville, “Variety in Design”,
Systems Research 11, no. 3 (1994): 95–103.
16 Valentina Croci, “Inhabiting the Body and the Spaces of Interaction”, Architectural Design 78, no.
4 (2008): 123, 122–125.
17 Kas Oosterhuis, ed., Interactive Architecture (Rotterdam: Episode Publishers, 2007), p. 21.
18 Bouman, “Architecture, Liquid, Gas”, p. 15.
19 Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space, trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith (Oxford: Blackwell,
1991), p. 221.
20 Paul Filmer, “Songtime: Sound Culture, Rhythm and Sociality”, in The Auditory Culture Reader,
ed. Michael Bull and Les Back (Oxford: Berg, 2003), pp. 91–92.
Chapter 8
Liz Teston
Figure 8.1 Diagram depicting related design disciplines and territorial frontiers. Hatched zones
represent interior architecture, architecture, and the urban design. Overlapping areas represent
opportunities for appropriation between the disciplines (e.g., political-spatial meets individual-
experiential). Dotted zones represent allied fields not addressed in this chapter.
Image credit: author
Notes
1 “Accredited Programs”, Council for Interior Design Accreditation, www.accredit-
id.org/accredited-programs (calculated based on info accessed on September 13, 2017).
2 Allison Carll White, “What’s in a Name? Interior Design and/or Interior Architecture: The
Discussion Continues”, Journal of Interior Design 35, no. 1 (2009): x–xviii.
3 “2015 Recipient | Institute Honor Awards for Interior Architecture”, American Institute of
Architects, 2015, www.aia.org/practicing/awards/2015/interior-architecture/beats-by-dre.
4 “2014 BOY Winner: Fashion Office”, Interior Design, 30 January 2015,
www.interiordesign.net/projects/detail/2516-2014-boy-winner-fashion-office.
5 Terry Meade, “Interior Design, a Political Discipline”, in Handbook of Interior Architecture and
Design, ed. Graeme Brooker and Lois Weinthal (New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2013), pp.
394–403.
6 Guobin Yang, “Emotional Events and the Transformation of Collective Action: The Chinese
Student Movement”, in Emotions and Social Movements, ed. Helena Flam and Debra King
(London: Routledge, 2005), pp. 79–98.
7 Uta Staiger and Henriette Steiner, introduction to Memory Culture and the Contemporary City,
ed. Uta Staiger, Henriette Steiner, and Andrew Webber (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), pp.
1–13.
8 Michel de Certeau, Practice of Everyday Life, trans. Steven Rendall (Berkeley, CA: University of
California Press, 2011).
9 Marc Augé, Non-Places: An Introduction to Supermodernity (New York: Verso Books, 1995).
10 Ian Buchanan, “Non-Places: Space in the Age of Supermodernity”, Social Semiotics 9, no. 3 (1999):
393–398.
11 Meade, “Interior Design, a Political Discipline”, pp. 394–403.
12 Alexander H. Jordan, Benoit Monin, Carol S. Dweck, Benjamin J. Lovett, Oliver P. John, and
James J. Gross, “Misery Has More Company Than People Think: Underestimating the Prevalence
of Others’ Negative Emotions”, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 37, no. 1 (2011): 120–
135.
13 Joe Moran, Reading the Everyday (New York: Routledge, 2005), pp. 1–28.
14 John Fiske, Reading the Popular (London: HarperCollins Publishers, 1989), p. 65.
15 Susan Willis, Primer for Daily Life (New York: Routledge, 1991), p. 175.
16 Guy Debord, “Introduction to a Critique of Urban Geography”, in Situationists International
Anthology, trans. and ed. Ken Knabb (Berkeley, CA: Bureau of Public Secrets, 2006), pp. 23–27.
17 Sadie Plant, Most Radical Gesture: The Situationist International in a Postmodern Age (New
York: Routledge, 1992), p. 58.
18 Libero Andreotti, introduction to Theory of the Dérive and Other Situationist Writings on the
City, ed. Libero Andreotti and Xavier Costa (Barcelona: Museu d’Art Contemporani de
Barcelona /Actar, 1996), pp. 7–9.
19 “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights”, The United Nations, 10 December 1948,
www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/index.
20 Aldo Rossi, Architecture of the City (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1984), pp. 130–131.
21 For recent symposia and lectures refer to: Architecture Exchange Symposium at the Architectural
Association, “How Is Architecture Political?”, Online Video: 4:04:12, 2014,
www.aaschool.ac.uk/VIDEO/lecture.php?ID=2702; or Mitchell Lecture Series at School of the Art
Institute of Chicago, “Urtzi Grau: Architecture, Interior Architecture, and Designed Objects”,
Online Video: 1:29:40, 2015, https://saic.hosted.panopto.com/Panopto/Pages/Viewer.aspx?
id=f158c521-1969-4619-8f0e-1e8d860e3654; or Narratives and Design Studies Symposium: A Task
of Translation at School of Art and Design History and Theory at Parsons, “Narratives of
Agency”, Online Video: 1:14:38, 2014, www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2AMXZnWia0.
Chapter 9
Fabricating interiority
Marc Manack
fab·ri·ca·tion
1. the action or process of manufacturing or inventing something.
2. an invention; a lie.1
Figure 9.1 Crystal Bridges Museum Store, Marlon Blackwell Architects, Construction Photo (Left,
Courtesy of Marlon Blackwell Architects), Interior View Complete Project (Right, Timothy Hursley
Photographer)
Notes
1 Fabrication definition excerpted from Google, www.google.com.
2 For more on architecture’s search to define its disciplinary autonomy see Robert Somol,
Autonomy and Ideology: Positioning an Avant-Garde in America (New York: Monacceli Press,
1997).
3 John McMorrough, “Ru(m)inations: The Haunts of Contemporary Architecture”, Perspecta 40
(2008): 164.
4 Distinctions and the production of design worlds form the basis for William Mitchell’s definition
of “architecture” in William J. Mitchell, The Logic of Architecture: Design, Computation, and
(New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2009) and Branko Kolarevic, Manufacturing Material
Effects: Rethinking Design and Making in Architecture (New York: Routledge, 2008).
7 For more on the implications of authorship, mass customization, and the role of identicality in
architecture’s disciplinary foundations, see Mario Carpo, The Alphabet and the Algorithm
Amy Campos
The frontier
From the vantage point of the nineteenth-century American frontier,
territory connotes the promise of ownership of land and resources and
simultaneously suggests an affirmation of self. During the westward
territorial expansion of the United States, settlers were allowed to stake
claim to land under the notion of Manifest Destiny, a belief that American
citizens had a fundamental right to own land and a duty to steward it.2 This
claimed landscape was seen as a resource-rich, culturally blank slate upon
which owners could pursue new ideals, beyond the persecution of feudal
hierarchies and “Old World” values. In the Jeffersonian sense, the
enculturation of place was dictated by the will and self-realization of the
free individual who staked claim to that territory. Ownership of a landscape
territory provided the social freedom for an owner to construct one’s own
inhabitation of that place. Territory, as a located place, became the
hierarchically dominant component of a complex spatial and cultural
system. In this case, the land itself provides the structure for inhabitation
and the cultural context that might emerge from it.3
Constructed territories
Neolithic Southern Anatolia represents an inversion of the frontier’s
territorial hierarchy. The construction of habitations produced a fabricated
territory upon which a public culture was defined. Çatalhöyük was one of
the earliest and most unique urban settlements.4 It was occupied between
7400 and 6200 BC on the Southern Anatolian Plateau in present-day Turkey.
In this densely populated settlement, individual houses were built directly
adjacent to each other. The houses were built from mud bricks reinforced
with wooden posts, made up of a large single room with smaller storage
rooms built around the periphery. Interior walls were plastered and
decorated frequently; platforms for various uses were built within the main
interior. The only means of egress was provided through the roof via a
wooden ladder and openings to the exterior. In Çatalhöyük, there were no
streets or squares separating independent buildings, only an aggregate of
dwellings entered through rooftop hatches. The city was built as a single,
agglomerated structure. In fact, the roof of this megastructure was the
thoroughfare, the public square, and the entry point for interior dwellings.
Over many generations, houses were rebuilt on previous layers of
demolition. Sometimes, as many as eighteen layers built the city mound’s
topography, making the roof structure stepped to provide shady places to
gather outside and a vertical surface for small windows providing light to
the interiors. The roofline acts as the territorial marker between interior and
exterior – private and public – space. The spatial hierarchy of the American
frontier is reversed in Çatalhöyük’s monolithic city. Here, the constructed
interior produces a public space that defines the territory of the city.
Where the frontier and the aggregate cityscape suggest various
intersecting relationships between territory and interior, the Lockheed
Burbank Aircraft Plant exemplifies a complete disconnection of the interior
activities from the exterior environment in which it resides. After the attack
on Pearl Harbor by the Japanese at the end of 1941, the United States
enlisted Colonel John F. Ohmer to deploy camouflage and decoy techniques
to help protect key military sites in California. Ohmer had witnessed the
success of military decoys at the Battle of Britain in 1940: by placing full-
scale decoys of military equipment on the ground in the countryside,
including tanks, aircrafts, and buildings, the British misdirected surveillance
from enemy planes flying above and forced the enemy to expunge massive
amounts of bombs on these decoy targets.5 In Burbank, rather than
strategically directing enemy attention to another unpopulated location
using decoys, the United States wanted to camouflage existing military
locations. In order to deceive the Japanese in much more urbanized areas in
California, Ohmer would have to deploy this decoy strategy at the scale of
an entire landscape. At the Lockheed Burbank Aircraft Plant in the suburbs
of Los Angeles, teams of set and prop designers, decorators, stage managers,
and other experts from Hollywood’s production stages were recruited to
take on the massive project of hiding a military operation the size of an
entire neighborhood. An enormous scrim roof was constructed to cover the
entire plant, including all of its buildings, streets and parking infrastructure,
aircraft hangars, and runways. The scrim was erected to look like the
American suburbs that surrounded the plant. Paper thin fake houses, streets
with rubber cars, trees, and shrubs, even laundry lines complete with drying
clothes and fire hydrants made up the elevated horizontal decoy. This
exterior space, seen only from above, produced a new horizontal facade built
as a peripheral diversion for a series of precise and enclosed actions. The
decoration of the exterior, as a decoy landscape, acts an architectural
distraction from the covert operations of the plant inside, becoming the
antithesis to the adage “form follows function.”6 The interior of the Lockheed
Burbank Aircraft Plant is created and enclosed by an artificial suburban
landscape that blends into the actual surrounding suburban landscape,
neither of which is integral to the internal operations of the plant itself.
Interiority exists independent of territory as a located condition. The plant is
a hidden, placeless island within an intentionally inconsequential landscape.
The landscape of this false suburb, the camouflage scrim, allows the interior
to be liberated from place, suggesting a potential for it to exist in any
location or no location.
Territorial transience
In the twenty-first century, occupying a situated place becomes less
significant than the ability to sustain multiple and simultaneous conditions
in one space or location. The design of the interior and its objects can be
defined as processes of occupation rather than as artifacts of a specific
location. The design of the Tailored hair salon and art gallery, in downtown
San Francisco, seeks to balance flexibility and transformability with
economy, accommodating multiple spatial configurations using a set of
modular furniture components in a single temporary location. The 1,200-
square-foot space simultaneously houses the everyday workings of a salon,
including a retail display, with the ability to transform into an art gallery
and venue for special occasions. Because of the transient nature of the
project, a singular design solution could not provide for the many
simultaneous activities required in the space.
A modular system of components was designed for the project
that could move, aggregate, stack, and disperse to produce multiple, varied,
and at times simultaneous inhabitations of the space (Figure 10.3). The
“toggle stool” is a multidirectional furniture piece designed to stack and
cluster as lounge and party seating, tables, counters, or shelving that can
hang from the wall or rest on a grid of pegs. Styling stands contain
concealed lighting at the top of the mirrors to illuminate clients; they can be
rolled into place for various styling configurations or pushed into gallery
wall combinations for art openings. At the top of each mirror is a groove
that can receive a picture rail hook so that art could be hung in front of the
mirror and lit by internal led lighting. The styling stands can be plugged into
any location within a grid of power outlets in the ceiling above. The stands
house all styling equipment, including holsters for hairdryers and flat irons
that float above a power trough in the base of the stands, omitting the usual
trail of cords from the floor. The design of the interior becomes an integral
part of the company’s growing mobile aesthetic. The salon’s modularity can
accommodate the expansion of their business in the current space and in
new spaces as they grow and build their brand. The flexibility of the
modular system acknowledges diurnal processes of use to orchestrate
multiple uses at the same time. At Tailored, the employment of modular
objects enables the structuring of movements, cycles, and simultaneous
occupations in space, regardless of location.
Liberated interiors, like the Lockheed Burbank Aircraft Plant and
the Migrant Interior project, suggest an inversion of the nineteenth-century
territorial idea, allowing the interior to be defined as an inhabited – if
placeless – territory. Transient interiors, exemplified by the tapestry,
Titlecase, and Tailored Salon, introduces mobility and simultaneity as an
evolution of territory in a twenty-first century, resource-scarce, nomadic
context. Inhabitation locates territory within a placeless, modern social
context. Territory as occupied space, and interior as defined inhabitation,
have evolved into a singular field of designed action, equally and
reciprocally defining each other.
Notes
1 Portions of this chapter were previously published in the International Journal of Interior
Swimming upstream
Repositioning authorship and expanding the
agency of the architect
Figure 11.1 Image of installed VarVac Wall, University of Minnesota School of Architecture main
office
Image credit: Ryan Lodermeier
VarVac Wall and the other examples outlined earlier serve as case
studies in how spatial designers might begin to resituate design authority,
not to impact their work less, but, ironically, to impact it more. By
relinquishing control in an area of a project where they traditionally seek to
maximize control, the designer can paradoxically seize greater control. This
is a risky proposition. It tasks designers with stepping outside of their typical
disciplinary constraints to learn new skills and to collaboratively embrace
the expertise of those from other disciplines. If we thought of our practices
like the internet sales giant Amazon thinks of its business, what
opportunities might arise? What are the corollaries in interior architectural
practice to Amazon’s expansion into the film, television, music, or home
delivery industries? By asking these fundamental questions, we offer that
designers might want to swim upstream in order to more meaningfully
influence the path of the water downstream.
Notes
1 Elite Kedan, Jon Dreyfous, and Craig Mutter, eds. Provisional-Emerging Models of Architectural
Practice USA (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2010), pp. 182–189.
2 Kimberly Holden, Gregg Pasquarelli, Christopher Sharples, Coren Sharples, and William
Sharples. SHoP: Out of Practice (New York: Monacelli Press, 2012), pp. 74–89.
3 Kedan et al., Provisional-Emerging Models of Architectural Practice USA, pp. 136–144.
4 Blaine Brownell and Marc Swackhamer, Hypernatural: Architecture’s New Relationship With
Spatialities
Chapter 12
Inside looking in
The prospect of the aspect
look,” and the word aspect from ad- “to, at” and specere “to look.”1 The
prospect of the aspect is the looking forward from how one perceives and
the continuation of that experiential multiplicity. It is a relationship between
the exterior and the interior, but one that is not necessarily defined as under
roof to not under roof. It is defined by the clarity of both being within a
limited boundary (interior) and simultaneously looking beyond and
experiencing that boundary (exterior). It is also infinitely repetitive. The
prospect of the aspect is a recursive quality that gains its value in continuum
and overlap, similar to standing between two mirrors that reflect
continuously, also known as the Droste effect.2 It is never a singular
experience, as its physical construction denies spatial exclusivity.
Figure 12.1 The radiating prospect of the aspect at the Pantheon (cones of vision, major and minor
axis, and spatial continuum)
Image credit: author
The idea was that you had a public space, and you’d go up the
facade of the building in streets in the air with escalators floating
across it, so the whole thing became very dynamic. People come
to see people as well as to see art; people come to meet people. So
we wanted to practice that as theatre.6
The complexity of the steel frame rectangle is truly remarkable. The overlap
begins on the approach from any of the Parisian streets, perpendicular or
parallel. No matter how much space outlies the actual Centre Pompidou, it is
consistently embedded in its context. Even when entering the plaza, the
scale of the building is so encompassing that the plaza does not act as a
space before the building (a space to view the object), but instead slips
through the steel frame, appearing to pass under and through the ground
floor. The city never stops; it passes right through the building.
Simultaneously, similar to the piazza outside of the Pantheon, the
Pompidou’s plaza is very much an interior room in the city, entered through
multiple portals. The plaza occupant is both in and out. This condition
continues in the ascent and descent of the escalators. Inside the glass tubes,
the overtly bracketed “interior” space offers the prospect of the aspect to the
strata of the surrounding context. From the surrounding buildings’
fenestrated walls, down the street canals, over the plaza, and eventually the
rooftops, all is presented in isolation and overlap. The dynamism of the
escalators enables this prospect of the aspect, but it is in their careful
orchestration with the steel frame and the program (the city, the museum,
the art, and the French culture) that solidifies it, until final arrival at the
rooftop. The frame is under, the escalators and pipes aside, any singular
aspect of the object has dissipated; it has become wholly part of the
prospect. Looking forward, Paris lies proffered below. The recursiveness of
the prospect of the aspect continues on further toward the Eiffel Tower,
which is its own example of this condition (Figure 12.3).
The rooftop of the Centre Pompidou, similar to the interior central
axis of the Pantheon and the courtyard of Saynatsalo, is both a connector
and separator from the interior and the exterior; from nature, from the
landscape, and from the urban. The perceived interior is turned inside-out.
Even though it is clearly a space with defined edges, the spatial
expansiveness of the universal x, y, and z axes the rooftop provides is
palpable. Conceptually conceived of as a “theater for the people,” the Centre
Pompidou’s spatial articulations epitomize the looking at the looking from;
the prospect of the aspect. Even at its young age of forty-four years, the
building has already persisted through cultural shifts and continues to
contribute to its environs across shifting social, cultural, and stylistic norms.
“The whole idea of Pompidou was that it is a place for the meeting of all
people, and the success of it was that the French took it over and it became
the most visited building in Europe.”7
Figure 12.3 The recursive prospect of the aspect at the Pompidou (cones of vision, urban spatial
layering, and horizontal and vertical inclusiveness)
Image credit: author
What is at stake?
Why concern ourselves with this analysis? Is this a mandate for more
flexible and systemically integrated designs that achieve relevance through
their inclusivity? Is this a call for a more collaborative and cross-disciplinary
environment? Absolutely, but the present system is seemingly set up against
the creation of a complex and integrated built environment. The design
disciplines have been isolated professionally and legally. The benefit has
been that each discipline has been able to develop its expertise, but the cost
has been a built environment that is increasingly separated from its site, its
context, and society. Most contemporary built contexts consist of the
efficient metal building (Walmart), the nondescript strip mall, or the isolated
object building (art museum). For the first two types, not only are they
applied everywhere, ambivalent to their surrounding environments, they are
also constructed with an ambivalence for persistence. The average Walmart,
for example, is given an estimated useful life of seventeen years. In
comparison to the 2,000-year-old Pantheon or even the 63-year-old
Saynatsalo, this obsolescence speaks to a practice of exclusivity and
efficiency, where the primary (and some might argue only) consideration is
the corporate gain, not a continued contribution to the physical environs
across shifting social, cultural, and stylistic norms.8 The practice of
exclusivity affects the isolated object building as well. Todd Williams and
Billie Tsien’s short-lived American Folk Art Museum (2001–2014)
exemplifies what happens when a design cannot maintain multiple complex
connections, as noted in the Architectural Record:
abyme, which generally describes the visual experience of standing between two mirrors, seeing
an infinite reproduction of one’s image. Mary McMahon, “What Is the Droste Effect”, Wisegeek,
Architecture, 2nd ed. (New York and Boston, MA: Museum of Modern Art, 2011), p. 24.
4 Ibid., p. 23.
5 Kenneth Frampton, Modern Architecture: A Critical History (New York: Oxford University Press,
1980), p. 197.
6 Richard Rogers, “The Pompidou Captured the Revolutionary Spirit of 1968 – Richard Rogers”,
DeZeen Magazine, 26 July 2013, www.dezeen.com/2013/07/26/richard-rogers-centre-pompidou-
revolution-1968/ (accessed 5 April 2015).
7 Ibid.
8 Estimated total useful life (years) = (Property and equipment, gross − Land) − Depreciation
expense for property and equipment, including amortization of property under capital leases =
(182,634 − 26,261) ÷ 9,100 = 17. “Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT)”, Stock Analysis on Net, www.stock-
analysis-on.net/NYSE/Company/Wal-Mart-Stores-Inc/Analysis/Property-Plant-and-
Equipment#Estimated-Total-Useful-Life (accessed February 2015).
9 “MoMA Begins Demolition of Folk Art Museum Building”, Architectural Record, 14 April 2014,
http://archrecord.construction.com/news/2014/04/140414-MoMA-Begins-Demolition-Folk-Art-
Museum.asp (accessed 5 April 2015).
Chapter 13
Susan Hedges
There are sixty-two clocks in the station, all controlled from one
master clock in the stationmaster’s room. Two of the clocks are in
the vestibule and two in the concourse, one is in the general
waiting room, another in the ladies’ waiting room, and there is
one in the dining room and one in the coffee room. Clocks, indeed,
are all over the place, and one has scarcely to turn one’s head to
see the time.20
Waiting drawings
Architectural critic Sanford Kwinter writes in Architectures of Time that
modernism changed the theories of time “in which time no longer remains
spatialized in order to furnish the stable ground or backdrop for phenomena,
but meshes inextricably with them, and forms the new rule of their endless
and aleatory proliferation.”21 The calendar and the clock are ways of seeing
absolute time but with no physical reality. Plans, sections, and elevations are
horizontal-vertical slices in a moment of time, a representation of space
rather than time. What of the attempt to draw time, what of the gradual
changes to space through the design process and possible future
occupations?
The drawing set consists of seventy-eight drawings on linen sheets
beginning with site plans and track lines, finishing with detail to stanchions
and cross sections of the subway. Ornate, partially drawn details show
wooden panels and fluting, plastered false ceilings, pierced carvings, bronzed
radiator grills, beveled mirrors, marble mantelpiece, openings to the
concourse and ladies’ lavatory, and a place for the clock. Step by step,
decisions have been made and project plans redrawn and newly drawn.
Every stroke counts; every screw has to be in the right place. The waiting
room, like many interiors, is transient, subject to fashion and impermanent
materials, to short lives with frequent renovation. The ladies’ waiting room
appears caught between moving occupation, its surfaces emanating the
atmosphere of its past.
Architect Mark Wigley suggests that the surface wraps the
atmosphere: the outer visible layer of an invisible climate where architecture
moves from the initial rough sketch to finely calibrated working drawings;
the lines on paper without atmosphere cleared of any effect, nothing to
threaten the authority of the line.22 “Sheet No. 24 Detail to Ladies’ Waiting
Room” holds to norms and conventions, recording a finished room. Running
dimensions, tolerances, and building materials define the space between
building elements, their dimensions, the recording of the building, and the
coordination of the structure.23 Sheet No. 24 can also be seen as a decorative
surface that exudes an atmosphere that the viewer of the drawings is meant
to experience, something of the building’s atmosphere. Drawings are
atmosphere simulators, and even the most abstract lines produce sensuous,
unpredictable effects (Figure 13.3).24
The plan and section, to be imagined as horizontal or vertical
slices, simultaneously reveal solids and voids its surfaces and nodes, an
improbable abstraction representing a multitude of constructed spatial ideas;
the waiting line representing a surface that has remained still while the
neighboring interiors have shifted.
Figure 13.3 Detail to Sheet No. 24 Details of Ladies Waiting Room, August 1927, Scale ¾", ¼" and Full
Size, Gummer and Ford, Architects and Structural Engineers, Auckland Railway Station, 1010 × 640
linen, original with annotations. Image credit: Ministry of Architecture + Interiors Ltd.
The waiting drawing intertwines, connects, and pulls taut. It
undoes and reconnects the different strands, a marker for something that
was emerging, something provisionally knitted together that has permitted
us to undo and redo in order to forestall premature closure. This chapter is
not an attempt to restage history as it was, but rather, it explores historical
knowledge as an ongoing reconstruction in the present located somewhere
between fact and fiction. The remnant lobby and waiting rooms, as points of
mobility and temporary rest, are caught in time where many voices have
just left the building. For Frascari,
The best part begins when the plan is torn to pieces by history,
defeated by events, chewed by time; when it reaches us as an
incomprehensible collage of forgotten memories as an unexpected
and enigmatic structure, as existential lust, as pure decoration.25
Notes
1 Howard Nemerov, The Collected Poems of Howard Nemerov (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1977), p. 459.
2 Mieke Bal, Narratology: Introduction to the Theory of Narrative (Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 2009), p. 108.
3 Karsten Harries, “Buildings and the Terror of Time”, Perspecta 19 (1982): 59–69, 64.
4 He goes on to suggest, “to pass the time (to kill time, expel it): the gambler. Time spills from his
every pore. – To store time as a battery stores energy: the flâneur. Finally, the third type: he who
waits. He takes in the time and renders it up in altered form – that of expectation.” Walter
Benjamin, The Arcades Project; Translated by Howard Eiland and Kevin McLaughlin; Prepared
on the Basis of the German Volume Edited by Rolf Tiedemann (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press,
1999), p. 107.
5 “Through a dialectical shift in the experience of time, and opening toward a change beyond all
prediction. Boredom is always the outward sign of unconscious happening… . One must not
waste time but must load time into oneself … ” Ref (5.1.162, 164) cited 7776 in: J. Rolleston, “The
Politics of Quotation: Walter Benjamin’s Arcades Project”, PMLA: Publications of the Modern
Research, ed. Steve Garner (Bristol and Chicago: Intellect, 2008), p. 136.
9 Marco Frascari, “Lines as Architectural Thinking”, Architectural Theory Review 14, no. 3 (2009):
200–212, 201.
10 “Pulling pieces of geometry, geology, alchemy, philosophy, politics, biography, biology,
mythology, and philology from alien territories, architects should write and draw with
hesitation, discovering the multiple aspects of architectural graphesis, a generative graphic
process understood in its slow making.” Marco Frascari, “Lines as Architectural Thinking”,
Architectural Theory Review 14, no. 3 (2009): 200–212, 202.
11 Marco Frascari, Eleven Exercises in the Art of Architectural Drawing: Slow-Food for the
Zealand Railways Magazine 2, no. 6 (1 October 1927): 26–36, 32 (accessed 4 April 2014).
18 “Railway Decoration”, New Zealand Herald LXVII, no. 20698 (18 October 1930): 13, Papers Past,
National Library of New Zealand Te Puna Ma¯tauranga o Aotearoa,
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19301018.2.129 (accessed 28 December 2014).
19 Sanford Kwinter, Architectures of Time, p. 21.
20 “Spacious Railway Yard”, New Zealand Herald LXVII, no. 20729 (24 November 1930): 9,
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19301124.2.168.22 (accessed 28 December 2014).
21 Sanford Kwinter, Architectures of Time, p. 36.
22 Mark Wigley, “The Architecture of Atmosphere”, Daidalos 68 (1998): 18–27, 26.
23 Anette Spiro and David Ganzoni, eds. The Working Drawing: The Architect’s Tool (Zurich: Park
Books, 2013), 145.
24 Mark Wigley, “The Architecture of Atmosphere”, pp. 18–27, 27.
25 Marco Frascari, “Plans”, Terrazzo 1 (1988): 96–131, 97.
Chapter 14
Spatial seductions
The everyday interiorities of Marcel
Duchamp, Edward Kienholz, and Pepón
Osorio
Pablo Meninato
combinations.
1
With this somehow lyrical description, Anthony Vidler outlines one of the
principal tendencies in contemporary architecture, characterized for its
perennial intention of creating new and unprecedented production. A
similar survey of an array of recent design magazines reveals multiple
images of these sculptural forms with specific regard to interior architecture:
carved spaces, undulating ceilings, and patterned fabric surfaces. Referred to
as blobs, fabrications, topographies, parametrics, or late modernisms, these
projects convey the unlimited possibilities of innovation, whereby only
budgetary constraints would pose restrictions to such extraordinary
concepts.2
The origins of these emerging interior architectural explorations
may be traced to avant-garde theoretical influences of suprematism,
constructivism, and de Stijl in the early modern movement. These projects
are characterized by their relentless rejection of tradition, search for
abstraction, and creation of spatial forms devoid of figurative iconography.
As demonstrated in Theo van Doesburg’s manifesto Towards a Plastic
Architecture (1924), the Dutch de Stijl group developed what is perhaps the
clearest embodiment of similar objectives:
20th-Century Architecture, ed. Ulrich Conrad (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1970), p. 79.
4 Anecdote quoted in various texts, among them Calvin Tomkins, Duchamp: A Biography (New
York: H. Holt, 1996), p. 137.
5 There is an extensive list of collaborations between artists and architects through the 20th
century, certainly starting with the Bauhaus, where Gropius included this idea as one of the
school’s main goals. Some of the most well-known pairs of artist-architect collaborations are
Amédée Ozenfant and Fernand Léger, Antoni Gaudí, Salvador Dali, Alfonso Iannelli, and Frank
Lloyd Wright; and more recently Frank Gehry and Claes Oldenburg.
6 For a description of the concept of the “assisted readymade,” see Dalia Judovitz, Unpacking
Duchamp: Art in Transit (Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press, 1998), p.
137.
7 Quoted in Anne D’Harnoncourt and Kynaston McShine, eds., Marcel Duchamp (New York:
Museum of Modern Art, 1973), p. 295.
8 In his biography, Tomkins develops an extensive review of the passionate relationship between
Duchamp and the Brazilian sculptor Maria Martins. See Tomkins, Duchamp, pp. 353–357.
9 Tomkins reports that Duchamp brought it from the region of Cadaqués, Catalunya. Tomkins,
Duchamp, p. 431.
10 In her review about “The State Hospital,” art critic Shelly Couvrette comments about Kienholz’s
experience working in a psychiatric ward in 1947. See www.cat-sidh.net/Writing/Kienholz.html
(accessed 22 February 2015).
11 In a letter to Artforum, Kienholz describes his ideas for this work. See Artforum #7 (Summer
1969): pp. 4–5.
12 González establishes a correspondence between Joseph Beuys’s “social sculpture” and Osorio’s
“social architecture,” see Jennifer A. González, Pepón Osorio (Los Angeles, CA: UCLA Chicano
Studies Research Center, 2013), p. xi.
13 Commented in González, Pepón Osorio, p. xi.
14 The term “passages” refers to the seminal text by Rosalind Krauss, Passages in Modern Sculpture
(New York: Viking, 1977).
15 Quoted in Michael Schulze, “The Forming Process of Assemblages and Objects”, Leonardo 23, no.
4 (1990): 373.
16 Robert Venturi, Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture (New York: Museum of Modern
Art, 1977; Orig. ed. 1966), p. 42.
17 Probably the most remarkable architectural examples that explore the notion of assemblage of
ordinary elements and objects are the “social explorations” of Samuel Mockbee and the Rural
Studio in Hale County, Alabama, and Teddy Cruz’s collage-like constructions in the Tijuana-San
Diego region.
18 Ellen Dunham-Jones, for example, discusses the opportunities offered by building and site
retrofitting in suburbia. See Ellen Dunham-Jones and June Williamson, Retrofitting Suburbia:
Urban Design Solutions for Redesigning Suburbs (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2009).
Chapter 15
Deborah Schneiderman
Figure 15.2 Furniture House 2 exploded axonometric depicting structural furniture elements; Shigeru
Ban Architects
Composite House: a non-hierarchical unit-based
building system
The Composite House, designed by Ferda Kolatan and Erich Schoenenberger
of su11 architecture+design, comprises an inherently flexible prefabricated
housing system.32 Given that its organization and the parts are integral and
connected, this design ethos is equally employed in both the interior
architecture of the house and the exterior. The house is a prototype, unbuilt
concept that is truly a culmination of this investigation. Add-ons, the
architects’ name for the prefabricated multi-programmed units, are
“components designed in response to specific programmatic and
atmospheric needs.”33 Add-ons carry the capacity to have walls, stairways,
doors, or storage attached to them.
The minimization of the importance of the house’s shell is of
particular interest in the Composite Housing project. The system is one that
is inherently fluid and quite unlike the largely fixed systems of typical
construction – or even most prefabs. The architects, in a sense, divorce
themselves from the role of designing the building or shell and allow the
resultant exterior to be derived based on chosen, mostly interior, program. A
local contractor would build the house skeleton (as it is termed by the
architects) from wood or steel. Each homeowner, through the selection and
combination of their preferred add-ons, would then personally design the
house. The interior and exterior architecture are combined into units by the
homeowner to meet their particular programmatic needs. There is a
dimensional system to enable design customization and configuration for
kitchens and bathrooms through a modular unit: one unit for a toilet, two
for a sink cabinet, three for a shower, and four for a bathtub. The elements
are intended for manufacture with an epoxy finish, one that would wear
equally well and meet the needs of both the interior and exterior
environment, balancing them hierarchically. The designers further connect
the interior architecture with that of the exterior through the composite
system which emphasizes the importance of interior habitation in the design
of the add-ons. “Surface and texture are integral to the design,
acknowledging the emotional connection people have with materials.”34 The
house celebrates everyday elements that are functionally critical to the
interior of the home like stairs, cabinets, and storage spaces. Rather than a
predetermined take on how individuals will live within the house, the add-
ons encourage the homeowner to consider the livability possibilities of the
interior of the home and select and arrange the units accordingly.
The add-ons are designed to be interchangeable, providing the
ability to reconfigure elements over time as necessary and/or desired. The
architects consider the units as a habitable puzzle consisting of several
functions, including object, furniture, and space (Figure 15.3).35 Color
choices, typically considered a decorative finish, are integral to this project,
applied largely as coding devices that define the planes and use of the
elements.
This system has been reconceived several times. In addition, the
architects have designed a second system called Composite Architecture,
which combines furniture and architecture systems into inter-programmed
space comprised of sofa and bed units, table and storage units, and other
components. These elements are purely interior prefabricated assemblages
and exist without connection to an architecture. The elements do not need to
be used within a specific structure and could be plugged into existing space
to create true interior prefabrication. The system, like the Composite House,
is customizable; the homeowner selects and previews the functionality,
materials, and colors through an online interface.
Figure 15.3 Sample Composite House add-on units, su11 architecture+design
Notes
1 Deborah Schneiderman, Inside Prefab: The Ready-Made Interior (New York: Princeton
Architectural Press, 2012), pp. 8–11.
2 Colin Davies, The Prefabricated Home (London: Reaktion Books, 2005), pp. 47–48.
3 Katherine H. Stevenson and H. Ward Jandl, Houses by Mail: A Guide to Houses From Sears,
Roebuck and Company (Washington, DC: Preservation Press, 1986), pp. 29–30.
4 Alden Hatch, Buckminster Fuller: At Home in the Universe (New York: Crown Publishers, 1974),
pp. 146–147.
5 Davies, The Prefabricated Home, pp. 25–26.
6 Douglas Knerr, Suburban Steel: The Magnificent Failure of the Lustron Corporation, 1945–1951
American Homes 1850 to 1950 (Washington, DC: Preservation Press, 1991), pp. 197–199.
13 Fetters, The Lustron Home, p. 8.
14 Jandl, Burns, and Auer, Yesterday’s Houses of Tomorrow, pp. 141–145.
15 Fetters, The Lustron Home, pp. 12–14.
16 Jim Zarolli, “Prefab: From Utilitarian Home to Design Icon”, NPR Morning Edition, 2008,
www.npr.org.
17 Wolfe and Leonard, “‘A New Standard for Living’”, pp. 56–57.
18 Carl Koch and Andy Lewis, At Home With Tomorrow (New York: Rinehart, 1958), pp. 115–117.
19 Jandl, Burns, and Auer, Yesterday’s Houses of Tomorrow, p. 194.
20 Wolfe and Leonard, “‘A New Standard for Living’”, p. 56.
21 Jandl, Burns, and Auer, Yesterday’s Houses of Tomorrow, p. 196.
22 Koch and Lewis, At Home With Tomorrow, pp. 116–118.
23 Jandl, Burns, and Auer, Yesterday’s Houses of Tomorrow, p. 125.
24 McQuaid, Shigeru Ban, pp. 167–168.
25 Dana Buntrock, “Shigeru Ban: Ethical Experimenter”, Architecture 85 (October 1996): 104–109.
26 Riichi Miyake, “Shigeru Ban as an Empiricist”, The Japan Architect 30 (Summer, 1998): 4–13.
27 McQuaid, Shigeru Ban, p. 167.
28 Miyake, “Shigeru Ban as an Empiricist”, p. 8.
29 Shigeru Ban, “Shigeru Ban: House of Furniture, Yamanakako-Mura, Yamanashi”, GA Houses 47
(1995): 56–59.
30 McQuaid, Shigeru Ban, p. 168.
31 Yasuhiro Teramatsu, “Furniture House #2”, Japan Architect 30 (1998): 54–55.
32 su11 Architects, “Composite House”, su11, 2008, www.su11.com/projects/composite-house/.
33 Ibid.
34 Andrew Blauvelt, Strangely Familiar: Design and Everyday Life, 1st ed. (Minneapolis, MN:
Walker Art Center, 2003), p. 228.
35 Ian Luna, New York: Architecture of a City (New York: Rizzoli International Publications Inc.,
2003), p. 237.
36 Koch and Lewis, At Home With Tomorrow, pp. 116–117.
37 Ban, “Shigeru Ban”, pp. 56–59.
38 Herbers, Prefab Modern, p. 130.
39 Stephen Kieran and James Timberlake, Refabricating Architecture: How Manufacturing
Methodologies Are Poised to Transform Building Construction (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004), p.
43.
Chapter 16
Oceanic interiorities
Sarah Treadwell
To push into the depths accelerating away from sweet air into a
greenish, blurred world with limited horizons, briefly sea creature,
cetaceous and skillful, is some sort of amniotic return, and an
acknowledgement of complicity; human bodies mix salt and water.
Out of your depth in many senses the sea lifts and submerges;
dragging on flesh, it seems reluctant to release you back into
everyday life. You carry the sea with you.
To live in the South Pacific is to be conscious of the watery nature of
interiority. Epeli Hau’ofa, a Fiji Islander, writer, and anthropologist of
Tongan descent writing for Oceanic people, starts his text, The Ocean in Us,1
with words from poet Teresia Teaiwa: “We sweat and cry salt water, so we
know that the ocean is really in our blood.”2 On the other side of the world,
British historian Philip Hoare, in his book The Sea Inside, wrote of his daily
immersion in northern oceans and his longing for engagements with the
deep waters that maintain the globe.3 These recurrent references to an
interior relationship with the sea suggest a spatiality that this chapter will
traverse.
Water covers approximately seventy percent of the earth’s surface.
The salt-laden oceans constitute the most extensive interiors that we
confront, and on which we depend. Because we have the sea within us and
because we also fear immersion (in the collective) in death, the sea is
envisaged in this chapter as a spatial condition that epitomizes our
vacillations between individuality and collectivity. This conflicted
relationship is explored through the making of a written image of the space
of the sea; an image of oceanic spatiality constructed by following threads of
writing that exhibit a sensitivity to the vast interior space that we exploit,
pollute, and endlessly imagine as escape.
Speculating on conditions of oceanic space that acknowledge the
shared and discrete natures of bodies and objects of the world, the written
image addresses the inevitable tension between the spaces of our collective
alignment and the temporality of individual lives. Each being in the world –
human and nonhuman – tends to be resistant to being taken over. Each body
can also be seen as open to combined engagements through the action of
work and negotiation.4 To swim in the sea is to form, momentarily and
warily, a collaborative relationship with the medium while still maintaining
our breathing selves. To undertake oceanic writing is to recall and enact that
collaboration.
Artist Robert Smithson shaped earth and water into a spiral with
the understanding that there was a connection between the Red Sea and
blood;5 oceanic writing acknowledges the scalar shifts between human and
marine bodies, both liquid and teeming with life. Such oceanic interiority is
maintained by permeable membranes (skin and shore) that permit
separation while allowing connections at individual and global scales. These
encounters have ethical and formal conditions. The immersive interior is, in
one sense, a uterine space; a space of beginning that endlessly repeats the
ordinary dramas of life and recognizes an exteriority within that cannot be
expelled.
On the surface, thickened with life, reactive to elsewhere, Hoare sees hints of
a condition beneath the skin that is at times a mirror. Invitation and
unreliability collect in his descriptions of the surface; meretricious,
ornamental, the sky falls. Across the surface that stretches along the
curvature of the earth, Hoare slides the horizon, which, while imitating
closure, lures mind and body around the globe. Standing on the edge of a
northern island, he notes:
The sea defines us, connects us, and separates us. Most of us
experience only its edges, our available wilderness on a crowded
island… . Perpetually renewing and destroying, the sea proposes a
beginning and an ending, an alternative to our landlocked state, an
existence to which we are tethered when we might rather be set
free.9
Hoare reflects on oceanic, tidal oscillations that make and remove; his sea
provides an image of the fluctuations of life: sailors might drown, but
Aphrodite was born of sea foam, the floating sperm of Uranus, according to
Hesiod.10 For Hoare, the sea is shaped as a sharp-edged image of freedom
opening into the world.
Teresia K. Teaiwa, in an essay on native Pacific cultural studies,
“Lo(o)sing the Edge,” also tests the limits of oceanic edges. She writes of the
edge of the ocean as a place to stand, a point to look out and back from and
as a critical or cutting edge. She asks:
The ocean in Teaiwa’s image is not only the recipient of history, but also its
instigator and participant. Temperatures of the world have been raised, but
it is the ocean itself that will pour across the reefs and beaches of Pacific
islands, removing traces of past and present occupation. The ocean will
change the histories of Pacific people; it is not possible, Teaiwa suggests, for
people to have an edge on the Pacific. Herman Melville in Moby Dick, or: the
White Whale gave that ocean a heartbeat and divinity. “Thus this
mysterious, divine Pacific zones the world’s bulk about; makes all coasts one
bay to it; seems the tide-beating heart of earth.”12
Dreaming escape
From the edge, an opening into the surface conditions of the sea prevails; we
look out to a pulsing liquid skin that surrounds us. To fall into water is the
stuff of fantasies and nightmares; sailors, those who navigate instrumentally,
fear death by drowning while things beneath the surface disappear from
consciousness, surfacing only as fleeting anxieties and desires. Attentive, no
doubt, to the lines of reflection and dispersal that pattern and ornament the
sea. As a constrained child, John Ruskin, author of The Seven Lamps of
Architecture (1849), gazed out from the edge.
Rosalind Krauss has told the story of Ruskin as a child watching
the sea. Her reportage evokes his restricted and constrained childhood that
left him with the gift of observation. Ruskin says:
The small, immobilized boy is aligned with the beat of the sea received only
in his stillness, immobility undone imperceptibly by the waves, like the
tides. The blood in his system barely circulates with the slow rhythm of
passing time. An image of elsewhere, a removal from the social, the sea is
pictured as “opening into a visual plenitude that is somehow heightened and
pure, both a limitless expanse and a sameness, flattening it into nothing, into
the no-space of sensory deprivation.”14 Krauss’s words, like the waves under
observation, construct the sea as a neutral space for wondering. The
detached plane of the surface offers some sort of compensation for enforced
restraint.
Purple and blue, the lurid shadows of the hollow breakers are cast
upon the mist of the night, which gathers cold and low, advancing
like the shadow of death upon the guilty ship as it labors amidst
the lightning of the sea, its thin masts written upon the sky in
lines of blood … and cast far along the desolate heave of the
sepulchral waves, incarnadines the multitudinous sea.16
Waves with no substance merge with the miasma of the scene. Stained and
flaming, the sea carries the guilt of the slave ship, tinted with the blood of
those cast into the water; waves as a funeral procession, marking passing
lives, approaching death. The sea is described by Ruskin with reference to
the guilt of Macbeth:
Tears overflow
Spatially imagined as a bleeding container of fear and trash, or a still surface
mirrored and riven by geometry, or shaped as a mechanism for abstract
detachment, the sea is also remembered as an implacable leveler. In the early
twenty-first century, a number of severe tsunamis hit Aceh, Japan,21
Samoa22 and other countries on ocean edges. The seas spread, dissolving and
eliminating many thousands of objects: people, animals, insects, houses,
furniture, and plants. Film clips from the time are haunting as the
insignificance of individual objects is set beside an immense body of moving
water in a washing away that rendered all equivalent; a scouring that left
the earth of Aceh exposed. Statistics gathered from writing and reports on
the tsunami noted:
Statistics cannot remain dry in such circumstances. With the many deaths,
the sea was both the instigator and repository of loss and mourning; lost
love, becoming child in loss, the ocean filled with catastrophic tears. Hélène
Cixous, in “Déluge,” wrote a final oceanic image of lost love and mourning:
I went right to the end of the labyrinth, under the roar of the tidal
wave, I ran beneath the sea, I ran on the earth, I went right to the
end of misfortune, above the racing tide rattled to the wind, below
I forced my way, I went right to the limit which I pushed back,
alive I abruptly entered behind the time after hope, as long as we
advance we prevent the story from ending, I ran, everlasting the
love – mourning in me the child-suffering created a flow of tears
matching the tidal wave above, bearing love death life further, no I
would not let myself be comforted and dried out, I would run on
until dream or reality gave me back my love, to the end, I run.24
The space of mourning is filled with the resistance of the running figure,
unable to outstrip the water, in a space of dreaming where the child cannot
be reached in time, always out of reach, where loss of love and life is
imagined over and over again. The tidal reach of such images is found in the
heaviness of slow-moving water, in a deep oceanic space, which bears both
the negligence and the beauty of the world.
Every domestic interior is, in some senses, oceanic, being liquid
(steam, moisture, and liquid emissions are constantly resisted) and
permeable (cut through with doors and windows and sound); they are
structured with geometries and surfaces that record the lives that they
contain. Able to be tainted or sweetened, and subject to evaporation, oceanic
interiors can be navigated with skill. At times resistant to collaborative
ventures, they contain new life, failed marriages, and difficult childhoods.
Despite being beset by a rising excess of material consumption, flooded with
items that exist to maintain other systems and other desires, the domestic
interior is oceanic in the tears that flow: sweat forms, blood falls, and waters
break over the difficulties and pleasure of everyday life.
Marine references have fabricated an image of oceanic interiority
as an empathetic practice, and oceanic spatiality emerges through a
deployment of thick, oily lines of things and words; the extracted interior
space being poised between the poetic and the accurate.25 To write is always
to construct an interior, through familiarity and estrangement, and to write
a pattern of oceanic interiority has been both an act of mourning and a
collaborative, formal undertaking. Containing anxieties, rising waters, and
detritus, reflecting desire and the passage of time, the sea repeats the interior
passage of life born and ended.
Notes
1 Epeli Hau’ofa, “The Ocean in Us”, in We Are the Ocean: Selected Works, ed. Epeli Hau’ofa
(Hawaii: The University of Hawaii Press, 2008), pp. 41–59.
2 Ibid., pp. 41–59.
3 Philip Hoare, The Sea Inside (London: Fourth Estate, 2013).
4 Adam S. Miller, Speculative Grace: Bruno Latour and Object Oriented Theology (New York:
Fordham University Press, 2013).
5 Robert Smithson, “The Spiral Jetty (1972)”, in Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings, ed. Jack
Flam (Berkeley, CA and London: University of California Press, 1996), p. 148. “Chemically
speaking, our blood is analogous in composition to the primordial seas. Following the spiral steps
we return to our origins, back to some pulpy protoplasm, a floating eye in an antediluvian ocean.”
6 Epeli Hau’ofa, “Our Sea of Islands”, in Inside Out: Literature, Cultural Politics, and Identity in the
New Pacific, ed. Vilsoni Hereniko and Rob Wilson (Boulder, CO: Rowman and Littlefield, 1999),
p. 37.
7 Epeli Hau’ofa, “Our Sea of Islands”, in A New Oceania: Rediscovering Our Sea of Islands, ed. Eric
Waddell, Vijay Naidu, and Epeli Hau’ofa (Suva, Fiji: The University of the South Pacific School of
Social and Economic Development, in Association with Beake House, 1993), p. 9.
8 Hoare, The Sea Inside, p. 17.
9 Hoare, The Sea Inside, p. 7.
10 Hesiod, Theogony, (8th–7th century BC), line 195, www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?
doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0130%3Acard%3D173 (accessed 19 May 2015).
11 Teresia K. Teaiwa, “Lo(o)sing the Edge”, The Contemporary Pacific 13, no. 2 (Fall 2001): 345,
www.academia.edu/3293752/L_o_osing_the_Edge
12 Herman Melville, Moby Dick, or: the White Whale (London: Hodder and Stoughton Ltd., 1930), p.
445.
13 Rosalind E. Krauss, The Optical Unconscious (Cambridge, MA and London: The MIT Press, 1998),
p. 2.
14 Ibid., p. 2.
15 Joseph Mallard William Turner, The Slave Ship, 35¾" x 48¼", Oil on Canvas (Boston, MA:
Museum of Fine Arts Boston, 1840).
16 John Ruskin, Modern Painters, Vol. 1 (Gutenberg Ebook, 4 September 2009),
www.gutenberg.org/files/29907/29907-h/29907-h.htm#b2s5c3p32 (accessed 15 May 2015).
17 William Shakespeare, Macbeth, Act 2, scene 2, lines 75–78, www.shakespeare-
online.com/plays/macbeth_2_2.html (accessed 15 May 2015).
18 Marcus Wood, Blind Memory: Visual Representations of Slavery in England and America, 1780–
At least 100 people are believed to have died and many more been
injured in the Pacific island nations of Samoa, Western Samoa and
Tonga after the powerful undersea earthquake this week that led
to tsunami waves up to six metres high.
23 Shannon Doocy, Amy Daniels, Anna Dick, and Thomas D. Kirsch, “The Human Impact of
Tsunamis: A Historical Review of Events 1900–2009 and Systematic Literature Review”, PLOS
Technologies
The spatial agency of digital praxis
Erin Carraher
The same can be asked of all disciplines that shape the built environment.2
Architectural theorists such as Jeremy Till and Antoine Picon,
amongst others, have contributed to the contemporary discourse
surrounding agency in design, which is influenced by the Marxist legacy and
often carries an implication of affecting change against societal structures.
Work of those like Diébédo Francis Kéré, Design Corps, and the Rural Studio
focus on improving the social condition of underrepresented populations
through design’s agency. Not all types of design agency are equal. Digital
processes open up an additional avenue for advancing design’s technical,
political, and social impact by embracing its influence to affect and be
affected by the activities that occur within the spaces it creates.
Despite the massive changes in technology and culture since the height of
the Modernist movement, our current thinking about contemporary design’s
agency has not progressed accordingly. The built environment has always
had agency, though it has not always been designed to reveal this. Digitally
designed and fabricated projects give designers the power to make structures
and products that assert their materiality. They make conspicuous how space
and matter produce effects on the inhabitants’ experience. With this,
computational design can help shape a public with the ability to judge a
level of responsiveness to its surroundings. It can help that public participate
in an intelligent conversation about the impact of space on their actions and
their power to reciprocally impact that space. It can change the public and
private discourse on design through a debate on the empowerment of those
who engage with a given piece of built work. Modernists may have
extended designed space to a segment of Western classes that previously
could not afford to have access to it, but in doing so they often created built
environments that feigned neutrality, but in fact imposed a heavy-handed
formal structure that overwrote the local context. Digitally envisioned and
represented design has the potential to create an equilibrium between
human and inanimate agents and expand the potential of such work to
positively impact a broadened social and economic world.
Even though the digital designer’s agency is processed through
layers of filters introduced into the process by the use of software programs,
coding languages, graphic user interfaces, and tooling, a more direct
connection to the production process has been gained, and the end result
liberates a new understanding of space. In the case of interior architecture,
the limits of economically determined design decisions driven by the cost of
nonstandard designs are not historically grounded, but rather, represent the
legacy of the previous generation’s technological advances in standardized
construction techniques. The process of normalizing building components
and shifting to products and systems from materials developed at the end of
the Industrial Revolution. The potential for contemporary, digitally fueled,
customizable interior architectural constructs that are now economically
viable to serve an audience beyond the technocratic elite is powerful, once
the dialog moves past the process-driven fetishization and formal results of
these tools.
Much of the work that has taken place over the past four decades
in this rapidly evolving field has involved experiments and installations, but
that has not yet been fully realized in programmatic, structural, or
environmental autonomy. Digitally produced architecture and interior
architecture, which for the purposes of this argument are focused on those
projects not integrated with more conventional forms of construction, too
often remain in the realm of figurative objects, articulated surfaces, or full-
scale prototypes intended to test materials and methods for future
application without engaging with the social and spatial dimensions of how
such forms differentiate space. This critique does not discount the critical
progress that has taken place to date, but instead aspires for it to do more.
The rapid expansion of access to digital tools in low-income areas and
developing countries, as well as the open-source nature of the communities
working with these tools, allows for the dissemination of knowledge beyond
the traditional formal structures of academia and Western practice. This
proliferation of access to computational tools promises to expand current
structures beyond these myopic issues.
These words ring true more than a generation later as we experience our
own radical shift in technology and the need to mobilize interior
architecture’s role in shaping the social spaces required to advance society.
To achieve enduring relevance, digital tools must be used in a way
in which the complexities of their resulting forms, the space that is created,
and their impact on social interaction is intentional and reflective. Radical
shifts in practice – of which interior architecture offers potential – often
have a social agenda. K. Michael Hays posits a practice between the
extremes of “instrument of culture” and “autonomous form” that informs a
productive architectural project through the resistant and visionary
authorship of the designer:
The confusion about what architects and designers “produce” when they
make an interior environment continues today. Is it the physical design itself
or the experience that the design creates?
What we mean when we speak of space in design is thus a
somewhat nebulous and fluid thing. As Hernik Berlage stated at the
beginning of the twentieth century, “Since architecture is the art of spatial
enclosure, we must emphasize the architectonic nature of space, both in a
constructive and a decorative sense. For this reason, a building should not be
considered primarily from the outside.”21 Modernists, who adopted the
German philosophical vocabulary for thinking about space, defined space in
a number of ways. Three of the primary definitions, according to Forty, were
space as enclosure (building elements are devices that enclose space, which
is defined as the principal theme of modernism), space as continuum
(continuous, infinite connection between inside and outside space), and
space as extension of the body (formed by human activity).22
In Production of Space, Lefebvre ties the post-Industrial
Revolution’s awareness of space and its production in the built environment
to the Bauhaus movement, which according to him developed a new global
definition of space.23 Lefebvre makes a direct connection between the
production of space24 and the changing modes of production in Fordist
manufacturing processes at that time:
Architects are not, after all, simply tools of power and agents of
spatial abstraction; they do have a distinctive material
understanding of space and its relations to social praxis as
something that can be modulated in varying qualities and to
diverse effects… . Indeed, if space is at once a distinctly modern
feature of architecture and a constitutive problem of modern
architecture as knowledge and practice, it is a blind spot of
architectural discourse for that very reason. If architects are
effective agents for the specialization of power as Lefebvre claims,
then one must also accept that an architect is trained to have an
intimate and perhaps a certain expert knowledge about space,
even if it remains unarticulated as such.35
There are many forms of spatial agency in contemporary digital praxis that
demonstrate aspects of fulfilling the potential of interior architecture as a
transformative technical, spatial, and social agent. The intricate installations
of Marc Fornes and THEVERYMANY promise a new form of interiority that
is both heterogeneous and homogeneous; the material research of Achim
Menges at the Institute of Computational Design premises the use of digital
tools to reengage designers with the natural properties of the materials they
use; perhaps most effective for the nature of this argument, WikiHouse’s
open-source, digitally driven, and environmentally responsive design
provides a broad range of clients who would not otherwise be able to afford
a designer’s services to adapt and fabricate their own home.
Most of the computationally designed and digitally fabricated
projects that are pushing boundaries on the technology and material fronts
of interiority are still focused on process-based advances and do not yet
address the experiential aspects of their design. The disruptive stage of this
advancement is over, and now the work of understanding how to better
harness these tools for the social good, and make visible the active space that
is produced, is beginning. The space is responsive and impactful, effecting
change through the empowerment of others to engage with it. Modernist
space may have allowed greater agency for inhabitants because of its
neutrality, but contemporary space engages the public in a relationship
where the human agent and the spatial agent are equal. This reciprocal
engagement extends beyond just the user to the designer, who is also an
active character in its production.
The challenge of contemporary digital praxis within interior
architecture is to identify and legitimize itself both within the traditionally
defined realm of spatial practice and within the public that consumes it by
establishing a way of talking about its agency. Computational design offers
ways of thinking in relationships that can begin to incorporate social,
spatial, and experiential parameters alongside formal and performative ones.
Digital fabrication as an act of making creates an interaction with space that
is more conscious and shifts the understanding of our relationship to
structure to a more conspicuous one. Even though designers working to
expand digital praxis in interior architecture have become more specialized,
they have gained the potential for their built work to serve an audience
beyond the technocratic elite once the dialog expands beyond the formal
results of these tools.
Notes
1 Scott Lash, Antoine Picon, and Margaret Crawford, “Agency and Architecture: How to Be
Critical?” (Scott Lash and Antoine Picon, in Conversation with Kenny Cupers and Isabelle
Doucet, Comments by Margaret Crawford), FOOTPRINT 3, no. 1 (2009): 7–20.
2 Ibid.
3 Special thanks to Shundana Yusaf from the University of Utah’s School of Architecture for her
guidance and editing during the development of this chapter. She gave significant input to help
establish my understanding of the space of Modernist architecture in this section amongst many
other invaluable insights and connections. Any mistakes or misinterpretations are solely my
own.
4 Michael Hensel and Achim Menges, “The Heterogeneous Space of Morpho-Ecologies”, in AD
Space Reader: Heterogeneous Space in Architecture, ed. Christopher Hight, Michael Hensel, and
Achim Menges (Chichester: Wiley, 2009), p. 199.
5 Walter Gropius, “Appraisal of the Development of Modern Architecture” (1934), in The Scope of
Total Architecture (New York: MacMillan Publishing Company, 1980), pp. 62–63. Emphasis is
from the original text.
6 Joan Ockman, “New Politics of the Spectacle: ‘Bilbao’ and the Global Imagination”, in
Architecture and Tourism: Perception, Performance and Place, ed. D. Medina Lasansky and Brian
McLaren (Oxford: Berg, 2004), p. 234.
7 Branko Kolarevic, ed., Architecture in the Digital Age: Design and Manufacturing (New York and
London: Taylor & Francis, 2004), pp. 32–33.
8 Ibid.
9 Stan Allen, “The Future That Is Now”, The Design Observer 3 (2012),
http://places.designobserver.com/feature/architecture-school-the-future-that-is-now/32728/
(accessed 25 September 2014).
10 Ibid.
11 Christopher Hight, Michael Hensel, and Achim Menges, eds., “En Route: Toward a Discourse on
Heterogeneous Space Beyond Modernist Space-Time and Post-Modernist Social Geography”, in
AD Space Reader: Heterogeneous Space in Architecture, ed. Christopher Hight, Michael Hensel,
and Achim Menges (Chichester: Wiley, 2009), p. 10.
12 Allen, “The Future That Is Now”.
13 Tim Love, “Between Mission Statement and Parametric Model”, Places Journal September (2009),
https://placesjournal.org/article/between-mission-statement-and-parametric-model (accessed 4
June 2015).
14 Ockman, “New Politics of the Spectacle”, in Architecture and Tourism: Perception, Performance
and Place, ed. D. Medina Lasansky and Brian McLaren (Oxford: Berg, 2004) p. 231.
15 Ibid., p. 230.
16 Rory Stott, “The Depreciating Value of Form in the Age of Digital Fabrication”, ArchDaily, 13
April 2014, www.archdaily.com/?p=495089 (accessed 26 September 2014).
17 Gropius, “Appraisal of the Development of Modern Architecture”, pp. 61–62.
18 K. Michael Hays, “Critical Architecture: Between Culture and Form”, Perspecta 21 (1984): 14–29.
19 Hight, Hensel, and Menges, eds., “En Route”, p. 11.
20 Adrian Forty, Words and Buildings: A Vocabulary of Modern Architecture (London: Thames &
Hudson, 2013), pp. 256–275.
21 Hendrik Petrus Berlage, Thoughts on Style 1886–1909 (Santa Monica: The Getty Center
Publications Program, 1996), p. 152.
22 Forty, Words and Buildings, pp. 256–275.
23 Tim Unwin, “A Waste of Space? Toward a Critique of the Social Production of Space …”,
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 25, no. 1 (2000): 11–29.
24 Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space (Oxford: Blackwell, 1991), p. 124.
25 Ibid., p. 124.
26 Ibid., pp. 27–28.
27 Hight, Hensel, and Menges, eds., “En Route”, pp. 9–37.
28 Nishat Awan, Tatjana Schneider, and Jeremy Till, Spatial Agency: Other Ways of Doing
Laura Lovell-Anderson
Figure 18.3 Through the interior volume transformation process, Yeung reflected: “there is often an
ambiguity between invisible and defined boundaries in mathematical surfaces – and this may
translate to factors of the component in regards to overall geometry relating to form flexibility. An
initial subdividing process may introduce parameters necessary for the component design, including
the general shape and the number of vertices in each module (dependent on the method of
subdivision). This process stems from the notion of ‘self-generated’ modular forms as a result of a
subdividing process. The outcome should ideally allow for an articulate component organization about
a substrate” (2016, p. 12).
Image credit: author
Notes
1 Donella Meadows, Thinking in Systems: A Primer (White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green
Pub., 2009); I.M. Rocker, “When Code Matters”, Architectural Design 76 (2006): 16–25.
2 Uri Wilensky, “Modeling Nature’s Emergent Patterns With Multi-Agent Languages”, Proceedings
Technology and Design: From Interior Space to Outer Space, ed. D. Schneiderman and A. Winton
(London and New York: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2016).
11 Michael Hensel, Achim Menges, and Michael Weinstock, Emergent Technologies and Design:
Sensorialities
Chapter 19
Laura Garófalo-Khan
This chapter uses the artificial grotto as the touchstone for an exploration of
contemporary interior architecture. The proliferation of organic form made
possible through digital design and fabrication techniques, coupled with a
conscious interest in reconnecting the human-made and the natural, make
this unique typology a plausible model for interior architecture. Framing
sensorial manifestations of ambient conditioning and performative
ornamentation with interior spatial design in terms of biophilia, this chapter
discusses projects expressing the sensual nature of the grotto’s architecture
without being confined by formal, morphological, or material conditions.
Responsive ornament
Natural or artificial, sacred or profane, the grotto is an event space, not a
place of quotidian habitation. It is not only a place outside the normal
condition, but also a place that envelops its occupants in its own cosmology.
Ornament, much like the grottoes it populates, is a way of defining a self-
contained cosmology that does not need to reflect the local conditions in
which the decorated object (or building) is made. Like the flowers of a
garden, these components are free to fabricate an alternative ecology in a
physical sense, which in turn engenders an alternative cosmology in a
conceptual sense.16
The installation Hylozoic Soil (Figure 19.1) by Philip Beesley is part
of a series of site-specific installations that employ a visual language that
defines fully immersive cosmology as otherworldly as the fanciful grotto in
its original conception. Components of these sensuous installations respond
to the visitor’s presence, while others are programmed with global or
rhythmic actions encouraging visitors to interact with the space. In his
article, Bloomer explains that touching and the possibility of touching are
critical to establishing the connection with nature that biophilia promotes.17
This set of luminous, cave-like spaces that have been deployed across the
globe over the past five years is a haptic wonderland. The responsive surface
is covered by hundreds of feathery digitally fabricated units that take on
different shapes due to their placement and activity. Microprocessors,
proximity sensors, and globules housing chemical reactions are deployed
with them on a net of mechanical acrylic components whose materiality
augments the ethereal and fragile quality of the vaults that envelop the
visitor. Its programmed activity engages the occupant in a delicate dance,
like the Italian fountain grottoes with their orchestrated sprays and splashes.
Figure 19.1 Hylozoic Soil, Installation at the Montreal Beaux-Arts Museum by Philip Beesley (2006)
Image credt: © PBAI
Geometry undone
A contemporary project that actually takes on the term is the SOL Grotto
(Figure 19.2) by Rael San Fratello Architects.18 It deviates from traditional
examples as it is not embedded in the earth but is a freestanding box. The
SOL Grotto adheres to the grotto model in four ways: its association to
water, its sensorial provocation, its intent as a place of rest in a garden/park,
and its focus on an interior redefined by the articulation of a performative
boundary that presents a “mediated experience of water, coolness, and
light.”19 Inside the small space is a discontinuous surface made of
luminescent points and lines. Composed of over one thousand glass tubes of
varied size embedded into a simple grid pattern, the resulting pattern is
distorted by its own three-dimensionality. The conceived pattern changes as
the point of view changes. The dynamic effect of the geometric aggregation
of tubes resembles the flow of dancing shells arrayed in geometric patterns
in historic shell houses.
Figure 19.2 SOL Grotto at the Berkeley Botanical Gardens by Rael San Fratello (2012)
Image credit: Matthew Millman
Porous Poché
Bienvenidos al Sur, a proposed exhibition hall for the Spanish Pavilion of the
2015 Milan Expo by Aybar Mateos Arquitectos (Figure 19.3), takes the idea
of a biophilic building to its ultimate conclusion by creating a building from
a thick layering of plants. Like the grotto, it is a literal garden room, an
interior in the exterior; its set of connected rooms is formed by the
landscape that provides an infrastructure for verdant growth. Unlike the
grotto, it is made of the tectonic frame system espoused by modern
architecture, rather than the stereotomic system of the earth mound.
Figure 19.3 Bienvenidos al Sur a proposed exhibition hall for the Spanish Pavilion of the 2015 Milan
Expo by Aybar Mateos Arquitectos
Image credit: © Aybar Mateos Arquitectos
Notes
1 Naomi Miller, Heavenly Caves: Reflections on the Garden Grotto (New York: George Brasilier,
Inc., 1982), p. 7.
2 Although the word natural is no longer applicable once we acknowledge we have entered the
Anthropocene, a proposed new geological epoch that recognizes humanity’s impact on our
planet, for the purposes of this short text the term will be synonymous with the non-human
ecological, geological, ambient, and environmental features that are generally seen as “nature.”
3 Stephen Kellert, “Dimensions, Elements, and Attributes of Biophilic Design”, in Biophilic Design,
the Theory, Science, and Practice of Bringing Buildings to Life, ed. Stephen Kellert, Judith
Heerwagen, and Martin Mador (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2008), pp. 3–7.
4 Stephen Kieran, “Evolving an Environmental Aesthetic”, in Biophilic Design, the Theory, Science,
and Practice of Bringing Buildings to Life, ed. Stephen Kellert, Judith Heerwagen, and Martin
Mador (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2008), pp. 243–246.
5 Kent Bloomer, “The Picture Window”, in Biophilic Design, the Theory, Science, and Practice of
Bringing Buildings to Life, ed. Stephen Kellert, Judith Heerwagen, and Martin Mador (Hoboken,
NJ: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2008), p. 258.
6 Ibid.
7 Judith Heerwagen and Bert Gregory, “Biophilia and Sensory Aesthetics”, in Biophilic Design, the
Theory, Science, and Practice of Bringing Buildings to Life, ed. Stephen Kellert, Judith
Heerwagen, and Martin Mador(Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2008), pp. 227–233.
8 Christopher Thacker, The History of Gardens (Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press,
1979).
9 Miller, Heavenly Caves, p. 7.
10 Ibid., pp. 20–36.
11 Ibid., pp. 34–50.
12 Hazel Jackson, Shell Houses and Grottoes (Oxford: Shire Publications Ltd., 2001), pp. 4–23.
13 Built in 1627 by Isaac de Caus, a leading garden designer in seventeenth-century England.
14 Bloomer, “The Picture Window”, p. 260.
15 Bloomer, “Ornament”.
16 Kent Bloomer and John Kresten Jespersen, “Ornament as Distinct From Decoration”, 2014,
http://ornament-scholar.blogspot.com/2014/02/ornament-as-distinct-from-decoration_5274.html
17 Kent Bloomer, “The Picture Window”, p. 256.
18 Project Team: Ronald Rael, Virginia San Fratello, Kent Wilson, Bryan Allen, Chase Lunt, Dustin
Moon, Bridget Basham.
19 “Sol Grotto”, Rael San Fratello, September 2012, www.rael-sanfratello.com/?p=1466 (accessed 10
December 2014).
20 Ibid.
21 Miller, Heavenly Caves, p. 12.
Chapter 20
Campfires
Banham described two kinds of shelter historically created by humans: a
shelter that avoided environment in its entirety, such as “under a rock, tree,
tent, or roof,” or one that was “actually interfering with the local
meteorology, usually by means of a campfire.”4 The Standard of Living
Package belongs to the latter category, and Banham made the case for the
campfire having “unique qualities which architecture cannot hope to equal,
above all, its freedom and variability.”5 The experience that Banham
described suggests a gradient of multiple environmental qualities with
different degrees of interiority. These spatial zones around the campfire
could be utilized in multiple ways, allowing for the subtle creation of
multiple interiors implied by simple environmental and, by extension,
experiential variation. In this framework, the Standard of Living Package
was a sentient structure, one able to sense its surroundings and provide
multiple gradients of space surrounding it. The provision of mechanical,
technological, and even emotive support rendered the Standard of Living
Package a broader energy provider, whereby “energy” was interpreted in an
expanded sense, as an essential part of the infrastructure of our daily lives.
Projects like Future Cities Lab’s Lightswarm (Figure 20.1) attempt
to create a gradient of space around the installation while simultaneously
tapping into the larger sonic energy field surrounding the site. Lightswarm is
an interactive light installation in a state of perpetual flux. Responding to
sounds harvested from the lobby of the museum and the surrounding city,
this site-specific artwork activates a south-facing facade with swarms of
light. During the day, filtered sunlight produces ever-changing patterns of
shadow, while in the evening the facade is transformed in a dynamic
electro-luminescent composition visible from the interior lobby, the garden,
and the city beyond. Sound-sensing spiders attached directly to individual
glass panels in the lobby transform the facade into a large-scale urban
sensor, an instrument to sense the city, visualize its auditory pulse, and
amplify its latent energies into cascades of light. Real-time data collected
from these sensors are used to inform a swarming algorithm that guides
patterns of streaming light. The resulting form is an artificially intelligent
facade – a smart surface that can sense, compute, respond, and interact with
its surroundings.
Figure 20.1 Lightswarm, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, CA
Image credit: Peter Prato
Feedback
In Architecture or Techno-Utopia: Politics After Modernism, Felicity D. Scott
describes Emilio Ambasz’s “anti-object” position in the environments he
commissioned for Italy: The New Domestic Landscape exhibition, one of
which was Superstudio’s Description of a Microevent/Microenvironment.10
Rather than “falling into the trap of passive abstention,” these environments
were “closer to his (Ambasz’s) ideal of active critical participation.”11 Scott
continues to quote Ambasz in describing the relationship these
environments had to their users as “an ensemble of interrelated processes,
whose interaction results in constantly changing patterns of relationships.”12
The variability and participatory quality of engagement was at the heart of
these projects; Scott notes this as a refusal of these objects “to adopt a fixed
shape.”13 Notions of feedback and loops of interdependency that have
become integral to today’s understanding of the relationship between
interactive spaces and their surroundings’ data inputs are implied in this
malleability and interactivity.
Scott further expands upon Ambasz’s view of the ability of the
domestic realm “to become a site of introducing ‘forms and scripts’ from the
larger public realm into a space able to respond given the right equipment,
to ‘our desire for continuous participation in the self-shaping and self-
management of everyday existence.’”14 This inextricable link between an
interactive space and its broader environment questions the role of the scale
of interactions in the projects presented here. We now have the right
equipment and are able to readily bring in forms and scripts from the public
realm into determined spaces. The environments we can create can tap into
anything from the local interactions of passersby, to the social media
floating in the ether or local sonic patterns. Key in the ability for these
projects to gain meaning is participation and active engagement which
allows them to shape and change daily life.
This interconnectivity makes the installations presented here
closer to Superstudio’s microevents than to the remote “happy islands” that
exist in pure isolation from everything that surrounds them or the magical
“talismans” that exist for purely symbolic and representational terms.15
Superstudio’s polemic was one of a full and outright rejection of production
and consumption. This was manifested in a life with no objects to be owned,
one that relied on an egalitarian and all-providing energy infrastructure we
could all plug into and feed into and from. This is in stark contrast to the
complex and contradictory politics of the grid we plug into today, raising
issues of ownership, privacy, access, and capitalism. Who owns the data?
Who disperses it? What data is represented and how is it selected? These
questions demand us to develop ways to circumvent, interrupt, and question
the information represented.
Murmur Wall, though apparently passive in its retransmission of
information, has the ability to override the system with a series of whispers,
messages sent to it from anywhere through an online interface. Analogous
to graffiti on an urban surface, the Murmur Wall can be tagged with
whispers sent to it by the public. These are transmitted as blue streams of
light and text that overlay on top of anything else being transmitted through
the wall at the time. The whispers counter the seemingly representational
nature of the installation and explore ways to make it an active participant
in the conversations happening around it.
Emerging trajectories
Lightswarm, Datagrove, and Murmur Wall endeavor to create microevents
and/or microenvironments around them that aspire to be “campfires” in the
urban landscape.16 These public installations attempt to bring people
together in varying degrees of proximity and intimacy by creating ranges of
experiences and participation. They aspire to create ranges of atmospheres
around them that compel varying degrees of engagement. Ultimately, these
works create multiple and overlapping interiorities that may be applied at a
various scales.
These installations map a future trajectory where gradients of
environment begin gaining intelligence through their seamless integration
with data – they become sentient. Sentience suggests an inherent ability of
an object to perceive, sense, and feel its surrounding environment in a
subjective and highly personal manner.17 As daily life is inundated with
information and data, this quality of sentience takes on a new role in the
design of the spaces we inhabit. New modes of space are emerging that are
immersed – sentient – in the data that we generate; surfaces that are
streaming with text and color or screens that are transmitting real-time
information. We readily expect every surface to be smart, to be data-rich
and brimming with information. We swipe, slide, and flip through screens
with surprising ease, and as the screens grow in scale and size, we expect the
same of the surrounding walls and surfaces. Rather than continuing to
flatten, minimize, and strip the representation of information, what if it
became robust, thick, deep, and part of the everyday spaces we interact
with? A territory is emerging where these qualities of ambience and
sentience are becoming hybridized and spatial. In response, designers seek to
further experiment in this field where rooms, buildings, and cities become
sentient and are integral to the transformation that renders the surrounding
environment rich and deep with information to experience.
Notes
1 Reyner Banham, “A House Is Not a Home”, Art in America 2 (1965): 70, 73.
2 Ibid., p. 74.
3 Ibid., p. 75.
4 Superstudio, “Description of a Microevent/Microenvironment”, in Italy: The New Domestic
Landscape: Achievements and Problems of Italian Design, ed. Emilio Ambasz (New York:
Museum of Modern Art), p. 242.
5 Ibid.
6 Ibid., p. 79.
7 Ibid., p. 242.
8 Ibid., p. 242, 244.
9 Ibid., p. 249.
10 Felicity D. Scott, Architecture or Techno-Utopia: Politics After Modernism (Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 2007), p. 126.
11 Ibid.
12 Ibid. Quoting Emilio Ambasz, ed., Italy: The New Domestic Landscape: Achievements and
Ross T. Smith
Visible/Invisible
The world is not a “lake of nothingness” but a place to be explored and
discovered in its depths and differences.8 When our physical body is
introduced to a scene; we are not only looking at objects from many
adumbrational aspects as we move around them and as they reveal
themselves to us. Our body becomes sensually engaged with the condition
of the objects in space which reveal limitless possibilities in perceiving them.
Philosopher Jean-Luc Marion suggests that Martin Heidegger
“legitimates the possibility of a phenomenology of the unapparent in
general.”9 Heidegger’s terminology of “showing itself” “from itself” is the
announcement of subtle revelation. With all that is visible, there must be
other things that remain invisible. Invisibility maintains potential,
excitement, and expectation of our oneiric sensibility. The hidden becomes
an equally valid phenomenal experience, as is the revealed. We understand
that if something is hidden, it must have the potential to reveal itself and
vice versa. Expectation, therefore, preempts revelation.
Spatial configuration determines how objects reveal themselves to
be present and absent in relation to each other and to ourselves. If we
consider adumbrations as revealing and alternating by hiding aspects of an
object, then we can extrapolate this to the dialectics of the visible and the
invisible, or presence and absence. Considered thus, absence can be regarded
as the inverse of presence. Absence, then, is not nothingness or emptiness,
but a place of portent, a space available for action, and a space which exists
of and for itself. In interior architecture, space is definable yet exists as the
presence of absence. Architects and designers make choices in design about
spatiality: open space, closed space, surface space, material space, furniture
space, object space, sound space, time space, or light and shadow space, for
example. Everything which is introduced or removed reconfigures and
redefines spatiality.
Experiential learning
Experiential learning is the physical experience of making and doing which
translates thought into action. Experiential learning reasserts the physicality
of the teaching and learning experience through embodying design concepts
in physical, project-based work. Although phenomenology offers a
philosophical theory to encapsulate conceptual studio design, it is the
experiential “making by doing” which reinforces the practice of architecture.
The processes of active experimentation, risk-taking, and reflective
observation combined with abstract and conceptual thought and research
reinforce the mode of experiential learning. The preference is an intimate
and experiential design studio which encourages the holistic engagement of
body and mind as the integration of a psychosomatic partnership.
Experiential learning is most effective for students who are strongly
motivated to learn. Students must take the initiative to generate their own
learning through active engagement with teachers, the environment, and the
opportunities and facilities available to them.
The language we need to express our newfound awareness has to
be poetic, elegant, sophisticated, and at times, raw and direct. Language
becomes the necessary complement to drawing by adding the descriptive
and poetic details that drawings merely allude to. Language provides nuance
and eloquence to silent drawings and models by providing an appeal to a
project. Exploratory and descriptive writing and speaking is a necessary
adjunct to studio practice, as is the phenomenographic expression of our
experience through movement, writing, drawing, making, photography, and
performance.10 Design studios can develop integrated exercises which
reinforce a phenomenological and experiential approach to learning through
exploration and discovery. These exercises can be applied at any year level
as they establish the orientation of the studio early in the semester.
“Paper Play Things” is a first-year introductory exercise for
students to work in pairs. The idea is to make an attachment for the body
using only paper. Details, structural form, and strength have to be developed
by understanding the qualities of the material itself. At the same time, the
final piece of work has to have a simple conceptual or developmental reason
that directs it. This is a way to start the semester with a few hours of fun
and play while introducing an experiential learning exercise (Figure 21.1).
Photography can be used to concentrate vision on specific details
when investigating objects. “Body” and “interior,” as words, create two
related foci for the students to explore, conceptualize, and revisualize the
physical world through the immediacy of photography. When the
photograph is printed and viewed, we often see many more aspects of the
close environment than we did at the time of taking the photograph. This
reinforces that we do not always see what we are looking at by realizing the
importance of acute and subtle attention.
“Blind drawing” is a two-hour drawing exercise which happens in
the first week of the semester to introduce the phenomenological approach
to the studio. Many high-achieving students can be self-critical and
intellectually judgmental of their creative abilities. Drawing by hand
encourages students to let go of the perfection and accuracy which are so
predetermined by CAD programs. Blind drawing disrupts the intellectual
preconception and fear of “not getting it right” that many students face these
days due to a lack of hand-drawing practice. The imperfection of viscerally
responsive mark making offers the possibility of the unexpected, where a
smudge could indicate a certain ephemeral or material quality that may lead
to a journey of imagining. Drawing (or any mark making) mediated by the
body is a phenomenographic process of transferring thought to paper. For
this exercise, the students are blindfolded and directed to draw a variety of
sensory perceptions of reality, not objects, but feelings of a thing. The
drawings are made with soft charcoal on large sheets of paper. The students
sit, stand, move about, crush the charcoal, or smash it into the paper, and
draw with their hands (Figure 21.2). Life is a messy business; we do not live
in a world of perfections and absolutes – it is one of errors and humorous
mistakes. The blind drawing exercise frees students from visually judging
their drawing abilities. It acts as a significant turning point in the studio.
Students use drawing to express their intuitions and ideas about design
freely, in a direct and uncomplicated manner (Figure 21.3).
Figure 21.1 Paper Play Things. Students: Melike Sena Erden and Muhammed Ali Şişman. First Year
Architecture Studio. Abdullah Gül University, Turkey. (2015)
Image credit: © Ross T. Smith
Architecture, says Botond Bognor, is a discipline which “guides
and creates the person-environment relationship.”11 It is the design studio
which has a predominant focus on the introduction to and the influence of
this relationship during an architectural education. It is in this period of
education, the actual experience of being in the design studio, during which
the teacher has the opportunity to offer students a vast array of cross-
disciplinary influences intellectually, physically, and socially. The challenge
is to delimit the headlong rush into formalizing and rationalizing human
experiences through the strict linearity of computer programs and their
seductive operational values. There has become an addictive fascination
with what happens on a screen to the neglect and detriment of hand
drawing, model making, and other physical forms of material
experimentation (exploration, the happy accident, and wonderment of the
diverse influences) which could be used in the architectural design processes.
There is less connection with the real and immediate as the digital and
virtual take the central focal point of many students today. A reemergence
of a phenomenological and experiential approach to learning, therefore,
shifts students to focus on acts of the body existing in reality.
Figure 21.2 Blind Drawing. Student: Tarık Şengüleç. Workshop at Melikşah University, Turkey. (2015)
Image credit: © Ross T. Smith
Figure 21.3 Blind Drawing. Student: Fenina Acance. Master of Architecture Design Studio. University
of Melbourne, Australia. (2012)
Image credit: © Ross T. Smith
Empowering students
The commitment of a teacher is to empower students to be freethinkers and
questioners, to contribute meaningfully in the architecture of this rapidly
changing world, and to be better equipped to tackle the difficult questions of
our future environment. Architecture and interiority are often mediators of
small problems. This is particularly evident in education and the progressive
evolution of the design studio. A conceptual approach to design teaching is a
persistent questioning of problems, ongoing research, resolution through
reflective insights, and the iteration of ideas and progress. This attitude can
be applied to all design questions to solve problems and gain new awareness
no matter the proposition.
Phenomenology expands students’ thoughts theoretically and
philosophically to enable them to examine their own perceptions and
concepts in architecture. Teaching and learning interior architecture is not
only about buildings; it is also about the innovation of our mind. It is one’s
creative imagination in response to how we live in this world that enables us
to conceptualize and interpret the built environment to enhance our lives,
not as an imaginary landscape, but as imagined propositions for living.
Greater sensitivity to our corporeal being reorients us to how we
inhabit the interior environment in particular. As recorded in Italo Calvino’s
book Invisible Cities, Marco Polo said to Kublai Khan:
Notes
1 Eugen Fink, cited in The Merleau-Ponty Reader, ed. Ted Toadvine and Leonard Lawlor
(Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 2007), p. 61.
2 Juhani Pallasmaa, “Lived Space”, in Sensuous Minimalism, ed. Fang Hai (China: China
Architecture and Building Press, 2002), p. 188.
3 Maurice Merleau-Ponty, The Merleau-Ponty Reader, ed. Ted Toadvine and Leonard Lawlor
(Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 2007), p. 63.
4 Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space (Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 1994 [1958]), p. 134.
5 David Seamon, “Phenomenology, Place, Environment, and Architecture”, in Environmental and
trans. Claude Lefort and Alphonso Lingis (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1968), p.
xliii.
9 Jean-Luc Marion, The Visible and the Revealed, trans. Christina M. Gschwandtner (New York:
Fordham University Press, 2008), p. 7.
10 Note: Phenomenology is the apprehension and comprehension of phenomena, whereas
phenomenography is the expression of that experience graphically or physically as
documentation and outward expression of experiential learning. The former could be considered
an internalized process whilst the latter an externalized manifestation of the phenomenological
process. Phenomenography is the process of recording physically, as drawing and writing,
making and building, the outcomes of learning by doing as things which materialized and can be
seen, discussed, and reflected upon by the individual or others.
11 Botond Bognar, “A Phenomenological Approach to Architecture and Its Teaching in the Design
Studio”, in Dwelling, Place and Environment: Towards a Phenomenology of Person and World, ed.
David Seamon and Robert Mugerauer (Dordrecht: Martinus Nijhoff, 1985), p. 183.
12 Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities (London: Vintage, 1997 [1972]), p. 103.
Chapter 22
Lines of Enquiry
Drawing out Sigmund Freud’s study and
consulting room
Ro Spankie
Provocation
In his introduction to the English translation of The Interpretation of
Dreams, psychoanalyst James Strachey describes Sigmund Freud’s life work
as follows:
Figure 22.2 Photograph of the desk at Berggasse 19, Vienna in 1938, by Edmund Engelman
Image credit: Freud Museum, London
Figure 22.3 Top: Diagram from The Interpretation of Dreams where Pcpt = perception Mnem =
memory Ucs = unconscious Pcs = Preconscious M = motor activity21 Image out of copyright Bottom:
Alternative description of Consulting Room and Study; the arrow indicating right that what Freud
heard at the end of the couch informed his writing, the arrow indicating left that ideas developed in
his writing would direct his interests in particular aspects case histories
Image credit: author
Freud tells his reader that it is the time sequence of this psychic
process that is important, rather than the spatial order; in dreams, the
process described is reversed. Dreams begin as wishes (or fears) in the
subconscious that work their way back through the memory traces before
they surface as dream-images in the sleeping perceptual system. He
continues:
Freud’s diagram of the mind (Figure 22.3, bottom) is a model of how his
interior functioned. Not directly representational, it refers to temporal
sequence rather than spatial arrangement, separating out function instead of
form. The ideas embodied in and associated with the furniture and fittings
become the building blocks of Freud’s imagination. Occupying this model
over time gave Freud a scaffold against which to build his instrument.
Notes
1 20 Maresfield Gardens: A Guide to the Freud Museum, with a Preface by Marina Warner
(London: Serpent’s Tail, 1998), p. viii.
2 Photograph of Freud sitting at end of couch Hohe Warte 1933. (26* www.freud.org.uk/photo-
library/detail/20025/)
3 The desk chair was made in 1930 by the architect Felix Augenfeld as a gift from his daughter
Mathilde. Augenfeld wrote, “she explained SF had the habit of reading in a very uncomfortable
body position. He was leaning in this chair, in some sort of diagonal position, one of his legs
slung over the arm of the chair, the book held high and his head unsupported. The rather bizarre
form of chair I designed is to be explained as an attempt to maintain this habitual posture and
make it more comfortable.” In 20 Maresfield Gardens: A Guide to the Freud Museum (London:
Serpent’s Tail, 1998), p. 57.
4 “What progress we are making. In the Middle Ages they would have burned me; nowadays they
are content with burning my books.” Sigmund Freud cited in Ernest Jones, Sigmund Freud: Life
and Work, Vol. III: The Last Phase 1919–1939 (London: Hogarth Press, 1957), p. 194.
5 “The poets and philosophers before me discovered the unconscious; what I discovered was the
scientific method by which the unconscious mind can be studied.” Remark made by Freud to
Professor Becker in Berlin 1928.
6 James Strachey, Sigmund Freud: A Sketch of His Life and Ideas, in the Introduction to The
Berggasse 19 (Vienna: Verlag Christian Brandstätter, 1998); Sigmund Freud Museum, Vienna,
www.freud-museum.at/; H.D. [i.e. Hilda Doolittle], Tribute to Freud (New York: Pantheon Books
Inc., 1971); The Wolf-Man and Sigmund Freud, ed. Muriel Gardiner (London: Hogarth Press and
the Institute of Psycho-Analysis, 1972); Ernest Jones, Sigmund Freud: Life and Work, in 3 vols
(Vol. I: “The Young Freud 1856–1900”; Vol. II: “Years of Maturity 1901–1919”; Vol. III: “The Last
Phase 1919–1939”) (London: Hogarth Press, 1953 for Vol. I; 1967 for Vol. II; 1957 for Vol. III); and
Hanns Sachs, Freud: Master and Friend. A Subjective and Personal Psychological Portrait of the
Great Psychiatrist (London: Imago, 1945) and (Freeport, NY: Books for Libraries Press, 1970).
After Freud’s death in 1939, his daughter Anna continued to live at 20 Maresfield Gardens until
her own death in 1982. During this time, the study and consulting room were left untouched. The
house opened as the Freud Museum London in 1986. www.freud.org.uk/
8 The term topological thinking refers its use in the article “Deleuze and the Use of the Genetic
Algorithm in Architecture,” by Manuel DeLanda in Designing for a Digital World, ed. Neil Leach
(Chichester: Wiley-Academy, 2002).
9 Marina Warner describing the antiquities in the collection in her preface to 20 Maresfield
Gardens: A Guide to the Freud Museum (London: Serpent’s Tail, 1998), p. viii.
10 To escape the summer heat in Vienna each year, the Freud family would rent a summer villa in
the surrounding countryside. In order that Freud could continue to work and to see patients, the
couch and many of his possessions would be transported there. Martha Freud writing to her
daughter-in-law Lucie describes how in the morning Freud had an analytical hour in Berggasse
19: in the afternoon when he moved out to the villa at Grinzing, he was able to sit at the desk
and feel at home “all his pictures and also the majority of his antiquities were in their places.”
Letter to Lucie Freud 8 May 1934 in Michael Molnar, The Diary of Sigmund Freud 1929–1939: A
Chronicle of Events in the Last Decade (London: Hogarth Press, 1992), p. 58.
11 Ernest Jones, Sigmund Freud: Life and Work, Vol. III: “The Last Phase 1919–1939” (London:
Hogarth Press, 1957), p. 248.
12 An example of a transitional object might be a teddy bear. See Donald W. Winnicott, Playing and
Reality (London: Tavistock Publications, 1967). An example of a fetish object might be a women’s
stocking. See Sigmund Freud, Fetishism 1927, in SE Vol. XVIII, pp. 152–157.
13 For a description of each of the objects on the desk see Ro Spankie, Sigmund Freud’s Desk an
Desk an Anecdoted Guide, p. 158; “That Freud was a heavy smoker is generally known. His
consumption averaged twenty cigars a day. That it might be called rather an addiction than a
habit was shown by the extent to which he suffered when deprived of the opportunity to smoke.”
Ernest Jones, Sigmund Freud: Life and Work, Vol. II: Years of Maturity 1901–1919 (London:
Hogarth Press, 1967), p. 430.
17 The Complete Letters of Sigmund Freud to Wilhelm Fliess 1887–1904, ed. Jeffrey Moussaieff
Masson (Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1985), p. xvii.
18 H.D. [i.e. Hilda Doolittle], Tribute to Freud (New York: Pantheon Books Inc., 2012), p. 175.
19 Donald W. Winnicott, Playing and Reality (London: Tavistock Publications, 1967), p. 82.
20 Sigmund Freud, The Interpretation of Dreams (London: Penguin, 1991), p. 684.
21 Ibid., p. 690.
22 Ibid., p. 685.
Chapter 23
On technological limits
Clare Olsen
The atmosphere and special effects of the built environment are particularly
pertinent for the immersive spaces of interior architecture. In the same way
that Pier Vittorio Aureli describes exterior facades as mediating “between
private property and public space,” interior surfaces mediate between the
private collective (program functions) and the private individual or sensorial
experience.5 The texture or smoothness of the surfaces, coolness or warmth
of materials, and dance of light delineate the emotive and sensorial qualities
within a space. Jacques Derrida describes, “To touch is to touch a limit, a
surface, a border, an outline,” emphasizing the tactile qualities of the
boundary between architecture proper and the affective experience within it,
what Gilles Deleuze refers to as the tactile-optical experience.6 This vibrant
border which defines the interior condition is celebrated by Lavin:
Notes
1 “Design Intelligence”, Zaha Hadid and Patrik Schumacher, ed. Latent Utopias: Experiments
Ornament, ed. Farshid Moussavi and Michael Kubo (Barcelona: Actar, 2006), p. 12.
13 John Dewey, Art as Experience (New York: Minton, Balch, 1934), p. 206.
Chapter 24
Simon Weir
Edible decor
Developing the principle that the most desirable of surreal objects generate a
real and visceral hunger in his 1932 essay, Psychoatmospheric-Anamorphic
Objects, Dalí described what are ostensibly practical problems of production:
“It was a question of knowing how one could end up making, for example, a
table edible, to satisfy at least partially the imperious desires of ‘cannibalism
of objects.’”13 This was not a passing caprice. A year later, Dalí referred to a
design of “the well-known and much desired table that is half made of stone,
half of poached egg” and described its triumphal moment as cooling slowly
in the late afternoon breeze while suspended between two poplar trees in the
forest of Ermenonville.14
A decade later, Dalí brought together two ideas in his
autobiography without an explanation of their association. First, he
described the period of experiments with the surrealist object as one
governed by a growing irrational hunger, which ultimately revealed itself as
a desire to eat everything. Having stated this, he then gave the
manufacturing recipe of the edible table:
Figure 24.2 “Lobster Telephone,” painted plaster, telephone, by Salvador Dalí, 1936. National Gallery
of Australia, Canberra. Purchased 1994.
Image credit: © Salvador Dalí, Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalí/VEGAP; licensed by Viscopy (2015)
Notes
1 Salvador Dalí, The Conquest of the Irrational (Paris: Éditions surrealists, 1935).
2 “M. Tullius Cicero, de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum, 2.15”, Perseus Digital Library, 1915,
http://data.perseus.org/texts/urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi048.perseus-lat1 (accessed 13 July 2014).
3 John Burnet, Early Greek Philosophy, 3rd edition (London: A & C Black Ltd., 1920), p. 104.
4 Salvador Dalí, “Sant Sebastia”, L’Amic de les Arts (Stiges) 16, no. 2 (1927): 52–54; Salvador Dalí,
“Els meus quadros del Saló de Tardor”, L’Amic de les Arts (Stiges) 2, no. 19 (1927): unpaginated
supplement; Salvador Dalí, “New Limits of Painting – Part 2”, L’Amic de les Arts (Stiges) 3, no. 24
(1928): 185–186; Salvador Dalí, L’Ane pourri (Paris: Éditions surrealists, 1930).
5 The history of the journal and Dalí’s association with it are described in Felix Fanés, Salvador
Dalí – the Construction of the Image 1925–1930 (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007), pp.
48–50.
6 Dalí, “Sant Sebastia”.
7 Alberto Savinio, “Anadymenon: Principles in the Evaluation of Contemporary Art”, Valori
Plastici (Rome), nos. IV–V (1919). Reprinted in: Massimo Carrá, Metaphysical Art (London:
Thames & Hudson, 1971), pp. 155–162.
8 Savinio, “Anadymenon”, p. 162.
9 Dalí, “Els meus quadros del Saló de Tardor”.
10 Salvador Dalí, “The Object as Revealed in Surrealist Experiment”, This Quarter (Paris) 5, no. 1
(1932): 197–207.
11 Dalí, “The Object as Revealed in Surrealist Experiment”.
12 Ibid.
13 Salvador Dalí, “Objets psycho-atmosphériques-anamorphiques”, Le Surréalisme au service de la
the Irrational, p. 4.
18 Salvador Dalí, Diary of a Genius (London: Creation Books, 1964), pp. 159–160.
19 Dalí, The Secret Life of Salvador Dalí, pp. 82–83.
Chapter 25
Kirsten Brown
Figure 25.1 Left, A cobbler in his shop at Old Sturbridge Village demonstrates the process for making
shoes at the turn of the nineteenth-century. Right, Visitors are invited to give hand-made shoes a try.
Image credit: Kirsten Brown
Although the touchable masterpieces were clearly the highlight of
the exhibit, equal attention was given to the exhibit space itself. At first
glance, the gallery appears to evoke the typical “white cube,” but upon closer
investigation, the intent behind its simple design is revealed. The white walls
are sparse, as decorative imagery or text are unnecessary to fulfill the
purpose of the exhibit. The works are displayed on slightly angled platforms
that place them at a natural height and distance from the audience – at
arm’s reach rather than safely hung out of reach. Didactic panels in braille
and text accompany each work to provide a description and historical
information. Pedestals are the only fixtures in the room, placed at regular
intervals to encourage a clear, unobstructed, natural flow through the
exhibit. Water bowls are also placed throughout the gallery to provide
refreshment for accompanying service dogs. Every detail of the exhibit space
was designed with the target audience in mind.
A peripheral outcome of the exhibit is the added value of touch in
the experience of sighted visitors. In his essay The Secret of Aesthetics Lies
in the Conjugation of the Senses, anthropologist David Howes describes the
aesthetic benefit experienced by sighted visitors who are able to complement
visual observation with tactile interaction: “Sighted visitors found their
experience of a painting to be enriched when they were able to
simultaneously view and explore a painting manually with the aid of a
tactile model.”9 Including the option to make physical contact with museum
objects fosters a meaningful connection between the visitor and the subject
matter and, by extension, a connection between the visitor and the museum.
While taste and its signifier, food, have been present in museums
for quite some time as subjects of different works of art, artful
dishes in restaurants and cafes, food’s own materiality as an object
with educational potential has rarely been explored.10
Each station offers an opportunity to explore not only the flavors of Native
American cuisine, but also traditional methods of production, like the
custom-built fire pit used for food preparation and cooking demonstrations.
Restaurants are an extension of the museological space with the
ability to “educate and encourage visitors to think reflectively about what
they eat and how their taste constructs stereotypes and ideas about other
communities and cultures.” The design of the interior space where this
interaction takes place reinforces these ideas.13 Every interior architectural
detail of the dining area at NMAI was built with Native American cultures
as an inspiration. The architects and designers maintained an ongoing
conversation with Native American communities from across the Western
hemisphere to faithfully represent the architectural traditions, craftsmanship,
and cultural sensibilities of Native American peoples. The curvilinear forms
and vertical cedar paneling of the restaurant interior reflect similar
conditions on the exterior, evoking wind-sculpted rock formations and dense
forests found in the natural landscapes of the Americas. As Frances Hayden
describes in We the People, “The landscape flows into the building, and the
environment is who we are. We are the trees, we are the rocks, we are the
water. And that had to be part of the museum”14 (Figure 25.2).
Although thoughtful museum dining spaces are the most common
method for incorporating taste into the museum, some take the concept
much further, building exhibits or even entire museums around taste
experiences and their related history and culture. The Southern Food and
Beverage Museum in New Orleans, Louisiana, “examines and celebrates all
the cultures that have come together through the centuries to create the
South’s unique culinary heritage.”15 While the museum displays exhibits
about the diverse culinary history of the South, it also serves as a
community center providing lectures, demonstrations, and tastings that
create a living history and meet the needs of the local community. In his
essay “To Exhibit, To Place, To Deposit,” Hans Hollein explains how “the role
of the museum is generally in the process of being restructured as far as
both tasks and content are concerned, as are its relations with the public.”16
Accordingly, the Southern Food and Beverage Museum is embracing the
changing role of museums, which has evolved to focus on its responsibility
to the local community not only as a cultural center, but also as a
community center. Its galleries are accompanied by working kitchens where
members of the community can partake in programming that brings the
subject matter to life. Much as the kitchen is the social center of the home,
the kitchen is also the social center of the Southern Food and Beverage
Museum; it is used to take advantage of the fact that food – its production,
its preparation, and the ritual of sharing a meal – is both formed by and
contributes to community identity and the role the museum plays in that
identity. Irina Mihalache states, “taste … can be educated by the self and by
the larger social, political, and cultural contexts.”17 By using the museum
space to facilitate direct interaction between visitors and Southern cuisine, it
provides the opportunity for the community to build stronger ties with its
own history and culture.
Figure 25.2 Mitsitam Cafe at the National Museum of the American Indian. Top, the interior details
of the dining area. Center, an open fire pit used to employ traditional food preparation techniques.
Bottom, cafeteria stations with seasonal menus reflecting traditional cuisines from five Native regions.
Image credit: Emily Francisco
Notes
1 David Howes, “The Secret of Aesthetics Lies in the Conjugation of the Senses”, in The
Space, ed. Nina Levent, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, and Lacey Simon (Lanham, MD: Rowman &
Littlefield, 2014), p. 285.
2 Amy Ione, “Art and the Senses ed. by Francesca Bacci and David Melcher (Review)”, Leonardo
Museum: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives on Touch, Sound, Smell, Memory, and Space, ed. Nina
Levent, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, and Lacey Simon (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2014), p.
215.
5 (MSM p. 3,4) Simon Lacey and K. Sathian, “Please Do Touch the Exhibits!”, in The Multisensory
Museum: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives on Touch, Sound, Smell, Memory, and Space, ed. Nina
Levent, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, and Lacey Simon (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2014), p. 3,
4.
6 “Collections”, Old Sturbridge Village, 2015, www.osv.org/
7 Rebecca McGinnis, “Islands of Stimulation”, p. 319. 2014.
8 Renee Phillips, Museum Art Program for Visually Impaired Visitors, 4 March 2015, www.healing-
power-of-art.org/art-program-for-visually-impaired-visitors/
9 David Howes, “The Secret of Aesthetics Lies in the Conjugation of the Senses”, p. 297.
10 Irina D. Mihalache, “Taste-Full Museums”, in The Multisensory Museum: Cross-Disciplinary
Perspectives on Touch, Sound, Smell, Memory, and Space, ed. Nina Levent, Alvaro Pascual-Leone,
and Lacey Simon (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2014), p. 197.
11 Robert Barthes, “Towards a Psychosociology of Contemporary Food Consumption”, in Food and
Culture: A Reader, 3rd ed., ed. Carole Counihan and Penny Van Esterik (New York: Routledge,
1997), pp. 28–35.
12 “Architecture and Landscape”, 2015, http://nmai.si.edu/visit/washington/architecture-landscape/
13 “Mitsitam Cafe”, 2015, http://nmai.si.edu/visit/washington/mitsitam-cafe/
14 Francis Hayden, “By the People”, Smithsonian, September 2004, pp. 50–57.
15 “Southern Food and Beverage Museum”, 2015, http://natfab.org/southern-food-and-beverage/
16 Hans Hollein, “To Exhibit, to Place, to Deposit: Thoughts on the Museum of Modern Art,
Frankfurt” in New Museology, ed. Andreas Papadakis (London: St. Martin’s Press, 1991): 41.
17 Mihalache, “Taste-Full Museums”, p. 202.
18 Richard J. Stevenson, “The Forgotten Sense”, in The Multisensory Museum: Cross-Disciplinary
Perspectives on Touch, Sound, Smell, Memory, and Space, ed. Nina Levent, Alvaro Pascual-Leone,
and Lacey Simon (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2014), p. 162.
19 Ibid., p. 152.
20 Sissel Tolaas, “Smell, the Beauty of Decay: Smellscape Central Park Autumn”, 2015. For Beauty –
Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial, Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Museum of Design, 2016,
https://collection.cooperhewitt.org/objects/69155275/
21 Alex Palmer, “Can Smell Be a Work of Art?”, 23 February 2016,
www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/can-you-smell-work-art-180958189/?no-ist
22 Jim Drobnick, “The Museum as Smellscape”, in The Multisensory Museum: Cross-Disciplinary
Perspectives on Touch, Sound, Smell, Memory, and Space, ed. Nina Levent, Alvaro Pascual-Leone,
and Lacey Simon (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2014), p. 188.
23 Andreas Keller, “The Scented Museum”, in The Multisensory Museum: Cross-Disciplinary
Perspectives on Touch, Sound, Smell, Memory, and Space, ed. Nina Levent, Alvaro Pascual-Leone,
and Lacey Simon (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2014), p. 167.
24 Jimmy Stamp, “The First Major Museum Show to Focus on Scent”, Smithsonian Magazine, 16
January 2013, www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/the-first-major-museum-show-to-focus-
on-smell-1787124/?no-ist
25 Ibid.
26 Ibid.
27 Katharine Beneker, “Exhibits – Firing Platforms for the Imagination”, Curator: The Museum
Temporalities
Chapter 26
Lois Weinthal
In Virginia Woolf’s novel, light was the medium that made the movement of
domestic helpers visible by the main character, Orlando, and revealed their
actions in his palatial residence as he looked on, from a distance, from one
interior into another. A subtle yet significant detail of this text was the
decision to set the story in the Elizabethan era and reveal the intimate
tracking of the body through a single point of light illuminated by an oil
lantern or candle. By choosing this setting, Woolf accomplished two
significant spatial maneuvers in her text: the first being the characters’
movements mapped by their direct connection to light, and second,
Orlando’s view from a distance resulting in a degree of objectivity, setting
apart the observer from the observed.
The practice of interior design anticipates the movement of
occupants where time as a variable reveals temporary events that take place.
Time-based events distinguish interiors from the static form of architecture,
yet the documentation of both these spatial realms defer to orthographic
drawings as the unifying form of representation. Orthographic drawings
work well to record forms that foresee no change until a renovation prompts
a new set of orthographic drawings. With Woolf’s excerpt in mind,
Orlando’s palatial residence could be documented in orthographic
projection, but the system is not conducive to the temporal movements of
the occupants since they are not static like architecture. It is possible to
imagine that in the time it takes to draw a room, occupants could be moving
in and out without a trace of their presence in the room, and orthographic
drawings like it that way; it keeps the space clean and objective rather than
muddy with the ephemeral shoes of people walking through it.
This introduction sets forth the overarching intention of this
chapter, which is to probe the orthographic projection drawing system to
find where it loses its grip on supporting the work of the designer. This
fissure takes place where the temporal activities on the interior are left off
the orthographic drawing. The conceptual hinge that binds the framework of
plan and section follows a set of logical rules that provide true data under
the assumption that only physical elements are documented. This system is
conducive to the static nature of architecture. In contrast, interiors align
with time-based activities but are typically absent in orthographic drawings.
However, they are still part of the architecture when occupation of the
interior begins at full scale.
This chapter makes reference to various scenarios used to reveal
the dynamic life of interiors that exist simultaneously with the static
architectural realm. The orthographic hinge will be compromised in order to
test how dynamic elements can be made visible. What is seen in plan may
not always be present or align with what is seen in section, and vice versa.
In order to insert these temporal elements into the orthographic system, it is
necessary to understand what grounds them to the physical world, in order
to fall under the context of true data, and form a realignment back to the
principles of orthographic projection. At the same time, the temporal
elements draw into question ways in which the orthographic system has the
potential to evolve. In order to develop a relationship between the temporal
and static in orthographic projection, an explanation of the orthographic
system with emphasis on specific variables will be highlighted that segue
into subsequent sections of this chapter. These variables will be placed in the
context of movement by dancers, and to some extent, actors, all of whom
are based on a stage where plan and section are mimicked through the blank
slate of stage floor and backdrop. Movement by dancers and actors reveal
where temporal occupation aligns and misaligns with orthographic
projection.
A set of elements identified in Orlando’s residence, being the
points of light, domestic chores, and the observer, will appear again as
variables in examples that follow. In the first section, a dancer’s pirouette
will help visualize how movement can be documented differently in plan
and section. The concluding example will return to a conventional interior
setting arranged by industrial engineers who sought to document the
moving body in order to design for ergonomically improved domestic
interiors. In these examples, the fleeting can always be grounded in true
data, and the means by which the fleeting is documented can be captivating
due to the invisible forces that are being made visible.
Orthographic projection
Orthographic projection is the fundamental drawing system in interior
architectural design for grounding a project in true measurement in order to
convey information to builders. The system provides a universal form of
visual communication by utilizing a set of variables that have reached a
level of objectivity. The evolution of this drawing type relies upon a clear set
of rules whereby a field of parallel lines meets a perpendicular surface. Plan,
section, and elevation inform one another across invisible hinges that result
in a collection of two-dimensional views folded up to convey a three-
dimensional form.
The perpendicular relationship is neutral until the draughtsperson
activates the latent field of invisible parallel lines received by the passive
surface patiently awaiting the drawn line, also known as the picture plane.
The receiving surface is meant to be flat in order to record the lines with
precision, otherwise a ripple in the picture plane would disrupt the rules and
potentially cause misinterpretation. The parallel lines can be seen as a
collection of points that appear on the paper and assist the draughtsperson
in realizing a design, but at a scale that is manageable at the size of a desk.
Point, line, and plane help translate back and forth between one, two, and
three dimensions, where the point can be seen as the fundamental element
upon which everything else is built. What appears as a point or line in one
drawing (such as a plan), may appear as a plane in another drawing
(elevation), hence the need for multiple views in order to piece together an
understanding of the whole. As the design appears on paper, the drawing
requires that the form being recorded hold still, as if being drawn for a still
life. This works for static elements but is unaccepting of the temporary and
fleeting. This matters not so much for architecture, but it matters in interior
design, where the practice is responsible for designing the temporary and
fleeting. Time is a variable inherent to the temporal, but absent from this
drawing type. With these variables and rules in place, how can the designer
integrate the temporal? The next section of this chapter will use dance as a
means of highlighting temporal movements of occupants to probe where the
orthographic system supports or breaks from allowing the temporal to enter
into the drawing.
Space-shapes
The introductory epigraph from Orlando described movements of the body
when undertaking domestic chores. Woolf placed emphasis on movements
such as “bending, kneeling, rising, receiving, guarding, and escorting,” rather
than the specific tasks associated with them. We know that kneeling in the
context of domestic chores could apply to the task of putting items away,
cleaning the floor, and so on. At a formal level, designers would categorize
these tasks with familiar programmatic terms, and the alternative would be
to situate the actions in the context of anthropometric studies. The difference
between these two may appear subtle as one folds into the other, but the
distinction between them is what separates programming spaces through
diagrams versus empirically documenting the body in action.
Jane Callaghan and Catherine Palmer were industrial engineers
conducting research in the 1940s with emphasis on improving the design of
the domestic realm by documenting the moving body undertaking domestic
chores. They sought to capture the moving body and frame it within
categories of tasks, but their intention was first to see how the body moved
in time and space before making assumptions about the programmed
interior. Thus, they knew to separate programming from anthropometric
studies. In order to study these movements, they developed methods of
documentation using 35mm camera photographs followed by a translation
of these images into three-dimensional models.
Their studies documented people undertaking singular activities
such as washing hair, getting dressed, and putting on stockings. The results
were summarized and published in their 1944 book, Measuring Space and
Motion, where they describe their intention of these experiments as “the
development of techniques by which space used by the human body in
action can be recorded, measured, and reproduced in tangible three-
dimensional form useful as the basis of house design.”3 Callaghan and
Palmer developed a system for documenting their models in a “stage” setting
that mimicked the drawing relationship of orthographic projection. With a
stage, multiple 35mm cameras, and mirrors in key locations, they
documented their actors in “three or more simultaneous views of these
definitive motions, a method of correcting for perspective, and a method of
presenting a final space-shape to scale.”4 In order to produce documentation
and understand the subject matter “in-the-round,” they relied upon multiple
views, each taking on a drawing view typical of orthographic projection that
included plan and elevations. The images were synthesized to form a three-
dimensional model, but what emerged in the process was the challenge of
finding a common line that each image could align to for precision. In the
example of washing hair, “It also happened that the front views were
photographed at a greater distance from the camera than the side views.
This necessitated enlargement of the front view before the two composites
could be joined together to make the model.”5 The scalar difference in the
photographs needed correction for their images to align, but a second
challenge was the need for the multiple views being photographed to be
taken simultaneously to help with the alignment in the three-dimensional
model. This would ensure that if an arm were raised in the air in one view,
that another view would capture it at the same time and location. The need
for multiple views and a reference line upon which to gauge all data falls
within the rules of orthographic projection. While they faced technical
challenges that may seem minor with our current technology, theoretically
they were early pioneers chipping away at the challenge of locating the
moving body in orthographic projection. Inherent to the orthographic
system is the ability to take individual views of an object and fold them up
into a three-dimensional form in its most basic silhouette. If done correctly,
shared information across all views will align. The photographs taken by
Callaghan and Palmer were used in a similar manner. In their
documentation of hair washing, the photographs were aligned around a core
vertical axis, upon which multiple elevation photographs were centered. In
this case, the central axis provided the hinge for connection.
Figure 26.2 Three-dimensional planar model by Callaghan and Palmer using photographs taken from
multiple views showing the body moving for washing hair. In Jane Callaghan and Catherine Palmer,
Measuring Space and Motion (New York: John B. Pierce Foundation, 1944), page 15.
Light tracings
This chapter began with a description of Orlando watching his servants
perform their duties based upon a light they held that made their actions
visible from a distance. Similarly, the audience that was scheduled to see
Anna Pavlova’s last performance instead saw a beam of light dance across
the stage to visualize where she would be. Light, as a form of marking a
person’s movements also factored into Callaghan and Palmer’s work. One
form of documentation they developed was called a “dark technique”
photograph, whereby the actor wore “lights attached to head, hands, elbows,
feet, and back… . The shutter of the camera was left open throughout the
action and the moving lights recorded the paths of motion.”6 The
photographic result was a time-lapse capturing movement made by the
tracings of a point of light. In works like this where true data was extracted,
while simultaneously fulfilling a phenomenal graphic, they gave an
alternative form of representation of the moving body for designers to
consider. Through their multiple experiments of documentation and
representation, the collection of Callaghan and Palmer’s work could be seen
as the precursors to current motion capture technology.
Callaghan and Palmer worked within the principles of
orthographic projection, and in some cases found ways of producing data of
the moving body that the system accepts. As for the pirouette, it challenges
the orthographic system to fracture at approximately one inch above the
plan view. It is a point of registration, yet diverges as a discrete entity to
become broader and more spatial, with the full view of the dancer as the
view moves up in elevation from the single point. The fracture initiates an
opportunity for another type of drawing to enter into the Cartesian
relationship and form a new hinge. It may seem plausible for the rules of
construction documents to integrate this request, but a moment of disbelief
is already inherent in the orthographic drawing – such as the rule that
allows the dotted line to represent what is behind or in front of the picture
plane, while still allowing the variables to remain constant.
If the rules were altered, what would happen? Is it possible that
the outcome, if still following a set of rules, would result in another reading,
much like the anamorphic drawing technique developed out of the
conventions of perspective did during the baroque?7 There is still precision
in the anamorphic technique. The degree of objectivity that the variables and
principles of orthographic projection have arrived at result in a set of rules
distilled to fundamentals that are unarguable. The missing piece is the
integration of movement that has yet to find a way into the drawing that
can become part of the professional construction document set. In the
examples given throughout this chapter, movement also has the potential to
be distilled down to a set of rules, but it may have to be derived from the
documentation of movement first, which can only help designers become
better aware of how the body moves in space.
Figure 26.3 “Dark-technique” photograph made by Callaghan and Palmer using lights on an actor to
show movement of putting on stockings. In Jane Callaghan and Catherine Palmer, Measuring Space
and Motion (New York: John B. Pierce Foundation, 1944), page 14.
Notes
1 Virginia Woolf, Orlando (New York: Harcourt, Inc., 1928), p. 20.
2 Oleg Kerensky, Anna Pavlova (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1973), p. 149.
3 Jane Callaghan and Catherine Palmer, Measuring Space and Motion (New York: John B. Pierce
Foundation, 1944), p. 13.
4 Ibid., p. 5.
5 Ibid., p. 15.
6 Ibid., p. 14.
7 For an overview of the development of the anamorphic drawing technique, see Alberto Perez-
Gomez and Louise Pelletier book, Architectural Representation and the Perspective Hinge
Frank Jacobus
Constructed space is, and has always been, a culturally reflective and
communicative mechanism. Materiality delivers messages within interior
spatial environments, reflecting a cultural sensibility and intelligence, but
also compelling future actions and desires. While we rightly tend to think of
the built environment as a mechanism that betters life and aids in human
advancement, an underlying persistent desire seems to be the fabrication of
spaces to embody human thoughts within material constructs. In this way,
we can discuss interior architecture as a spatial and material construct
meant to preserve cultural or personal beliefs. The core ingredient of this
effort is material itself, the physical or nonphysical substance that makes
space possible.
Figure 27.1 “Human Locomotion,” Muybridge
Image credit: author
More than any other device, the printed book released people from
the domination of the immediate and local. Doing so, it
contributed further to the dissociation of medieval society: print
made a greater impression than actual events, and by centering
attention on the printed word, people lost that balance between
the sensuous and the intellectual, between image and sound,
between the concrete and the abstract.8
When one thinks of the day as an abstract span of time, one does
not go to bed with the chickens on a winter’s night: one invents
wicks, chimneys, lamps, gas lights, electric lamps, so as to use all
the hours belonging to the day. When one thinks of time, not as a
sequence of experiences, but as a collection of hours, minutes, and
seconds, the habits of adding time and saving time come into
existence. Time took on the character of an enclosed space: it
could be divided, it could be filled up, and it could even be
expanded by the invention of labor saving instruments.13
Just as the world after the rise of the book was “lightened,” in that
information once conveyed through the weight of stone was now
transportable by hand, the clock gave rise to new conceptions of abstract
space, interchangeable and relatable over any distance, transportable in the
minds of humans.
In the period from 1850 to 1890, the entirety of Western culture
was trying to discover their relationship with new forms of mechanization.14
As society mechanizes, one by one, concrete entities are replaced by their
abstract counterparts. Mumford points to the romanticism of numbers as
resulting in the
Notes
1 Victor Hugo, Notre-dame de Paris, trans. Alban Krailsheimer (Oxford and New York: Oxford
University Press, 1993), pp. 192–206.
2 Siegfried Giedion, Mechanization Takes Command (New York: Oxford University Press, 1948), p.
v.
3 Giedion, Mechanization Takes Command, p. v.
4 Siegfried Giedion, The Eternal Present: The Beginnings of Architecture (New York: Bollingen
Foundation, 1964), p. ix, 349–398.
5 Edward Twitchell Hall, The Hidden Dimension (New York: Anchor Books and Doubleday, 1982),
pp. 1–6.
6 Ibid.
7 Vincent Scully, Architecture: The Natural and the Manmade (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1991),
pp. 39–64.
8 Lewis Mumford, Technics and Civilization (New York: Harcourt Brace and Company, 1934), p.
136.
9 Thomas Fisher, “The Past and Future of Studio Culture”, Arc Voices, 15 October 2004.
10 Paul Shepheard, What Is Architecture (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1999), p. 12.
11 Neil Levine, “The Book and the Building: Hugo’s Theory of Interior Architecture and Labrouste’s
Bibliotheque Saint-Genevieve”, in The Beaux-Arts and Nineteenth-Century French Architecture
Time travel
Interior architecture and the exhibition space
Anne Massey
An exhibit
This is the past, a photograph, an image, a fleeting moment frozen in time,
never to happen again (Figure 28.1). One afternoon, on the first floor of a
nineteenth-century townhouse near the Ritz, a split second is captured,
unique and ephemeral. It was taken by the British artist Richard Hamilton
during the installation of the exhibition an Exhibit one hot August day in
1957. It was a moment in London when everything seemed possible, the
moment of mid-century modern, when art education was freely available in
Britain, when new buildings in a new style were being built as part of a
shiny new future. New styles of music, art, and design still shocked; new
approaches to exhibition design still grabbed the attention of the gallery
going public. Here are Perspex sheets arranged in the nineteenth-century
space, challenging the imperial past of traditional London with its wrought
iron, Juliet balconies, and French windows. Here was a new future in
translucent plastic, hanging playfully over the period details, mocking the
heritage of the building, adding a new layer of understanding and
provocation, erecting new boundaries between past and present, then and
now – the here and now. The shimmering sheets reflect the ornamental
ironwork, the flagpole outside, the mellow stones of nineteenth-century
London. The peace and apparent tranquility of London at the height of
empire is now disturbed by new technologies, by a new generation noisy
with provocation, armed with new materials and a new perspective. Time is
interrupted and the everlasting, secure order of neoclassical architecture
challenged by this ephemeral installation – the exhibition. The boundaries
between past, present, and future become blurred. We are on the edge
between London as the imperial city and London as the site of modernity.
Figure 28.1 an Exhibit, installation shot, 1957, Richard Hamilton, ICA Dover Street, London
The Perspex panels were used in the available, standard dimensions of 1.2
meters by 0.6 meters, eight inches, and the curatorial team were not precious
about how the sheets should be arranged. The sheets used were in the
commercially available colors of red, grey, black, and white and were hung
at varying heights using nylon thread in a loose grid formation of 16 inches.
They were ordered differently for the Newcastle and London shows and
could be reinstalled in an endless distribution of divisions and boundaries to
create a myriad of mazes to challenge the exhibition visitor.
one of the problems of the ICA in the early days from the
exhibition point of view was that the architectural features and
style of the place really was not conducive to hanging pictures
successfully … The screens that had been made were covered with
blue felt … and the end walls were glossy straw which wouldn’t
take a picture. So most of the efforts after that were directed at
removing all the disadvantages of the fact that the place had been
turned into an exhibition gallery … and since there were such
problems with the space and not really any hanging space,
because the big problem with the ICA was not only the décor but
the fact that one wall was entirely taken up with window.12
Figure 28.2 Paintings from Haiti, ICA (1951)
The paintings were hung awkwardly on the blue felt screens, ordered
logically in a sequence determined by the windows to the right of the image.
This was March 1951 in London, with a chill wind and rationing still in
place. Members of the public were dressed in overcoats over their suits,
guarding them against the cold. This was before the faint air of optimism
offered by the Festival of Britain, which took place in the summer before
Hamilton’s Growth and Form exhibition and post-war reconstruction had
made much of an impact. The floorboards looked bare; rubbish piled up to
the left beneath the contemporary style table which doubled as an
admissions desk. The gallery assistant organized the piles of information
sheets and postcards against the backdrop of the brand new, straw-covered
wall mentioned by Hamilton. To the left was the shelving and display
cabinets specified by Fry and Drew. Institutional, tubular steel chairs were
grouped to the right of the image, perhaps left over from an evening event.
During the span of the exhibition from March 13 to April 6, 1951, a
plethora of events took place in the space. The screens were moved into
storage, and collector Mercedes Mackay discussed “The Indigenous Music of
Nigeria” with examples of various instruments; the American choreographer
Beth Dean discussed “Dances of Australasia-Aborigines of Australia,” and
there was dancing for ICA members led by Ernest Berk with music by Peter
Ury and the Sholanke African Band. This was London facing the devastating
effects of the Second World War and the transformation of the British
Empire into the British Commonwealth before the more self-confident
installation of an Exhibit.
Notes
1 Christoph Grafe in Tom Avermaete and Anne Massey, eds., Hotel Lobbies and Lounges: The
Architecture and Design, ed. Graeme Brooker and Lois Weinthal (London: Bloomsbury, 2013), p.
xvi.
4 See Anne Massey, “Ephemeral”, in Interior Wor(l)ds, ed. Luca Basso Peressut, Imma Forino,
Gennaro Postiglione, and Roberto Rizzi (Torino: Allemandi University Press, 2010), pp. 161–165.
5 Jeremy Till, Architecture Depends (Cambridge, MA, and London: MIT Press, 2009), p. 79.
6 Lucy Kimbell, “Rethinking Design Thinking: One”, Design and Culture 3, no. 3 (2011): 285–306.
7 Anne Massey and Gregor Muir, eds., ICA 1946–68 (London: ICA, 2014), p. 38.
8 See Bruce Altshuler, Salon to Biennial-Exhibitions That Made Art History, Volume 1: 1863–1959
Productions
Spatial practices, processes, and effects
Clay Odom
Production-oriented practices
Sensuality has been known to overcome even the most rational of
buildings. Architecture is the ultimate erotic act. Carry it to excess
and it will reveal both the traces of reason and the sensual
experience of space. Simultaneously.3 (See Figure 29.2.)
Figure 29.2 (Left) material spatial condition, and (right) the full system engaging material, space,
technology, and lighting. These effective conditions serve to obscure and even supersede formal
intervention and existing interior conditions. From the project Tesseract 3.0 by Clay Odom.
As speculative, spatial practices that are not form-centric, POPs are built
upon developing process-driven, systemized, and iterative relationships
between material, technological, and spatial effects; they develop a new type
of rigor. In becoming focused more on processes realized through patterning
material, space, and sequence, this new practice becomes tuned to subjective
conditions; the role of people and experience in design becomes primary. For
POPs, and the processes that afford for their creation, critical engagement
and iterative development are both creative and generative. Here, the system
includes material technical components and the organization of these
components: the installation, the generated effects, the emergent conditions,
and the human experiences combined into one.
Situating productions
In writing about what could be called an entanglement of effects and form
found in the work of seminal practice, Herzog and de Meuron’s
(entanglements understood here as Venturian contradictions), Jeff Kipnis
seeks to reconcile rigorous planning and form production with surface and
atmospheric effects in what he described as “The Cunning of Cosmetics”.7
The very framework of this chapter, as well as its timing at the beginning of
contemporary production-oriented practices, recapitulates the dialectical
tension between what is traditionally the domain of design preoccupation
(the object) with a growing focus on the manipulation of the surfaces of
form and the production of effects. This shift seeks to make sense of effects
and processes, while positioning them within the larger context of design
and architecture. It is a critical question to the development of contemporary
spatial practices as described above.
To accomplish this turn toward productions (of space, atmosphere,
surface, and even contemporary investigations of glamour) design processes
and design outcomes in the form of materials, codes, criteria, atmospheres,
affects, and effects must be intertwined as Kipnis suggests. Buckminster
Fuller, who many consider the father of the 1960s radicalism noted above,
famously asked, “How much does your building weigh?” This exquisitely
simple question forced architects and designers to critically question the
very processes of design that they had come to take for granted. It also
generated even more fundamental questions regarding the role that objects
play beyond themselves in connection to broader ecologies. These questions
forced designers to critically reconsider objects’ relationships to the world
beyond including makers, designers, and materials, and even the markets
that drove their creation. This question is still valid. For contemporary
designers engaged in the world of spatial production, the question might be
rephrased into, “What does your work produce?”8
Describing the trajectory of the development of production-
oriented practices, from planning to form to space to effect, is the
fundamental question that helps to define productions and to situate the
work of POPs with regard to larger trends in spatial design.
For Latour there are no cryptic essences lying behind… . There are
only actants of all possible and actants are fully expressed in each
moment … it is true that new features of objects appear through
the unfolding of successive events.13
Ultimately, the pull between producer and produced sets the basic
tension for contemporary spatial design practices. This tension is becoming a
productive rather than problematic condition. It is generated in spaces
between preconceptions about theoretical and conceptually driven
approaches, the actualities of making, and the productive capacities of
design and making in tandem. Through an understanding of productions,
however, the vacuum between these poles may be engaged as a space where
speculative, critical practices (such as POPs) may claim territory. This is a
condition where systematized approaches to design from concept through to
actualization may be leveraged. Finally, to fully claim this elusive territory,
POPs must interrogate the range processes and products of those processes
as being fundamental to speculative interior practices. These productions are
spatial, affiliative, generative, and not directly tied to formal stylistic
conceits; rather they function through diagrammatic, active entangling of
objects and effects through processes. This understanding may allow
designers to move fluidly between processes and outcomes to “negotiate a
field in which the actual and the virtual assume ever more complex
configurations.”22
Notes
1 Robert Venturi, Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture (New York: The Museum of
Modern Art, 1966), p. 16.
2 POPs (production-oriented practices) is used here to describe spatial design practices, methods,
processes, and pedagogies whose intention is to generate multiplicities of outcomes. POPs are
those which extend through and between academic and professional practice. And here we begin
to understand that this mode of practice becomes focused not on the creation of discreet
solutions, but rather on leveraging dynamic processes to produce a maximum range of effects
and affiliations. These productions become the conditions through which new projects are
conceptualized and generated. Speculative practices may be seen as exhibiting the following: 1.
POPs maximize productions (of effects of form, surface, space, experience, atmosphere, and
programmatic potential, for example) by leveraging processes. 2. POPs are projective and open,
meaning they are not focused primarily on the view that design is a discreet “problem-solving”
exercise. 3. POPs are affiliative, meaning the processes and the productions seek and generate
relationships. 4. Speculative practices are collaborative; they seek transdisciplinary connections
and understand potentials of linking diverse ranges of connection. 5. POPs are extensive,
meaning they seek conditions to test processes that may fall outside of traditional disciplinary
boundaries. 6. POPs ultimately may generate more normative professional practices or projects,
but that is not their fundamental goal.
3 Bernard Tschumi, Architecture in/of Motion (Rotterdam: NAi Publishers, 1997), p. 107; Simon
Sadler, Archigram: Architecture Without Architecture (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2005), p. 47.
4 Simon Sadler, Archigram: Architecture Without Architecture (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2005),
p. 47.
5 Patrik Shumacher, “Arguing for Elegance”, in Elegance, ed. Helen Castle, Guest-ed. Ali Rahim
and Hina Jamelle (Architectural Design/AD, 77, no. 1 [January/February 2007], p. 30).
6 Shumacher, Elegance, p. 36.
7 Jeffrey Kipnis, “The Cunning of Cosmetics”, in Herzog & de Meuron: El Croquis 84, ed. Richard C.
Levene & Fernando Marquez Cecilia (Madrid: El Croquis, 1997).
8 I first make this assertion in the online article “Tesseract Series” suckerPUNCH Daily, 6 February
2015, www.suckerpunchdaily.com/2015/02/06/tesseract-series/#more-38440
9 Bruce Sterling, Shaping Things (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press and Mediawork, 2005), p. 14.
10 Gregg Lynn, Intricacy (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania/Institute of Contemporary
Art, 2003).
11 Jeff Kipnis, A Question of Qualities: Essays in Architecture (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2013), p.
2.
12 Donna De Salvo, “Making Marsayas”, in Marsayas, ed. Donna De Salvo and Cecil Balmond (Tate
Publishing, 2002), pp. 10–12.
13 Graham Harman, The Prince of Networks: Bruno Latour and Metaphysics (Melbourne: Re-Press,
2009), p. 47.
14 Stan Allen, “Diagrams Matter”, in Diagram Work: Data Mechanics for a Topological Age, ed.
Cynthia E. Davidson, with guest editors Ben Van Berkel and Caroline Bos (ANY 23, 1998), p. 17.
15 Gernot Bohme, “Atmosphere as the Fundamental Concept of the New Aesthetics”, Thesis11 36
(1993): 113.
16 Clay Odom, “Mobile Processes, Transient Productions: Nomadic Spatial Practices”, in Nomadic
Interiors: Living and Inhabiting in an Age of Migrations, ed. Luca Basso, Marco Borsotti, Imma
Forino, Pierluigi Savadeo, Jacopo Leveratto, and Tomaso Longo (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,
2015). This section of text was examined first in a paper presented at the Interiors Forum World
Conference in Milan, Italy, in 2015.
17 Jane Bennett, “Systems and Things: A Response to Graham Harman and Timothy Morton”, New
Literary History 43, no. 2 (Spring 2012): 226.
18 Clay Odom, “Patterning Entanglement”, Applied Geometries, International Journal of Interior
Architecture + Spatial Design, v3, ed. Jonathon Anderson and Meg Jackson (Houston: ASD
Publications, 2014), p. 12; note: this work is also expanded in an Interior Design seminar titled
Patterning: Diagrams, Sequences and Systems taught at the University of Texas School of
Architecture.
19 Ben van Berkel and Caroline Bos, “Interactive Instruments in Operation: Diagrams”, in Olafur
Eliasson: Surroundings Surrounded, Essays on Space and Science, ed. Peter Weibel (Cambridge,
MA: MIT Press, 2001), p. 84.
20 Rem Koolhaas, interview with Charlie Rose, 19 October 2011, www.archdaily.com/182642/rem-
koolhaas-on-charlie-rose/
21 Gernot Bohme’s seminal work “Atmosphere as the Fundamental Concept of a New Aesthetics”
and Graham Harman’s work “Tool Being” are positioned here as setting the stage for the
dialectic between Atmospheres and Objects, where the concept of Productions and Production-
Oriented Practices is developed.
22 Allen, Diagram Work, p. 17.
Part six
Materialities
Chapter 30
“Living” rooms
The hypernaturalization of the interior
Blaine Brownell
Properties
Properties pertain to the fundamental composition and structure of
elements, including their inherent physical and chemical attributes. These
qualities may be static or dynamic based on the elements’ intended purpose.
When designers and architects consider the properties of design elements in
a rigorous and sensitive way, they can create interior architecture that is
more attuned to scientific principles.
One strategy is to embrace the ability of natural systems to use
resources effectively while enhancing user health and satisfaction, an
approach Carnegie Mellon architecture professor Vivian Loftness calls
“environmental surfing.”2 For example, interior vegetated surface systems
employ oxygenating plants’ intrinsic capabilities to purify air. In a vertical
interior living wall developed jointly by CASE (Center for Architecture
Science and Ecology) and SOM, hydroponic plants absorb interior toxins
through their exposed roots, meanwhile releasing beneficial oxygen for
interior occupants. The Active Phytoremediation Wall System (AMPS)
includes low-power fans that accelerate the toxin-absorbing potential of the
plants.3 Other natural “surfing” approaches include power harvesting from
light or kinetic energy. Recently developed photovoltaic technologies can
convert light from indirect and electric sources, making them suitable for
interior applications. These technologies include biodesign materials, such as
Cambridge University’s moss powered biophotovoltaics or designer Julian
Melchiorri’s Silk Leaf, via chloroplast’s inherent capabilities.4
In addition to performative characteristics, properties may also
pertain to the innately robust structural qualities of natural systems. Some
designers experiment with the scale of natural structures to create novel
design applications with unexpected visual effects. For example, Smith
Allen’s Echoviren reinterprets the cellular composition of the sequoia tree at
the scale of a building module.5 The firm 3D printed some 600 modules using
a biodegradable PLA material – thus also employing the inherently
biocompatible properties of the cells – and aggregated them to create an
interior room within a forested site. Sabin + Jones LabStudio’s Branching
Morphogenesis is another example of a scaled structure – in this case, a
Processes
Processes refer to natural methods of fabrication and construction. Since the
Industrial Revolution, material fabrication has generally been carried out in
a highly resource-intensive, inefficient, and polluting manner. By contrast,
natural processes use resources effectively and generate byproducts that may
be reutilized. In this way, even natural waste is a resource for another
process, unlike many types of industrial waste that must be disposed in
landfills. Another distinction pertains to the issue of control in design and
manufacturing. Industrial logics and traditional design approaches mandate
near total control over design and manufacturing, leaving nothing to chance.
However, the incorporation of natural processes in design introduces a new
kind of material agency in which biological, chemical, or physical processes
are allowed to run their course and subsequently alter the final results. What
is effectively a partnership with nature – rather than traditional brute
consumption of natural resources – presents an intriguing opportunity for
designers, who assume the role of directors of the design experiments they
set into motion.
Processes may be generally conceived according to the two
approaches of additive and subtractive methods. Today, additive
manufacturing is commonly associated with 3D printing, a technique that is
largely perceived as entirely manmade. Yet many natural examples of this
approach may be seen in the animal kingdom. For example, potter wasps
construct nests by regurgitating masticated soil and other materials in
additive layers, producing hollow vessels resembling clay pots. Based on this
biological model, the Italian company WASProject has developed a method
of 3D printing earthen structures of aluminosilicate clay.13 A kinematics
printer governs a material-extruding nozzle that incorporates reinforcing
materials, like hemp and kenaf fibers, adding enhanced tensile properties to
printed constructions. At this time, WASProject can print structures up to six
meters in height. Another biological model is the sessile barnacle, which
effectively “prints” its chitinous shell over time, extending its height and
diameter as the animal grows from within. University of Minnesota
architecture students devised a method of printing cementitious materials
with a custom-built, nozzle-fed table, which produces conical cells of
manifold heights and diameters based on available space.14 A third example
of zoological construction may be seen in the Silk Pavilion, designed by MIT
Media Lab researchers, who placed 6,500 live silkworms on a dome-shaped
scaffold composed of lightweight steel formwork and silk cables.15 Over
time, the insects spun a fibrous curtain of silk over the formwork, which was
later removed to showcase the entirely animal-constructed textile skin.
Designers have also employed mineral-based processes in their
work. The Seizure project by UK artist Roger Hiorns, for example,
demonstrates the potential of crystalline-clad surfaces to create new kinds of
user experience (Figure 30.2).16 To create the work, Hiorns created
watertight seals around an apartment in London, and then immersed it in a
water-based solution with copper sulfate. After one month, the artist
removed the fluid to reveal a space entirely encrusted with blue crystals. In
another example, University of Minnesota architecture students created self-
similar building modules made from borax crystals. The crystal bricks were
made by placing felt-wrapped PVC pipe sections in a mineral solution. After
six hours, the tubes were removed to reveal sturdy yet lightweight
cylindrical blocks of white crystal. The students constructed a full-height
pavilion with these modules, demonstrating their capacity to hold 100 times
their own weight.
These students also explored the potential of natural subtractive
manufacturing processes. In one project, they studied the ways in which
termites digest wood fibers. Based on the knowledge that particular species
of termites are attracted to the softer, wetter regions of timber specimens,
the students proposed a series of plywood sheets custom designed to
anticipate particular patterns of termite digestion along their surfaces. In this
way, the insects could be employed to create acoustical interior wall or
ceiling panels of varying absorption levels – each one uniquely crafted by
termites. The Truffle house in Costa da Morte, Spain, exemplifies an animal-
driven subtractive process at a much larger scale.17 Designed by Ensamble
Studio architects, the house was constructed of concrete cast around a
formwork composed of stacked hay bales. Once the concrete cured, a small
calf was led to the entrance of the structure and encouraged to eat the
compressed hay. Over the course of one year, the calf ingested all of the
formwork, revealing the interior of the house. During this time, the animal
grew to be a mature cow of over 600 pounds in weight, symbolizing the
conversion of a residual building material by a metabolic process.
Figure 30.2 Seizure by Roger Hiorns
Image credit: Hilary Perkins
Phenomena
Phenomena concern the transformational qualities of environments over
time, as experienced in changes of weather or fluctuating seasonal patterns –
or in natural organisms’ responses to their physical contexts. Like the
processes described above, natural phenomena invite new ideas about the
notion of control. In some ways, interactive and responsive architecture
enables greater user control than in conventional interiors. In other ways,
however, continually transforming environments signify an unpredictable
departure from traditional, homogeneous spaces.
One of the most direct applications of natural phenomena is the
physical re-creation or simulation of meteorological experiences within
interior environments. Many studies have demonstrated, for example, the
beneficial health effects that result when high-quality daylighting and
ventilation are introduced to interior spaces. Recent experiments in this area
have resulted in some significant and unexpected designs. One application is
CoeLux sky simulation, a lighting strategy that recreates daylight within
Future implications
The experimental Japanese designer Tokujin Yoshioka creates environments
that exemplify the search for a deeper connection with natural systems and
experiences. When once asked what implications his methods have for the
future of design, he replied:
Notes
1 Blaine Brownell and Marc Swackhamer, Hypernatural: Architecture’s New Relationship With
http://blainebrownell.com/third-nature-catalyst/.
11 “UK Pavilion: Shanghai Expo 2010”, Heatherwick Studio, 2010, www.heatherwick.com/uk-
pavilion/.
12 “Pavilion”, 2012expo.lt, May 2012, www.2012expo.lt/en/lithuania-in-expo-2012-yeosu-korea.
13 “World’s Advanced Saving Project”, founded in 2012, Wasproject.it, www.wasproject.it/w/en/.
14 Blaine Brownell, “Hypernatural Studio”, 2015, blainebrownell.com,
http://blainebrownell.com/hypernatural-studio/.
15 “Silk Pavilion”, Mediated Matter, 2013, http://matter.media.mit.edu/environments/details/silk-
pavillion.
16 Charlotte Higgins, “Seizure, Glistening Cave of Copper-Sulphate Crystals, Moves to Yorkshire”,
The Guardian, 13 June 2013, www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2013/jun/13/seizure-copper-
sulphate-crystals-yorkshire.
17 “The Truffle, Costa da Morte, 2010”, Ensamble Studio, 2010,
www.ensamble.info/#!thetruffle/c1f4p.
18 CoeLux, established in 2009, www.coelux.com.
19 “Cloudscapes”, Tetsuo Kondo Architects, 2012, www.tetsuokondo.jp/project/bnl.html.
20 “History,” FogScreen, premiered in 2002, www.fogscreen.com.
21 “Rain Room, 2012”, Random International, 2012, http://random-
international.com/work/rainroom/.
22 “Bloom”, DOSU Studio Architecture, 2012, http://dosu-arch.com/bloom.html.
23 Suzanne LaBarre, “Mighty Building Facade Beats Solar Heat With Mechanical Muscles”, Fast
Company, 4 January 2011, www.fastcodesign.com/1662975/mighty-building-facade-beats-solar-
heat-with-mechanical-muscles.
24 Achim Menges, “HygroSkin: Meteorosensitive Pavilion”, achimmenges.net, 2013,
www.achimmenges.net/?p=5612.
25 “The Stratus Project”, RVTR, 2011, www.rvtr.com/research/research-b/.
26 Tokujin Yoshioka quoted by Blaine Brownell in Matter in the Floating World: Conversations
With Leading Japanese Architects and Designers (New York: Princeton Architectural Press,
2011), p. 243.
Chapter 31
Internal disconnect
Material memory in the John Portman
originals
Gregory Marinic
An interior-exterior provenance
In the nineteenth century, the tectonic qualities and material conditions of
commercial arcades blurred city streets into building interiors. Parisian
passages and other interior urban environments such as the Galleria Vittorio
Emanuele II (1865) in Milan, Galerias Pacifico (1889) in Buenos Aires, and
the Old Arcade (1890) in Cleveland served as forerunners of the atrium
hotel-shopping complexes of the mid-twentieth century. The architectural
language of these European and European-inspired interior spaces was
appropriated by John Portman for his unique interior-exterior aesthetic in
America. Analogous to Lefebvre’s consumption-oriented theory, arcades and
Portman atria extended commercial space into large urban plots to establish
new interior streets for storefronts and cafés. Although the historic
European passages and American arcades maintain strong interior-exterior
readings, Portman’s buildings have undergone continual interior
renovations which have subverted the original exterior aspects of their
interior architectural design.
As both architect and developer, Portman’s hotel-retail-
commercial complexes transformed downtowns into increasingly isolated,
transactional, and privatized forms of urbanism. These internally focused
projects embraced a Brutalist aesthetic by appropriating exterior spatial
conditions and materials to create interior urban experiences.1 Portman
addressed the conventional wisdoms of various stakeholders – planners,
developers, architects, retailers, and the public – who sought a substitute
form of downtown urbanism that ignored the realities of civil unrest,
disinvestment, and abandonment. As American inner cities shrunk from
white flight, his city-within-a-city concept responded to increasing
uncertainty. Building exteriors were turned outside-in to create autonomous
internal plazas, encapsulated landscapes, and hermetic commercial zones.
Beginning in 1967 with the Hyatt Regency Atlanta, Portman
created bold interior spaces that brought the outdoors inside by challenging
conventional assumptions of the hotel interior.2 Soaring spaces, building-
scale internal facades, extensive landscaping, lagoons, and exposed concrete
embodied an interior-exterior aura. As temples of consumerism subjected to
market pressures and changing tastes, his late modernist hotel-retail
interiors were among the first to be adapted in the postmodern wave. The
qualitative permanence of these iconic structures – their monumental,
austere, and sublime interior architecture – has been incrementally
diminished and interiorized by the insensitive actions of corporations, real
estate developers, managing agents, and professional designers. Focusing on
recent adaptive practices, this chapter critiques twenty-first-century
renovations to the original John Portman interiors of the Hyatt Regency
Atlanta (1967), Westin Peachtree Plaza (1976), and Detroit Renaissance
Center (1977).
One of the most significant and destructive alterations to the Hyatt Regency
Atlanta was initiated in 2010 by TVS Design.6 TVS led an extensive
renovation that removed the white-glazed terracotta flooring in the atrium
and common areas.7 The original fan-pattern tiles evoked an abstracted
European cobblestone street that made the atrium feel both public and
urban. Why was this critical interior condition replaced with conventional
porcelain tile? Were the designers unaware of the historical importance of
this material and its spatial intent? Among the most irreverent departures
from the Portman concept, the new floor disrespects the historical integrity
of the original interior surface. Furthermore, the scalar and material
qualities of the new floor are incompatible with the monumental scale of the
22-story atrium. Reorienting an interior-urban space into an ordinary
interior space, the civic stature of the Portman original has been
significantly diminished.
While the original interiors of the Hyatt Regency Atlanta engaged
layers of textural and spatial complexity, it was the lighting concept that
imbued subtle, nuanced, and otherworldly qualities. In the 2010 renovation,
the original internal exteriority was altered with a new lighting concept that
changed the type and amount of artificial light, as well as its relationship to
materiality. The entrance and atrium spaces were brightened substantially,
while the material palette was lightened.8 The resulting environment no
longer enhances spatial depth and unseen spaces; these distinctions have
been neutralized and rendered equally. At night, the brightness of the
ground plane detracts from the ability to perceive the dramatic verticality of
the atrium. In short, this impressive interior urban space no longer appears
as monumental as it once did.
In the original design, materials were coordinated to enhance their
impact at the scale of the building and the city. In the 2010 renovation, TVS
Design selected materials for their individual qualities instead of their
relevance to the 1967 concept. Pursuing a safely conventional aesthetic
rather than a rigorous and integrative approach to architectural interiors,
TVS imposed new materials that disregard the notable provenance of this
iconic building. Designers ignored the urban tenets of the Portman original.
The monumental atrium space remains; however, its material articulation
and overall effect have suffered immeasurably.
Apart from materiality and light, various significant architectural
elements have been removed. From 1967 through the early 1980s, the atrium
ceiling served as a constructed sky plane surrounded by balconies that
resembled landscaped terraces. Since 2010, hanging vegetation has been
entirely removed and guest room corridors have been refitted with
conventional patterned carpeting. The overall interior architectural effect has
shifted from “exterior terraces opening onto the city” to “interior hallways
surrounding a lightwell.” Furthermore, a pair of monumental hanging follies
that gave scale to the atrium – a three-story birdcage with parrots and a
grandly scaled, ornamental parasol – have been dismantled.9 Their removal
has altered the public sensibility of the atrium in favor of a more ordinary
hotel lobby aesthetic. Although the structural bones of the Hyatt Regency
Atlanta remain, the uniqueness of its interior urbanity has been largely
erased.
Notes
1 Paul Goldberger, John Portman: Art and Architecture (Atlanta: High Museum of Art, 2009).
2 Ibid.
3 William Neill, Urban Planning and Cultural Identity (London: Routledge, 2003).
4 Ibid.
5 Hyatt Corporation, Press Release, May 2011. Lucinda Press, ASID, Senior Associate/Design
Coordinator for the Atlanta renovation, TVS design.
6 Hotel News Resource, Press Release, 26 March 2012. Hyatt Regency Atlanta Debuts $65 Million
Transformation, www.hotelnewsresource.com/article62229.html (accessed 12 January 2016).
7 Leon Stafford, “No More Retro for Iconic Hyatt Regency”, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 20
August 2010.
8 Ibid.
9 Ibid.
10 Daniel Niemeyer, 1950s American Style: A Reference Guide (New York: Lulu Publishing, 2013).
11 Westin Corporation, Press Release, Atlanta’s Icon: The Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel,
www.westinpeachtreeplazaatlanta.com/hotel-history (accessed 12 January 2016).
12 Office of John Portman and Associates, Press Release, 1986.
13 Katherine Mattingly Meyer and Martin C.P. McElroy, Detroit Architecture: AIA Guide Revised
Investments Along the Detroit River (Detroit: Metropolitan Affairs Commission, 2001).
16 Ibid.
17 Collin Anderson, Evolution of a Retail Streetscape: DP Architects on Orchard Road (Singapore:
Images Publishing, 2013).
18 Sherri Welch, “GM to Launch Major Renovation of Renaissance Center HQ This Summer”,
Automotive News, January 2016.
19 Robin Meredith, “GM Buys A Landmark of Detroit for Its Home”, The New York Times, 17 May
1996.
20 Lefebvre, The Production of Space.
21 Ibid.
22 Mike Gane, Baudrillard’s Bestiary: Baudrillard and Culture (London: Routledge, 2002).
23 See The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend, WA: Bay
Press, 1985); republished as Postmodern Culture (London, 1985).
24 See Jameson, Marxism and Form: Twentieth-Century Dialectical Theories of Literature
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1974), p. 34. Despite describing the difference between
postmodern pastiche and modern parody, Jameson’s “Postmodernism, or the Cultural Logic of
Late Capitalism”, also links the origins of pastiche to Thomas Mann and Adorno.
25 Jean Baudrillard, Simulacra et Simulation (Paris: Editions Galilee, 1981).
26 Ibid.
27 Jean Baudrillard, The Consumer Society: Myths and Structures (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications, 1998).
28 Perry Anderson, “Forward”, in The Cultural Turn, ed. Fredric Jameson (London: Verso, 1998), pp.
xi–xiv.
29 Ibid.
30 Fredric Jameson, Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (Durham, NC: Duke
University Press, 1984).
31 Ibid.
32 Fredric Jameson, “Culture and Finance Capital”, in The Cultural Turn, 1996 ed., ed. Fredric
Jameson (London: Verso, 1998).
Chapter 32
Marco Vanucci
Among all the elements of architecture, the building envelope plays a key
role in defining the relationship between the surrounding environment and
the articulation of interior spatiality. In particular, through new
understandings of material systems and performance, the articulation of the
envelope in contemporary architecture aims at the production of
heterogeneous spatial constructs. Beyond the dichotomy of form and
program, interior architecture can be rediscovered through the articulation
of performative envelopes. The progressive architectural discourse of the
past fifty years has been polarized by research of complex forms, on the one
hand, and by the innovative articulation of program on the other. This
emphasis on the autonomy of form has been counteracted by the
determination of programmatic relationships. While these two aspects have
been thoroughly investigated and have produced vast amounts of literature,
questions related to the articulation of interior space have not received a
corresponding level of critique. Discourse surrounding spatial design has
paradoxically centered on the description of aspects that influence the shape
or fruition of spatiality, without engaging into a deeper understanding of the
quality of interiority.
The postmodern study of architectural typologies (Aldo Rossi’s
work, for example) with its tendency to privilege form has moved on to
extensive research of programmatic hybridization in late postmodernism as
evidence by the Office for Metropolitan Architecture. At the turn of the
twenty-first century, the advent of new computational technology and
digital fabrication marked a new phase. The exploration of complex,
informal geometries opened up new ways of thinking about the relationship
between form and function. Seminal projects like the Yokohama Ferry
Terminal by Foreign Office Architects paved the way to a new
understanding of the relationship between materiality, structure, and
performance in architecture. The problem of fabricating complex geometries
(often related to projects whose main concern were the representation of the
form of the object itself) gave way to a deep reconsideration of the material
and performative quality of space in new architectures of the digital age.
Advanced computation became a tool for simulating material
behavior, and the performative quality of space ceased to be merely a
representational tool. The representation of architecture and its interior, in
fact, has traditionally been expressed through orthographic projections in a
Euclidean space. Plan and section are traditionally considered to be vehicles
to communicate the organization and political dimensions of the
architecture and its interior. The plan organizes a particular sequence of
spaces and describes the nature of its human dimension. It manifests the
intention of a specific social and political structure; a symmetrical and
centralized plan aligns with a hierarchical organization, whereas a
fragmented and distributed plan instigates a more open and democratic
occupation of space. The introduction of the corridor, for example, marks an
important moment in the organization of circulation within the dwelling
unit. In “Figures, Doors, and Passages,” Robin Evans1 gives a compelling
insight into the relationship between spatial organization and social
arrangements. He distinguishes between the medieval sequences of
interconnected rooms with sixteenth-century British architecture, where the
introduction of the corridor introduced the separation of different social
strata within a single home. Privacy, distance, and the segregation of the
aristocracy from servants were manifested in architectural forms for the first
time thanks to the addition of corridors and ancillary circulatory spaces.
Similarly, the section is a representational tool that can be used for
organizing the hierarchy of social strata, whether through the separation of
functions on different levels or through the homogenization of programs via
the employment of pilotis and the open plan.
Figure 32.1 OPENSYSTEMS Architecture, Nexo is a project for a flexible kiosk in Chicago (IL). The
envelope is formed by a triangulated three-dimensional fractal panel that forms a self-supporting
structure. Its recursive geometry produces a fractal pattern: a series of identical, triangulated metal
plates scale down in size as they grow over each other forming a visually compelling and solid
structure.
What is it in the territory that gets onto the map? We know the
territory does not get onto the map. That is the central point about
which we here are all agreed. Now, if the territory were uniform,
nothing would get onto the map except its boundaries, which are
the points at which it ceases to be uniform against some large
matrix. What gets onto the map, in fact, is difference, be it a
difference in altitude, a difference in vegetation, a difference in
population structure, difference in surface, or whatever.
Differences are the things that get onto a map.5
Notes
1 Robin Evans and Pamela Johnston, “Translations From Drawing to Building and Other Essays”,
AA Documents (Architectural Association, 2003).
2 Alejandro Zaera Polo, “The Politics of the Envelope”, Volume Magazine, p. ii.
3 Hashim Sarkis, The Paradoxical Premise of Flexibility, CASE: Le Corbusier’s Venice Hospital
Heterogeneous Space Beyond Modernist Space-Time and Postmodernist Social Geography (Wiley:
AD Reader, 2009), p. 7.
Chapter 33
Zeke Leonard
It was a satisfying feeling when you managed to fit all of the parts
into the right place.
The owner of this house has often welcomed me to its soft mats
and quiet atmosphere, and in the enjoyment of them I have often
wondered as to the impressions one would get if he could
suddenly be transferred from his own home to this unpretentious
house, with its quaint and pleasant surroundings… . Gradually the
perfect harmony of the tinted walls with the wood finish would be
observed.7
Attention is drawn to tatami, as they are the spatial building block of the
traditional Japanese residential structure, and with good reason; a tatami is
quite literally the measure of a human body. At 1 ken (about 1.8 meters) by
1/2 ken (about 0.9 meters), a traditional tatami describes the amount of space
that a single person can comfortably occupy when prone. Two tatami next
to each other make a space that is 1 ken by 1 ken, called a tsubo. Tsubo are
used in Japan to describe spatial area much in the way that “square footage”
is used in America (Figure 33.1). Instead of using only one part of the human
body to describe the area, however, Japanese tradition uses a unit that is
based on the entire human body as a ruler. One effect of this method is that
spaces retain a human scale: as tatami are laid out it is uncommon to find a
space that is more than about ten tatami without some division of space,
whether a change in floor plane, a sliding screen, or some other method.
The absence of all paint, oil, varnish, or filling, which too often
defaces our rooms at home, is at once remarked… . On the
contrary the wood is left in just the condition it was when it left
the cabinetmaker’s plane, with a simple surface, smooth but not
polished.12
Methods of work
The answer, of course, is “yes.” Humans respond to other humans. An object
or space that bears the marks of another human, whether it is the maker or a
long-time user, can have a resonance. It is this resonance that drives us to
store and display items in museums or to preserve old buildings. This
resonance, however, does not have to apply only to very special or very old
objects/spaces – it can also apply to our homes. In fact, this activity is
already applied to personal objects. It is the rare person who does not, when
prompted, bring out an object, whether it is an old Bible, vegetable peeler,
quilt, sewing kit, piano, or something else altogether and say with pride,
“This belonged to my grandmother, or my uncle, or has been in our family
for generations.” From an autoethnographic stance, there is a predisposition
to respond to and venerate age. It is this same impulse that drives some
people to collect autographs – the evidence of being at only one degree of
removal from a person the collector admires. It is but a short leap from this
human-to-human connection with the object as mediator to a human-to-
human connection with the materials in a space as mediator.
There is a difference between the “common society” in Japan as
cited by Odate and that of the West. Often clients look to interior designers
and architects to define such abstract terms as “worth” and “value.” Too
often, as John Stanislav Sadar writes, the “immaterial aspects of our
environment are somewhat foreign ground for the architect.”17 In his
engaging article “Inhabiting Materials, Managing Environments,” Sadar
explains,
Notes
1 Toshio Odate, Making Shoji (Fresno: Linden Publishing, 2000), p. 17.
Occupancies
Chapter 34
Georgina Downey
Notes
1 In the mid-eighteenth century, at his École des Beaux-Arts, the gifted architectural educator
Jacques-Francois Blondel “made full use of field trips (‘conferences sur les lieux’) to help students
make the transition from theory to reality.” Reed Benhamou, “The Education of the Architect in
Eighteenth Century France”, Journal of Eighteenth Century Studies 12, no. 2 (September 1989):
190.
2 Gennaro Postiglioni, The Architect’s Home (Köln: Taschen, 2013), p. 9.
3 Ibid.
4 Postiglioni, The Architect’s Home, p. 11.
5 Anna Jug, “Moving Forward: How Are House Museums Engaging With New Audiences, While
Attracting Visitors Back?”, MA Coursework Thesis, Curatorial and Museum Studies, University
of Adelaide, submitted June 2015.
6 Elizabeth Grosz, Space, Time and Perversion: the politics of bodies, (New York: Routledge, 1995),
p. 22.
7 A lieu de mémoire is any significant entity, whether material or non-material in nature, which by
dint of human will or the work of time has become a symbolic element of the memorial heritage
of any community (in this case, the French community). These may include places such as
archives, museums, cathedrals, palaces, cemeteries, and memorials; concepts and practices; and
objects. Pierre Nora and Lawrence D. Kritzman, eds., Realms of Memory: Rethinking the French
Past. Vol. 1: Conflicts and Divisions (New York and Chichester: Columbia University Press, 1996),
p. 27.
8 Trevor Keeble, “Introduction”, in The Modern Period Room: The Construction of the Exhibited
Interior 1870–1950, ed. Penny Sparke, Brenda Martin, and Trevor Keeble (London: Routledge,
2006), pp. 2–4.
9 Jeremy Aynsley, “The Modern Period Room: A Contradiction in Terms?”, in The Modern Period
Bulletin 59, no. 3 (September 1977): 457. “No other architect of the period [modernism] has been
so thoroughly studied. Writings on Gaudí form one of the longest bibliographies of any architect
of any time.”
13 Gij van Hensbergen, Gaudi: A Biography (New York: Harper Perennial, 2003), p. 59.
14 Pilar Viladas, “Le Shack”, New York Times Magazine, 1 April 2001,
http://partners.nytimes.com/library/magazine/specials/20010325mag-leshack.html (accessed 8
June 2015).
15 Beatriz Colomina, “Battle Lines: E.1027”, Renaissance and Modern Studies 39, no. 1 (1996): 96.
16 Tim Benton, “E-1027 and the Drôle de Guerre”, AA Files 74 (2017): 123–143.
17 Walter Benjamin, The Arcades Project, trans. Robert Eiland and Kevin McLaughlan (Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 1999), p. 9.
Chapter 35
Event-space
A performance model for spatial design
Dorita Hannah
But one can say that there is no space, there are spaces. Space is
not one, but space is plural, a plurality, a heterogeneity, a
difference. That would also make us look at spacing differently. We
would not be looking for one.
— Daniel Libeskind: The End of Space
The two epigraphs above assert space as contentious, multiplicitous, and
unpredictable, to which I would add, “performative.” What is it for space to
perform? In architectural discourse, the term “performance” has generally
been associated with building science. As a technical and diagnostic tool for
investigating the quantifiable workings of the constructed environment,
building performance has focused on improving the operations and
efficiencies of buildings and their physical impact on occupants who are
rendered “users.” Implicated in modernism’s ongoing utopian project, its
concerns with optimization have remained central in the engineering
sciences, although twenty-first-century thinking has attempted to align
pragmatic concerns with aesthetic considerations.6 As David Leatherbarrow
maintains in the opening chapter of Performative Architecture: Beyond
Instrumentality,
It is perhaps more productive to ask not what a building (as singular object)
8
is, but what the fabricated environment (as a dynamic multiplicity) does. By
folding performance into the mix, built environments no longer need be
perceived in relation to singular works of architecture, but as multimodal
spatial action itself – as spacing!
In Parables for the Virtual, Brian Massumi writes, “What is pertinent about
an event-space is not its boundedness, but what elements it lets pass,
according to what criteria, at what rate, and to what effect.”40 Architectural
theorist Rubió Ignasi Solà-Morales suggests we combat the brutal nature of
disciplinary space with “weak architecture” that utilizes the fleeting,
vestigial, and ephemeral to construct a new type of monumentality “bound
up with the lingering resonance of poetry after it has been heard, with the
recollection of architecture after it has been seen.”41 Solà-Morales refers to
the tendency for architecture to foreclose on chance by attempting to create
itineraries of control. In order for architecture to be transformed into a
dynamic and co-creative event, the aleatory and temporal, found in the
theatrical event, must be admitted. “This is the strength of weakness; that
strength which art and architecture can produce precisely when they adopt a
posture that is not aggressive and dominating, but tangential and weak.”42
Spatial design can align itself to Solà-Morales’s notion of weak architecture,
which exerts its powers as both performative and resistant in defying attack
through transience, permeability, and anti-monumentality. This could
challenge architecture’s conformist tendency in times of fear and crisis. A
free-flowing exchange of, bodies, and ideas can be made present by
spatiality that operates figuratively and concretely as an accessible, porous,
and unpredictable realm.
Acknowledgement
This chapter develops and extends an earlier text: “Event-Space: Performance
Space and Spatial Performativity” in Performance Perspectives: a critical
introduction (Palgrave McMillan 2011: edited by Jonathan Pitches and Sita
Popat), applying the event-space paradigm to interior design. It also draws
from my book Event-Space: Theatre Architecture and the Historical Avant-
Garde (Routledge Press, 2017).
Notes
1 Scenography, generally associated with the practice of theater design, concerns the visual,
experiential, and spatial composition of an event, as well as how these integrated elements are
presented (via the production) and received (by the audience), although the boundaries have
become increasingly blurred through interactive and immersive theater practices. For more
detailed discussions on Scenography as an expanding field, see Joslin McKinney and Philip
Butterworth, Introduction to Scenography (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009); Thea
Brejzek, ed., Expanding Scenography: On the Authoring of Space (Prague: Arts & Theatre
Institute, 2011), Dorita Hannah and Olav Harslof, Performance Design (Copenhagen: Museum
Tusculanum Press, 2008), and Joslin McKinney and Scott Palmer, Scenography Expanded: An
Studies Reader, ed. Henry Bial (New York and London: Routledge, 2004), pp. 7–9, 29.
4 Jon McKenzie, “Global Feeling”, in Performance Design, ed. Dorita Hannah and Olav Harsløf
(Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2008), p. 128.
5 Jane Rendell, “The Re-Assertion of Time Into Critical Spatial Practice”, keynote address in One
Beyond Instrumentality, ed. Branko Kolarevic and Ali Malkawi (New York: Spon Press, 2005): 7.
8 Ibid.
9 Jacques Derrida, Of Grammatology, trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Baltimore, MD: John
Hopkins University Press, 1997), p. 68.
10 Jacques Derrida, Positions, trans. Alan Bass (London: Continuum Press, 1997): 76.
11 This link to punctuation as a dynamic spacing was also discussed by Omar Khan and Dorita
Hannah in relation to the term “performance/architecture”: “Introduction”
Performance/Architecture, ed. Omar Khan and Dorita Hannah, Journal of Architectural
Architecture: A Reader in Cultural Theory, ed. Leach (London and New York: Routledge, 1997),
pp. 324–336. Originally published in Bernard Tschumi, La Case Vide: La Villette (London:
Architectural Association, 1986), pp. 324–336, 320, 335. Jacques Derrida, who was introduced
“into” architectural discourse by Bernard Tschumi, saw an application of his philosophy of
deconstruction to architecture within the project of the Parc de la Villette. As the philosopher
noted, this invitation to participate in the project threw him “into the space of architecture,
rather than architectural space,” exposing him to a new discipline: Mark Wigley, “Jacques
Derrida: Invitation to a Discussion”, Columbia Documents of Architecture and Theory 1 (1992):
10–11, 7–27.
13 Jacques Derrida, “Point de Folie – Maintenant l’Architecture”, pp. 333–334.
14 Ibid.
15 Jacques Derrida in Mark Wigley, “Jacques Derrida: Invitation to a Discussion”, Columbia
Documenting interiority/inhabiting
duration
Marian Macken
During the artist’s life, the studio’s output was the chief interest
and importance: paintings, sculptures, and drawings documented Whiteley’s
creative process, and the studio occupied a liminal space between the act of
making and the made. The studio is referred to through these artworks. With
the death of an artist, and this output ceasing, the physicality of the space is
of interest, as the site of former artistic events. For the visitor, the
opportunity and experience of being within the space gives an immediacy to
the artist’s work. Rather than gazing at paintings, the studio-museum visitor
may take an active role and walk into the space, be immersed and enclosed
within the same space that the artist once worked in. For Edmund Capon,
the former director of the AGNSW, the Whiteley Studio still feels “curiously
occupied” by the spirit of the artist through its atmosphere.2 According to
curator Barry Pierce, “exuberance, inspiration, and melancholy” are present
in the space, a contemporary spirit that extends beyond the individual to
being a time capsule of a generation of Australian artists.3
A visitor to the studio-museum approaches with an expectation of
authenticity, of being within the “real” space of the studio, an expectation
which looms over and compresses the temporal distance between its former
use as a studio and the present day of the visit. However, the visitor is
entering a space that is no longer used or inhabited, but which, in fact,
resists inhabitation (except by the “spirit” of the former artist). The space is
observable but not occupiable. The visitor retains the role of the “viewer,” at
once existing within the space but also a member of the audience.
Depending on the curatorial philosophy, the passage of time is halted and
change is excluded. These studio-museums suspend time and understanding
of the temporality of place. It is not the artist’s studio that is being visited,
but rather, the residue of a former inhabitation. The space becomes defined
as a physical container of absence; the studio-museum becomes a vessel of a
former creative dynamism. With the understanding that events and
experiences leave residual traces as proof of their occurrence, the studio-
museum retains and preserves former artistic events: it becomes a spatial
document, or spatial archive, that serves as evidence of a course of events.4
In this way, the room is a trace left by the past. As a spatial document, the
studio-museum is more specifically a document of interiority. This spatial
document occupies the same site and structure as the original and is
imprinted with traces of its own original space, but it is no longer the
original.
Replication
The studio-museum, as a replicated original space, has analogies with a full-
scale, post factum model of the space. It operates similarly to the
reconstruction of Mies van der Rohe’s German Pavilion, designed for the
1928/29 International Exposition in Barcelona (referred to as the Barcelona
Pavilion), nearly sixty years after the original was dismantled. Naming the
reconstructed Barcelona Pavilion – or studio-museum – a full-scale, post
factum model makes explicit the experience for the visitor: one is walking
Duration
Although these two examples of spatial documents (studio-museums and
Demand’s photographs) display quite different media and dimensionality,
they share an intention to document interiority. Three-dimensional, formerly
creatively dynamic space is documented to preserve the trace of past artistic
events. As documents, the question arises as to temporality:
Notes
1 Art Gallery of NSW, Brett Whiteley Studio (Sydney: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2007), p. 70.
2 Ibid., p. 175.
3 Ibid., p. 30.
4 Charles Merewether, “Introduction: Art and the Archive”, in The Archive, ed. Charles
Merewether (London: Whitechapel; Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2006), p. 10.
5 For an extended reading of the Barcelona Pavilion as full-scale model, see Marian Macken,
“Solidifying the Shadow: Post Factum Documentation and the Design Process”, Architectural
Archive, ed. Charles Merewether (London: Whitechapel; Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2006), p.
127.
8 Kester Rattenbury, ed., This Is Not Architecture (London: Routledge, 2002), p. 57.
9 ‘While it has become a commonplace of the early twenty-first century to conflate simulacra with
the thing imitated, the two remained relatively distinct between the wars. It was the difference
between the two, not their similarity, which prompted Walter Benjamin to write such seminal
essays as “The Mimetic Function,” and “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical
Reproduction.”’ George Dodds, Building Desire: On the Barcelona Pavilion (London: Routledge,
2005), p. 5.
10 Walter Benjamin, “The Work of Art in the Age of Reproducibility”, in Walter Benjamin: Selected
Writings, Volume 4, 1938–1940, ed. Howard Eiland and Michael W. Jennings (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 2003, 1939), p. 253.
11 Thomas Demand, Thomas Demand/Roxana Morcoci (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2005),
p. 10.
12 Jasmine Benyamin, “Analog Dreams”, in 306090: A Journal of Emergent Architecture and Design,
11: Models, ed. Emily Abruzzo, Eric Ellingsen, and Jonathan D. Solomon (Princeton, NJ: School of
Architecture, Princeton University, 2007), p. 90.
13 Michael Fried, Why Photography Matters as Art as Never Before (New Haven, CT: Yale
University Press, 2008), p. 271.
14 Ibid.
15 Merewether, “A Language to Come”, p. 135.
16 Merewether, “Introduction: Art and the Archive”, p. 12.
17 Geoffrey Batchen, “Life and Death”, in Time, ed. Amelia Groom (London: Whitechapel Gallery;
Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2013), p. 49.
18 Eduardo Cadava, Words of Light: Theses on the Photography of History (New York: Princeton
University Press, 1997), p. 63.
19 Paul Ricoeur, Time and Narrative, Volume 3 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985/1990), p.
120.
20 Stephen Kern, The Culture of Time and Space, 1880–1918 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 1983), p. 84.
21 Mary Ann Doane, cited in Sven Spieker, The Big Archive: Art From Bureaucracy (Cambridge,
MA: The MIT Press, 2008), p. 25.
22 Ibid., p. 26.
23 Brett Whiteley Studio (Sydney: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2007), p. 170.
24 Merewether, “A Language to Come”, p. 129.
25 Ibid., p. 127.
26 Art Gallery of NSW, Brett Whiteley Studio (Sydney: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2007), p.
170.
27 Ricœur, Time and Narrative, Volume 3, p. 122.
Chapter 37
Johan Voordouw
Topology
The term “topology” was first published in a paper entitled “Vorstudien zur
Topologie” by Johann Benedict Listing in 1847. The Mobius strip was defined
eighteen years later, in 1865.6 Topology and architecture have a number of
inherent contradictions. Mathematically, topology deals with scaleless
deformation undermining a critical dimension of architecture; topologies are
geometrical relationships devoid of scale and measure. Through
deformation, different shapes are geometrically the same, which undermines
the critical importance of form; topology studies the surface of geometry – it
has no space. Topology remains critical to current computational
architecture. To understand how topology has retained relevancy, it is
critical to understand how the definition has morphed through its short but
intensive use in architecture. By no means the first mention of topology in
relation to architecture, Reyner Banham used the terms in his essay “The
New Brutalism” to describe the Smithson’s Sheffield project, stating that the
“connectivity” (topology) of the circulation, inside/outside, and penetration
have always been important to architecture but had historically been
subservient to platonic geometry (building form).7 Banham described the
banality of topology when he stated that both a brick and a billiard ball
could become the same topological shape through simple deformation. In
Banham’s article, topology is separate from form, subservient in the
architectural hierarchy of circulation, playing an important but secondary
role to architectural form. In the coming decades, these two considerations
would merge. Topology entered contemporary lexicon through Deleuze’s
book Le pli: Leibniz et le Baroque (The Fold: Leibniz and the Baroque).
Bernard Cache, Peter Eisenman, and Greg Lynn brought Deleuze’s book to a
broader architectural audience in the mid-1990s in subsequent articles for
Architectural Design magazine, most notably in Lynn’s March/April 1993
Erasure of interiority
Walter Benjamin sat at a threshold. The interiority of nineteenth-century
Paris was very specific to its time and place. His time was both the end of
the Beaux Arts facade and the rise of the steel frame and its growing
transparency. It might be purposeful to distinguish between these two
spaces, the heavy wall and the light frame, and how in contemporary
practice these two elements of architectural enclosure have evolved. The
“mask,” as Giedion described the classical facade, was the visible expression
of classical composition while the architectural “truth” lay hidden in the
steel structure behind the stone.19
Topology undermines both of these defined conditions. The
porosity of the topological boundary erodes the solidity of the facade. With
the facade removed, the interiority that once contained the modern
apartment is opened up like the back of a dollhouse, exposed to the outside.
The separation of the facade from the interior is untenable in topological
surfaces where the walls, floor, and ceiling are varying deformations of the
same continuous surface. Furthermore, if we invert Benjamin’s glass-
covered, steel-framed arcade from interiority to exteriority, it more aptly
forms the lineage towards transparency and nomadism that, as stated by
Deleuze and Guattari, define the spaces of the later twentieth century.20 The
“truth” of structure is once more hidden, embedded in the continuous
surface that facilitates inhabitation. With topology, the arcade as wandering
path expands from line to network to field, from infrastructure to surface.
The interior is therefore affronted from two directions: one is the erosion of
the facade from the outside, the second is the increased transparency and
openness within space itself. “Open space” is increasingly synonymous with
the outside.
Space is not found, it is structured, and from this structure
interiority is constructed. To consider the ground as the plane of
inhabitation ignores the volume needed to physicalize human presence.
Structured space argues for a tectonic response that undermines the
hegemony of surface. Tim Ingold writes, “the hegemony of the straight line
is a phenomenon of modernity, not of culture in general.” He continues,
“Since the straight line can be specified by numerical values, it becomes an
index of quantitative rather than qualitative knowledge.”21 This might be
true of computational surfaces as well. To quantify mathematically is to
know materially but not to understand culturally or spatially. The interior
was so easily erased as its discourse was qualitative and its boundaries
increasingly vague. As Lefebvre writes, “all ‘subjects’ are situated in a space
in which they must either recognize themselves or lose themselves, a space
which they may both enjoy and modify.”22 The definition of interiority need
not revert to the static compartmentalization of rooms for space to be
constructed, nor does the infinitely folded surface that ideally defines
topology need to fragment to staidly define the floor, walls, and ceiling.
Topology must simply fold in such a manner that deforms surface to form
space. Interiority as a defined inside to a surrounding outside can retain the
porosity but rescind the ambiguity that has previously undermined its
articulation. In its present construction, for all the dynamism of topological
surfaces, it remains as staid and static as the Dom-ino system of Le
Corbusier. While it facilitates passive meandering, it stifles modification.
While it is variable, it remains immobile. It remains an open question how
one might both enjoy and modify, but for that condition to exist the surface
must spatialize, the interior must be demarcated, and the exterior must be
defined as something “out there.”
Centralizing space
It might be a contradiction that architecture is concerned with space when
for such long periods of its practice architecture was unconcerned with the
interior. Laugier’s primitive hut was open to the elements, its roof and
columns a vague definition of an interior. There is a difference between the
architectural history of Giedion and the philosophy of Deleuze when they
speak of space and interior, respectively. Giedion speaks of the first space
conception as volumes in space, outside looking at the object. He cites the
lack of interior in ancient structures (Egypt, Sumeria, and Greece) because
the space contained no windows to connect to the outside.23 To Deleuze, the
interior (monad) is completely enclosing inside the object, with no
connection to the outside. Deleuze notes, “The monad is the autonomy of the
inside, an inside without an outside.”24 Deleuze further separates the
enclosing walls from the interior when he continues:
The ground plane rarefies the surface of the earth in order to allow
human activities to take shape. As these surfaces become
increasingly smooth and continuous, their grip is reduced to a
minimum. The stairway becomes a ramp and the ground falls
away.31
Topological interiors
There are a number of examples that describe topological interiors. Kiesler’s
Endless House (1924–50), lifted off the ground, was a separation of space
from ground. Conversely, Jacques Gillet’s Sculpture House (1962) was cave-
like and contained. Interiority is not an argument for pure separation,
recreating Giedion’s first space conception to replace Deleuze’s neo-
Baroque. Furthermore, it is not an argument for a calcified interior, the staid
rooms of classicism hidden behind the massive facade. It merely argues for a
defined interior to partner and counter the pervasive exteriority that defines
much of the current discourse.
In mathematical terms, points on a topological surface are not
equal. Therefore, in architectural terms, a hierarchy lies latently embedded in
the folds. The question remains whether topology is used to form a porous
surface, folding out to merge with the exterior, or conversely begins to wrap
and form a new interior. The outside will always be present, but interiority
in architecture must be nurtured and preferred if space is to be constructed
and experienced. If the center of topologies is critical, the definition of the
edge is equally important. Topological surfaces currently have two edge
conditions: one is blended into the landscape; the other is a violent cut of the
surface, extruded like the side of a cliff revealing its folds. Both conditions
deal poorly with the boundary of the outside. In the former, the outside
merges in; in the latter the transparent edifice puts all interiority on show.
Here Lars Spuybroek (NOX) offers a direction forward. The 1993–97
H2Oexpo offers an enclosed topology. The pavilion constructs a surface for
active engagement. It combines ambiguity to facilitate new disparate modes
of experience with defining a tectonic and space on the inside. The Teshima
Art Center, by Ryue Nishizawa and structural engineer Mutsuro Sasaki,
offers a more recent example (Figure 37.1). The pure “nothingness” of space
that encapsulates the public inside a covered space beautifully frames the
outside. This interiority is not for protection. It is simply a definition and
difference from the outside in all its poetic subtlety. Additional works by
SANAA at the Rolex Learning Center at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de
Lausanne explore the undulating plane as habitable surface, and Toyo Ito’s
Taichung Metropolitan Opera House is a topological surface that defines
both vertical as well as horizontal space over a series of connected floors.
Figure 37.1 Teshima Art Centre (2010), Architect Ryue Nishizawa with structural engineer Mutsuro
Sasaki. A hovering surface that defines an enclosure.
Image credit: Iwan Baan
Figure 37.2 Rolex Learning Centre at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (2010), SANAA.
A path cuts across the topological floor to define a place for movement.
Image credit: Iwan Baan
Architectural purgatory
The car, the garage, and the house
Architects have revered the automobile for its abilities, its function, and its
form. Paradoxically, the automobile spawned one of the largest threats to
architecture: the garage. Devoid of function and implied form, and born
from immediate response, the garage forged the next fifty years of the field.
In thinking of the city and home in the twentieth century, inevitably
transportation, highways, and roads come to mind. Today’s constant stream
of movement finds humanity constantly moving through the interiors of the
world, only viewing glimpses of the exterior environment. Inside our homes,
automobiles, and offices, the world has become a constant interior.
Architects have used the appearance and formation of the
automobile as generators of architectural relevance and a canvas of
exploration; exemplified by Le Corbusier and his depictions of the modern
city, his famous 1927 photo in front of Casa Weissen layered with an
automobile and a female model, or Villa Savoy’s lower level articulation that
allowed for the full turn radius of a car, empowering the car to both enter
the interior shell of the home and dominate the initial design of the home.
Frank Lloyd Wright often designed both for and around automobiles. His
masterpiece, the Guggenheim Museum in New York, owes its most
distinctive interior elements – the spiral of its rotunda and its continuous
surface circulation – to his affinity for the automobile and the space they
occupied. Architecture has had a long and fascinated affliction with the
automobile. Yet, the automobile is not a child of architecture at its inception;
in fact, it could be said it was made to bypass architecture.
While much of the work that exists today is a reaction to the original
implementation of the automobile into society, society – and directly
architecture – has done very little to advance itself in the name of
integration or assimilation.
The automobile dominated architecture. It restricted it, forced it to
comply, and reinvented the method and parti of architecture. Architecture
had historically been focused on the interaction and inhabitation of the
human figure. It has long been focused with this realm of society, yet
architecture has found itself controlled, manipulated, and desperately
chasing the goals of the automobile industry. The home being labeled as a
machine for living brought upon the formation of the car as a machine for
the home. The explosion into society at a rate of one every forty-five seconds
created an overflow of machines. An overflow of design allowed little time
for response from a field that reveres thought over implementation.
Architecture’s fantastic response was the garage – the architectural
equivalent of purgatory; a space that has largely become one of disarray,
storage, and exile of history. As part of the typical single-family house, the
garage has always been an eyesore or an architectural misfit to any
comprehensive layout and parti; stuck on the side, hidden behind brick
veneers, disguised as an extension of the housing mass. The automobile,
proud marvel of the industrial age, the sign of modernism, technology, and
design found itself located next to tools, Christmas lights, and washing
machines. Architecture had no response, no assimilation, and no integration
– only space. It was an object, one that was used as needed and forgotten
when not.
Even today, a garage is known as a part of a home, and is
associated as a parasitic object attached against the home’s will. Viewed as
an unconventional space within the conventional urban fabric, the garage
has found itself as home to countless modern day revolts. This purgatory of
a space has allowed for unconventional ideas to explode; creations such as
Amazon, HP, Apple, Nirvana (and in general all young bands), all formed
and fostered initially as outliers and outcast in society, were all founded
within this invisible armature of suburbia. Here is where we store the
pinnacle of the Industrial Revolution, in a space bleeding revolution,
bleeding reinvention, and we are surprised when reinvention turned its eyes
on its most unwarranted occupant. There must be an avenue to regain the
volume that has traditionally been allocated to an uninhabited space within
the home.
Car as form, as object, and as space evokes many of the same
tools, thoughts, and conversations found within architecture. Performance,
corner issues, transparency, and privacy are all found on the scale of the
home and on the scale of the automobile. Space, for architects and designers,
exists in realms with names such as “inside” and “outside.” There is a clear
connection between the two, one that seems to grant leeway in the way that
either is connected or understood. This question of what an automobile is
allows for us to stop and wonder what we are designing. In reality, what
does the term “automobile” imply? Does it imply the function of the object?
The shape? If anything, it seems to imply an idea, a memory, one that is tied
to something more than form and function. In considering early memories
of an automobile, it is likely that it existed in the form of a toy, an object you
held in your hand; one that drove over any object within reach, survived
falls from the tallest bookshelf, and resided in the home. It was also the
magical animal your parents took to work in the morning; it was the way to
see the world. It was not merely an internal combustible engine framed by a
steel chassis with air conditioning. There is always more to an object that
the object itself. Here we discover where architecture can find some creative
freedoms and interpretations. We must consider that the term itself has run
its course.
Architecture may have reached a point where the automobile is
ready to be absorbed, for the term to be played with, contaminated, and
tested. A moment came in the last century where the terms “technology”
and “machine” delineated from the dominance of the other. They both have
formed an arena of architectural discourse, one where the aesthetics of
function have seemed to overwhelm the discussion. Here, it may not be the
aesthetics in question, but the social impact of the term. Society has found
itself welcoming technology within the setting of the home, while uneasy of
the term machine, which has come to imply dirt, noise, and pollution. Here
is where the car has found its Achilles heel. While pursuing the Darwinian
desire for survival, the automobile has turned to technology to survive.
Technology has a long history of distorting architectural
conventions. It has destroyed the corner by allowing curves to smooth it into
oblivion; it has disfigured poché (the walls, columns, and other solids of a
building or the like, as indicated on an architectural plan, usually in black)
into a graphic, no longer a negative space of conversation. Technology has
allowed us to embrace our imaginations, our impossibilities, and to
construct them. Our thoughts and ideas are closer to those of childlike
dreams and superhero worlds than those of modern day architectural
thinking. Architecture has found time to play, to take a step back and allow
for some enjoyment, some fruitful embracing of the sprints it has been
forced to make to keep up with the machine. Architecture has found itself a
child again, pursuing routes of discovery with little regard to outcome or
reality. It is valuable to consider how, in this new century, technology seems
to be capable not only of collapsing distance but even annihilating it, such
that our notions of space and of the built environment are being reinvented
to align with the urges and desires of our dreams. Dreams have become the
sketches and hopes of reality.
What is a car with no driver? What is a car with no destination?
What is a car that no longer needs a road to travel? What is a car if it drives
itself? What is a house if not a stationary car? Modern automobiles resemble
building programs rather than dirty machines. Inventing refreshed views on
the car-architecture assimilation, the car has found a way to understand the
home, the dwelling, and thus, architecture. The car is no longer a machine,
but technology. The driver, once a staple of a car, is no longer needed,
allowing for self-guided movement, thus fostering communication and
interaction such as that found in the program of a home. The car is no longer
forced to thrive on gasoline and fuel but is quickly becoming a thriving
sustainable appliance allowed in the home. Recent technology has allowed
the car to receive the largest transformations of form, usage, and program
since its inception. This change, these variables and the destabilized nature
of the car, has left a larger ability for architecture to regain the space once
stolen; it has given architecture a playground of possibilities.
There is a sudden blurring of programmable space and
connectivity being allocated to the automobile. If connectivity is no longer
based on proximity, is a car needed for relevance or transport? If you can
talk, eat, and sleep in a space that is in constant movement, what is the
benefit of community, neighborhoods, or towns? There seems to be more at
play than a car that can plug into a wall or a battery that can recharge in
eight hours or less. The idea is that the cars of the future are playrooms or
multifunctional rooms that are part-house-part-car and capable of things
that only children can imagine. The car becomes a space of programmable
possible impossibilities; it becomes the object that can survive falls from the
tallest bookshelf.
The automobile has become a space of social interaction; it is no
longer the lonesome experience of a machine but has become a medium of
connection for technology. As in Greg Lynn’s RV prototype house, it uses
the terminology closely associated with automobiles and allows for the
program of a house to infiltrate and inform the form. Projects like Auto
Residence of 2012 by Volkan Alkanoglu Design shows how the simple choice
to reject the garage as an object and implement the car directly into the
interior dwelling can create a forum of conversation between the two. This
allows both to resonate off each other, parts of the dwelling become the car,
and the car becomes part of the interior organization of the dwelling. By
reducing the form and utility into a space, much like the cabin of a car, the
dwelling brings together intelligent systems, comfort, and freedom of
motion while calling attention to the jumps in technology’s ability to realign
architecture’s tendencies.
Various forms of media have understood the usage of the car and
garage, and might give us a glimpse of the trajectories in architecture. The
Jetsons, a cartoon, showed the ability of a car that folds into a briefcase,
completely erasing the need for auxiliary storage. The film Oblivion shows a
motorcycle that folds into a briefcase and can thus be carried to and from a
destination, the machine completely concealed within technology. While a
childhood cartoon and a Hollywood film may seem to be farfetched and
dispatched mediums from modern day architecture and design, we find
inventions like The Folding CITYCAR from MIT, for example, that become a
key part of the interior space, and allow for space-saving solutions and
conservation of social tendencies and dwelling comfort.
While the threads of film, cartoon, and children’s toys may seem
distant from conversations of dwelling, garage, architecture, and discipline,
that could not be further from the truth. It reinforces the idea that form
rarely follows function when function is constantly updated and
progressing. Form and function do not exist in a world where neither is
understood nor cared for, yet they allow for trajectories of architecture to
see a glimpse into the future. This allows us to entertain the questions: Does
a house still look like a house, or does a car still look like a car? Should they?
What is a house, and what is a car? A youth’s TV show and Hollywood
would seem to say it could be anything, and today’s technology would seem
to agree.
It is important to question the current programmatic elements of
our homes. Space, for architects, designers, and a majority of the world exist
in realms with names such as “inside” and “outside.” Yet one group of
today’s society has the ability to see that everything can exist in other
variations; they know there can be a middle, or no space at all, that not all
must be tied to an extreme of classification or regulation. They can see the
world in a cardboard box or an underwater universe underneath a blanket:
children. To a child, space is not confined by architectural history. There is
no hard line such as interior or exterior. Their playrooms allow for new
associations and the erasing of old ones. They exist in a relentless state of
infinite possibilities. They are unaware of any scheme, and because of this,
they are capable of creating innocent mistakes and fruitful discoveries. To
them, a garage is not storage, but an endless cave of possibilities.
As adults who remember when the world was limitless, we find
ourselves in a constant striving notion of recovering the wonder and delight
in the early experiences with space we once took for granted as children. It
is valuable to consider how, in this new century, technology seems to be
capable not only of collapsing distance but even annihilating it, such that
our notions of space and of the built environment are being reinvented to
align with the urges and desires of our childhood dreams. Perhaps, above all,
play is a simple joy that is a cherished part of childhood. A child’s playroom
is a place where anything can happen. Architecture can be an avenue of play
for adults, one that combines the power of childhood naivetés with the
means of processing experience and of defining the relationships, purpose,
and order of architectural need and desire. It allows for consequences-free
production with uninhibited ability. It allows us to take a car and a home
and place them within each other. It allows us to wonder what happens and
revel in the outcome.
Forms, spaces, and shapes are built with little regard to finite
purpose. It is possible that with the reinvention of the automobile, its social
and architectural implications may find their way out of the garage and into
the home, right back into the playrooms of childhood awe. We must
understand how and why we have the programmatic and social structures in
our homes and find ways to reinvent the whole, not the part. We must
regain the space and form that the car had held. Simple tools such as the
usage of terminology, forms, or methods are a direct and immediate form of
assimilating the utility of these two worlds of architecture and automobiles.
Scale, form, and color are all of the interaction needed, nothing defined by
the definitions we attribute to them through repeated usage. It may be time
to allow some naïve realignment.
Various forms of manufacturing, from aerospace, virtual, and
automobile industries, are now openly transferable and infiltrating each
other. Today’s technology is last century’s automobile. It has overtaken
architecture, displaced it, shaken it, and allowed it to settle into new
territories; it has allowed architecture to play. Modern understanding of
space and form allows for cars to become the naïve toys of childhood,
allowed to be anything and go anywhere. It is allowing the car to be
absorbed into the house and into the city while bringing the city, dwelling,
and social interaction into the car. The car has become the garage, and the
garage has become the dwelling; the car is no longer an object but a
program. This absorption of the automobile into the external shell of
architecture has slowly allowed the garage to exist, and now the garage has
been absorbed into the interior shell of the home, opening new and
unexplored architectural challenges.
We once showcased the automobile on the exterior as a fashion of
exemplifying the modern connection to architecture. The garage transformed
the automobile into a symbiotic attachment to the home, only relevant
through proximity. Technology has now allowed the car to travel into the
interior without architectural separation. It is now shown on the interior; the
framing of the interior architecture becomes the site for a new interaction
between car and home. The exterior format of Casa Weissen is replaced by
the Auto Residence of Volkan Alkanoglu Design (Figure 38.2).
A car can now be treated as an inhabitant in the interior realm of
the home. The garage has found itself empty, unneeded. Aligned with the
newly fashioned social norms of the home, and with transportation
changing faster than ever, the time is ideal for new values and social
implementations of architectural devices. This allows for architecture to
regain the spatial opportunity it handed to the garage out of necessity to
accommodate an uninvited and undesirable dweller. New developments in
the automobile and manufacturing industry are pushing technologies
toward electric and connected automobiles, allowing us to blur the once
stringent norms of what one calls a home. These new norms grant the
home’s interior to bleed to the exterior, and the once isolated exterior to the
infinite interior,4 allowing us to invite the once reviled dweller to become an
inhabitant, a resident, and begin to understand its desires and needs. We
now have the unique opportunity to rethink the troubled relationship
between cars, the garage, and the interior, and thus, architecture itself.
Figure 38.2 Top, Casa Weissen, Le Corbusier 1927; 2 Bottom, Park Residence, Volkan Alkanoglu 20123
Notes
1 Various authors, Automoción y Urbanismo: Europa – La ciudad ideal (Madrid: Fundación
Barreiros, 2004), pp. 19–20.
2 Willy Boesiger and Oscar Storonov, Le Corbusier, Complete Works (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
Architectural Press, 1994), p. 18.
3 Volkan Alkanoglu, “Auto Residence – Volkan Alkanoglu | DESIGN”, Auto Residence, Volkan
Alkanoglu | DESIGN, 2012. www.alkanoglu.com (accessed 8 June 2015).
4 “Yowp: The Jetsons Are Not Top Cat”, Yowp: The Jetsons Are Not Top Cat (accessed 12 June
2015).
Chapter 39
Jan Smitheram
Studio outcomes
Each week, in both projects, students were supplied with a list of what tasks
needed to be achieved – to supplement the brief and to integrate studio
clearly with the final submission. Students began the spacing project by
drawing the body in space. For this session they were limited to a space of
their choice within the school. Plans were provided so they could record
where their drawings occurred. From this simple base, students were then
asked to extend their initial drawings to communicate the relationship
between body and space. They were given a series of words to prompt this
stage as they explored spacing through drawing and modeling, which was
followed by exploring the relationship between two and three dimensions.
Students were then directed to return to the plans, to explore how spacing
could be communicated in relation to more technical drawings. Students
then recorded and mapped the movement of the body toward the building
(at an urban scale), still communicating the bodies’ occupation of space.
Finally, students drew a composite drawing to communicate spacing at
different scales through a singular drawing.
As the images illustrate, students drew their own or other bodies’
engagement with space, focusing on distance, volume, movement, and
orientation of the body, to make spacing present. Their work focused
strongly on the moving body. Students communicated proximity between
body and space (such as looking at door handles) as an intensity that cannot
be measured. On the one hand, the activity of drawing and modeling
enabled students to question how we reproduce our spacing, and how this is
conditioned through our daily practices; the students highlighted these
relations, then questioned and critiqued them. On the other hand, it is also
apparent that students still reproduced a notion of the body projected onto
space. The body became a way for them to order space. At times the
drawings were reductive (complex relations were reduced down to a single
line). The result was a range of responses. For the forming project, students
followed the same process of exploration through weekly tasks, but now the
project moved to form creation.
Figure 39.1 Presentation panel showing body occupying space and extracting the shadows, by Megan
MacPherson, Spacing (2010)
Figure 39.2 Image of model developed from drawing of the hand turning a door handle, by Matty
Nuku, Spacing (2010)
Discussion: scale
While there are a number of outcomes that can be described from the studio,
in this section I am going to focus on scale and spacing, particularly in
relation to disciplinary boundaries. Scale, historically, is a term that
describes a system of order and understanding of space through a standard
measurement; it provides a particular way of understanding interiors,
architecture, and urbanism. Scale is a language that defines space and quite
literally divides it. Rather than understanding scale as a proportional
relationship between the body and the built environment, this studio
approaches scale in different ways, though scale still acts as a structuring
device performing its historical role in this assignment. Students were
prompted to shift between scales – and in the last stage of the project to
move up and down between scales – without a preconceived hierarchy of
where one ends a design or what scale of design is more critical. Scale here
is an action. Scale, or scaling, in the students’ work is a story of intensities of
exploration at a scale, or a “rhythm” of moving between scales, rather than
closing space down to what can be measured and divided.7
Figure 39.3 Presentation panel showing form, program, and atmospheric occupation by Ben Allnatt,
Forming (2010)
Spacing
These two projects look at how the spacing of the body and of the built is
created, imagined, produced, and sustained, where students are actively
theorizing relations through their drawings, models, and other forms of
communication. Spacing is far from neutral in architectural discourse; it is
extremely political, as much is invested in keeping the body and the body’s
material engagement with architecture separate from the aesthetic object or
in trying to dissolve the line that separates the body from the built. In the
students’ work we are able to discern that the occupying body is bound and
transformative, fixed and relatively stable, and fluid and chaotic, because the
spacing of the body can belong to more than just one category.
If we are to focus on occupation first, the students were able to
both explore and express how the body and space affect each other. By
directing students toward spacing, they are allowed to focus on the body as
lived, as “presence and absence, familiar and unknown.”9 The second project,
which started with forming, was also about occupation and program.
Through the student work of teasing out a “theater of the everyday,” the
aspect of performance that emphasizes everyday rituals and protocols
(where our relationship with space is defined, prefigured, and prescribed as
outward influences) enables the world to be understood/made sense of.10
Spacing enabled a way to draw attention to the body, to occupation, in a
way that drew toward, at times, the historical, the regulated – but also, as
already stated, the transformative.
Both projects were about occupation. The first assignment on
spacing, in the end, actually conveyed more of an abstract understanding or
potential of spacing than the forming project. At the end of the second
assignment on forming, while given the opportunity, the majority of
students did not create an isolated form from its surroundings, a container
for relations, creating a boundary between private and public. Several
projects showed that in some respects creating spaces could be
indistinguishably urban, architectural, or interior. However, to convey
occupation most students focused on the interior to tell a story about their
assignment. In terms of communicating space as an atmosphere, as a space
of occupation, the forming assignment conveyed this to a greater extent
than the spacing assignment. In particular, through a focus on materiality,
students created spacing within forming – through atmospheric space. The
forming project illustrated that spacing can be a process within forming.11
Spacing gives rise to both conceptual and visceral knowledge, but
one could add, so does forming. In the studio, both projects enable students
to explore occupation in relation to space through doing. The most
significant result is to begin to achieve the pedagogical goal of undermining
discrete disciplinary thinking in order to nourish forms of design that unite
interiors, architecture, and urban design, enacted through the students’
design work itself. Students’ exploration of occupation enabled them to cross
disciplinary boundaries – through shifting scales – that was not
unidirectional and without hierarchy. Students created connections through
their design work. While the spacing project enabled students to explore
occupation in an analytical way, the forming project enabled students to ask
what space might feel like, and to create atmospheric spaces through
materiality. The design work the students created, and the teaching process,
did not situate interiors as coming after architecture, but taught that it is
part of a design process where each discipline enfolds each other.
Notes
1 For an outline of the varied interpretations of blended learning see, Pete Sharma, “Blended
Learning”, ELT Journal 64, no. 4 (2010): 456–458.
2 See, for example, Ignasi de Sola-Morales, “Absent Bodies”, in Anybody, ed. Cynthia Davidson
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997), pp. 16–25; and Karen A. Frank and Bianca R. Lepori, eds.,
Architecture From the Inside Out, 2nd ed. (Chichester: Wiley-Academy, 2007).
3 Robert Imrie, “Architects’ Conceptions of the Human Body”, Environment and Planning D:
Appropriations
Chapter 40
Markus Berger
This disjunction occurs, the voice loses its origin, the author enters
When Roland Barthes declared the death of the author in 1967, he freed the
text from the dominant “god-like” theological presence of the writer, best
captured for architecture in Ayn Rand’s towering depiction of Howard
Roark who “held his truth above all things and against all men.”2 The heroic
figure of the architect has dominated much of the history of modern
architecture, with manifestos, changes in style, and advancements in
material and technology subsumed under his singular creative authority. By
decentering the architect as a god-like author, following Barthes’s cue, could
we not engage architecture and its interiority differently? It allows for the
lived experience of architecture (like Barthes’s reader) to become more
central to our understanding of the production of space, and by
relinquishing origins and authorial intent, the built environment can be
opened up to multiple meanings/readings and creative appropriation for
making and remaking the world we live in.
This approach to appropriation has profound implications for
professional practice and education in architecture and relocates the much
younger disciplines of interior architecture and interior design as not
marginal but integral to it. After all, most of the construction industry in the
United States is focused on the reuse of existing buildings, and the market
for green buildings is exploding; the lion’s share of the opportunity exists in
retrofits, not new buildings.3 Across a globe of human habitation, this
massive stock of existing buildings – and remaking this built environment –
requires a complete reconceptualization of architectural history and theory.
The past of buildings cannot be merely narrated from a singular
architectural origin, but rather has to be thought through its diverse social
and cultural lives. The architect can no longer simply represent the body and
soul of a building, rather the forms and spaces accumulate meanings
through years of appropriation and acts of living. How do we account for
this nonlinear history of architecture, and in what ways does it alter the role
of the architect and the nature of architectural interventions? By thinking
along lines of appropriation, this chapter explores an alternative roadmap for
architectural practice at large.
An apprentice of appropriation
The German word for appropriation, aneignung, has two very different
meanings: to take something away, and to learn something. This second
meaning in German, to train until one has mastery and is able to make one’s
own, is what sets aneignung apart from the English “appropriation.” In
German-speaking countries, a craft is still learned through the old medieval
institution of apprenticeships, and an apprentice learns the craft through
appropriation – thus referring to the learning aspect of appropriation. The
apprentice learns through copying the matter; duplication and repetition
without any original thought or experimentation is integral to the first
process of appropriation of the master’s skills. Richard Sennett reminds us in
his book, The Craftsman:
Craftsmen take pride most in skills that mature. This is why simple
imitation is not a sustaining satisfaction; the skill has to evolve… .
Slow craft time also enables the work of reflection and
imagination – which the push for quick results cannot. Mature
means long; one takes lasting ownership of the skill.8
Appropriation is thus more than just imitation of the master, it is the slow
and long accumulation of skills that become “one’s own.” This is central to
the making of “tradition,” but it is not a static tradition, for as a set of skills
become “one’s own,” the very achievement of mastery requires the
apprentice to add something to what has been copied. Thus appropriation in
this sense also recognizes slow change that is integral to “taking” and
remaking.
In art history, what is passed down from teacher to student is
rarely accounted for as vital, for the discipline is so focused on stand-apart
“originality” that the only way to understand transmissions that shape us is
through the idea of “influence” that can be traced between masters and
ideas. Indian classical music, for instance, is passed down through the guru-
shishya tradition, based on lineage and a relationship between guru (teacher)
and shishya (student). For the student to become a master he must add
something to the technical mastery he receives in his training with the
teacher. That which he adds is not with the grand gesture of “originality,” but
rather it is the subtle soul force of creativity.
Another way to think about the slow, accumulated
transformations and creativity of aneignung is through the image of the
palimpsest. In 1967, around the same time as Barthes’s landmark essay,
Rodolfo Machado’s text “Old Buildings as Palimpsest” came out, in which he
argued:
www.smh.com.au/comment/our-cultures-are-not-your-costumes-20141114-11myp4.html (last
modified 14 November 2014).
5 Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space (Oxford: Blackwell, 1991).
6 Robert S. Nelson and Richard Shiff, eds., Critical Terms for Art History (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1996), p. 163.
7 Markus Berger, Heinrich Hermann, and Liliane Wong, eds., Interventions/Adaptive Reuse: Int/AR
(Providence: Rhode Island School of Design, 2009).
8 Richard Sennett, The Craftsman (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2008), p. 295.
9 Rodolfo Machado, “Old Buildings as Palimpsest: Toward a Theory of Remodeling”, Progressive
of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 32, no. 1 (2002): 1–15, available on the website of Project
Muse, https://muse.jhu.edu/ (accessed 23 May 2015).
13 Nelson and Shiff, Critical Terms, p. 118.
14 “Composing: Harry Mathews’ Words & Worlds”, library exhibit, University of Pennsylvania
online, 2004, www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/rbm/mathews/mathews.html (last modified 26
October 2010).
15 Jean-Luc Godard, Movie Maker Magazine, 22 January 2004, on website of Goodreads,
www.goodreads.com/quotes/search?utf8=&q=godard&commit=Search (accessed 12 April 2015).
16 Paul Valéry, “Recollection”, in The Collected Works of Paul Valery, vol. 1, trans. David Paul
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1972).
Chapter 41
Graeme Brooker
Discourses of appropriation
Along with my rudimentary positioning of reuse and appropriation as
primary elements in the production of interior architecture, I would argue
that the conception and formulation of the subject consists of processes
where ambiguity is a significant and vital condition. This is because
architectured interiors are primarily composed of matter that is being placed
into new contexts that they were never intended for. Another source of these
ambiguous – or unfixed – qualities is found in the discourses surrounding
the processes used to describe reuse and appropriation. In Michael
Guggenheim’s Formless Discourse: The Impossible Knowledge of Change of
Use, the author suggests that there is a theoretical shortcoming in the
literature surrounding the discipline of reuse and therefore, by association,
interior architecture.6 He suggests there are numerous reasons for this
deficiency, and in particular he relates this weakness to the absence of the
user in architectural thinking. Guggenheim proposes that up until the 1970s,
the occupants of buildings were often merely used for the purposes of scale,
particularly in representations of the built environment, and he suggests that
a central concern of any interior discipline is human occupation. Therefore,
this situation has ensured that the interior has not been suitably represented
in earlier twentieth-century spatial discourses – in particular Modernism –
where the nuances of occupation and use were often overlooked. He also
notes that the authors of the existing literature on change of use appear to be
confused about what they see; “They see only typological change in the
buildings and are unable to grasp the process related changes.”7
Utilizing Latour’s We Have Never Been Modern, Guggenheim
explicitly connects change of use to the user or occupant of space. Latour
identified three methods of understanding for working with existing
architecture: he described buildings as technologies, signs, and interactions.8
Guggenheim developed these three approaches further. He described them as
technological, semiotic, and sociological. Technologies describes the
understanding of the building through function, and how a particular use
affected the user. In other words technologically oriented thinking positions
the building through type or use. In contrast, a semiotic approach focuses on
the sign or symbol of the building, rather than its material aspects. The
semiotic properties of a building are described as signs that prompt the user
to assume a particular response. Guggenheim used the example of a church
spire as a symbol of the use of the building. Its appearance instructs the user
to congregate and worship beneath it. The sociological (or interactive)
approach reversed the technological and semiotic determination of use, and
instead informed the user to act on the building regardless of its
technological or semiotic implications.
Throughout the change of use processes, or the building’s reuse
and appropriation, Guggenheim suggested that the sociological or
interactive properties were dominant. The building was to be defined by its
new use. He explains that this is because:
He goes on to say,
This does not mean that technological features no longer play a
role, or that in the process of change of use architects and builders
are not materially altering the building. However, the material
properties become relatively less important to the sociological
ones.10
When the world has been fully codified and collated, when
ambivalences and ambiguities have been sponged away so that we
know exactly and objectively where everything is and what it is
called, a sense of loss arises. The claim to completeness causes us
to mourn the possibility of exploration and muse endlessly on the
hope of novelty and escape.15
The failure to “clarify its object” is instead a positive and dynamic quality
endorsing a continuous attempt to redefine interior architecture and its
references. This open-endedness ensures that the architecture of the interior
remains open to a multiplicity of voices and ideas. If reuse is uncodifiable,
then the processes of making architectured interiors are invaluable and
capable of expressing nontraditional ways of presenting interior space. As
Kinney states, “Reuse is noticeably nonconformist, exceptional, and
ideological, rather than systematic and neutral.”16
Appropriate dialectics
So, if ambiguity is fundamental to the subject, what discourses may be
useful to develop to assist understanding in the discipline of architectured
interiors? In The Emergence of the Interior, Charles Rice described the
doubled quality of the interior utilizing the “Two-fold Room,” a poem by
Charles Baudelaire:
Figure 41.1 Old/New: FRAC Nord-Pas de Calais, Dunkerque; Lacaton and Vassal. The existing Halle
building was “doubled” to create a new exhibition and event space.
Figure 41.2 In/Out: Red Bull Academy, Madrid; Langarita-Navarro. The threshold between interior
and exterior was obscured when the old warehouse was reoccupied with a series of rooms in which to
make music.
These processes of conversion ensure that the dialectic of space and place
becomes constructed through changes in use as well as the processes of
decay, obsoletion, and reoccupation, and then the same again.
Figure 41.3 Space/Place: Maidan, exhibit; Bureau A. The riot shields were reappropriated in order to
make a shelter, turning a space into a place.
Notes
1 Henry Hildebrant, “The Gaps Between Interior Design and Architecture”, Design Intelligence
John Gigli, Frazer Hay, Ed Hollis, Andy Milligan, Alex Milton, and Drew Plunkett, eds., Thinking
Inside the Box: A Reader in Interiors for the 21st Century (London: Middlesex University Press,
2007), p. xi;
Clive Edwards, Interior Design a Critical Introduction (Oxford: Berg, 2011), pp. 2–8;
Paul Rodgers, eds., Interiors Education Futures: Contemporary Insights (Oxford: Libri, 2012), p. 1.
2 Julia A.B. Hegewald and Subrata K. Mitra, Reuse: The Art and Politics of Integration and Anxiety
(New Delhi: Sage Publications, 2012), p. 3.
3 Richard Brilliant and Dale Kinney, eds., Reuse Value: Spolia and Appropriation in Art and
Puzzle
Rachel Carley
Notes
1 Paul Virilio, “Paul Virilio on George Perec”, AA Files 45/46 (2002): 15–18.
2 Matthew Escobar, “X: Identity, Reflexivity and Potential Space in Perec’s W Ou Le Souvenir
D’Enfance and Gide’s Le Faux Monnayeurs”, The Romantic Review 98, no. 4 (2007): 413–433;
Kuisma Korhonen, “Narrating the Trauma: George Perec’s W ou le Souvenir d’enfance”, in Terror
and the Arts: Artistic, Literary, and Political Interpretations, ed. Matti Hyvärinen and Lisa
Muszynski (New York: Macmillan, 2005), pp. 113–128.
3 Tania Ørum, “Georges Perec and the Avant-Garde in the Visual Arts”, Textual Practice 20, no. 2
(2006): 319–332.
4 David Bellos, “Writing Spaces: Perec in Perspective”, Cambridge Architectural Journal no. 9
(1997–8): 11–18; Peta Mitchell, “Constructing the Architext: George Perec’s Life a User’s Manual”,
Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 37/1 (March 2004): 1–16.
5 Enrique Walker, “Scaffoldings”, in From Rules to Constraints: Luis M. Mansilla + Emilio Tuñón,
User’s Manual, the bi-square dictates which objects and which quotations are to be found in each
of the hundred rooms, but has little or no bearing upon the narrative development of the novel”.
21 Bellos, Georges Perec, p. 515.
22 Ibid.
23 Bellos notes that Perec, “used twenty-one bi-squares, each comprising two lists of ten ‘elements’,
giving forty-two lists in all, with 420 ‘things’ to distribute, forty-two to a box (and never the
same forty-two twice)”; Bellos in Mitchell, “Constructing the Architext”, p. 10. In addition, each
chapter, its title prefaced by its location on the gird square, included these relevant coordinates in
the text of most chapters. Bellos, Georges Perec, p. 606.
24 See Lists 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 20, 21, 22, 23, 27, 28, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38.
25 David Bellos notes that Perec “gives the reader virtually no access to the inner lives of its named
characters”; Bellos, “Writing Spaces: Perec in Perspective”, p. 16.
26 This is emblematized by one of Life’s central characters, Percival Bartlebooth, who was based
upon two literary protagonists: Bartleby, from Herman Melville’s short story, Bartleby, the
Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street (1853) (New York: Melville House, 2004) and the central
character from Valéry Larbaud’s novel, The Diary of A.O. Barnabooth: A Novel (c. 1913) (London:
Quartet Books, 1991).
27 Bellos, Georges Perec, pp. 605–606.
28 Noah Wardrip-Fruin, “Writing Networks: New Media, Potential Literature”, Leonardo 29, no. 5
(1996): 361. Fruin sees the structures and frameworks found in Life as having possibilities for the
development of new media tools which enable authors to give connections and create structures
using pad, a zooming interface that “brings continuous space and relative size to the presentation
(and navigation) possibilities of new media.” Fruin, “Writing Networks”, p. 363.
29 Motte, Jr., The Poetics of Experiment, p. 16.
Chapter 43
Metropolitan hybrids
Programming for a thriving urbanity
Rafael Luna
With an expanding urban field blurring the lines between city boundaries,
minimizing available land for construction, and increasing real estate values,
there is a larger need for appropriating existing building stock to address the
demand for accommodating diverse programs in a growing city. This effect
has conditioned the development of new typologies derived from
programmatic relations inscribed into existing structures. The existence of
these new typologies comes from a need for maintaining a vibrant,
uninterrupted urban landscape, intensifying urban cores, and adapting
infrastructure into the urban fabric. These new typologies, which can be
identified as metropolitan hybrids, acknowledge the importance of
programming and interior architecture as strategies for developing
contemporary architecture – not only through adaptive reuse, but also via
new construction.
In this discussion, it is important to differentiate the categories of
programming. These terms are sometimes used interchangeably, yet they
describe a very different interior logic with very different intents. In the
context of architecture in the twenty-first century, programming can be
classified into four categories: single-use buildings, mixed-use buildings,
metropolitan, and hybrids, and we can postulate that a relationship exists
between the different levels of urbanity and the different building typologies
they create. The urban levels can be divided into village, town, city, and
metropolis. The village, with a population of 100–1,000 people, is
characterized by single-use buildings. The town, with a population of 1,000–
100,000 people, introduces mixed-use buildings (generally one program on
top of another) such as apartments on top of retail stores as low-rise or mid-
rise buildings. The city, with a population of 100,000–1,000,000 people,
develops the high-rise. The high-rise allows multiple programs to exist
vertically. This is the prototypical mixed-use development, which attempts to
maximize real estate. It is also the quintessential typology for the conception
of metropolitan architecture. The next level of urbanity, the metropolis, with
a population of 1,000,000 and over, starts generating the metropolitan hybrid.
Single-use and mixed-use buildings belong to a more practical
group of programming, while metropolitan architecture and hybrids belong
to a conceptual group. Single-use and mixed-use buildings are defined
through real estate regulations, zoning, and building codes for occupancy. A
single-use building would only allow one occupancy, as opposed to a mixed-
use building which allow a combination of occupancies within permissible
city and code regulations. Architecturally, this is a very compartmentalized
relationship between programs, which is why they become terms mostly
used in real estate with the intent of maximizing value. A direct
appropriation of single-use and mixed-use buildings would require adapting
an existing structure with an existing occupancy. Change in occupancy often
becomes a factor of real estate commercialism, which has been a condition
criticized by Jane Jacobs as described by John McMorrough in his essay
“Good Intentions”:
Jacobs had a clear intention of creating a city that was diverse, active, and
metropolitan. Her argument for mixed-use programming, short blocks,
mixed-use buildings, and sufficient density are valid toward that ideal while
reusing the existing building stock. McMorrough, however, points out that
these are just “good intentions” that end up being exploited as commercial
developments presented as mixed-use buildings. Such appropriations are
evident in examples such as Boston’s Quincy Market or London’s Covent
Garden. Although these are highly successful commercial developments,
they promote a monoculture. Diversity cannot rely on simple
commercialism. There exists a need to understand diversity and activation as
architectural intervention maximizes the potential of a structure in order to
strengthen the image of the city, rather than just a commercial exploitation.
This can be explored through the conceptual programming group of
metropolitan architecture and hybrids.
Although hybrids have existed for centuries (as seen in medieval
walled cities using the wall as a protective infrastructure and housing for
soldiers), metropolitan architecture is more closely related to the architecture
that erupted from the growth of cities as a result of the American industrial
revolution of the mid-nineteenth century and into the beginning of the
twentieth century. The development of the high-rise during this era allowed
for greater density within a confined city area, and the development of
electricity allowed for the city to be active day and night, inside and outside.
Conceptually, these are two technological advances that changed the way
the interior space could be conceived. In 1969, Elia Zenghelis explored this
potential by introducing the Urban Design class at the AA with the intent to
explore “the advantage of millions living together in a restricted area,”
finding the “ideological foundations of metropolitan living.”2 Within a
couple of years, the class shifted focus to understand the “values inherent in
the artificiality of the man-made world, within which urban form (or
architecture) manifests itself.”3 This is the essence of metropolitan
architecture, which could be defined in two ways: first, it mimics the
cityscape (buildings that looks like a city); second, it embodies programmatic
elements of the city (a building that contains a city) (Figure 43.1).
In the first definition, the form and massing of a building is
designed to resemble the massing of the city regardless of its interior
programming. An example would be the New York, New York Hotel in Las
Vegas, where a group of several iconic towers from Manhattan are merged
into a single building that resembles the New York skyline. OMA also used
this strategy in The Hague City Hall competition, where the overall mass
was divided into three bars that formed the silhouette of a grouping of
skyscrapers. Another example would be the Mirador housing complex by
MVRDV, where the building is conceptually a whole city block tilted
vertically.
The second definition deals with the programmatic relationship of
trying to create a city within the building. The architectural shell acts as a
setting, and programming takes a priority role. To use Las Vegas as an
example again, this effect happens in most hotels where the intent is to keep
visitors inside a single building doing a variety of city activities like
shopping, eating out at new restaurants, attending a theater performance,
visiting museums, gambling at casinos, walking through parks, and seeing
new art in galleries, all while remaining inside the building.
The definitions presented for metropolitan architecture describe
buildings that have a certain autonomy from their context in that they
create their own microcosms. If that is the case, these buildings can operate
in a suburban condition, where they would become an attractor (like hotels
on the Las Vegas Strip) as much as they would in a world capital where they
would blend in, like a skyscraper in Manhattan. The skyscraper, being the
quintessential metropolitan architectural typology, presents a great
opportunity for exploring these microcosms in the field of adaptive reuse.
The scale of these buildings makes them more prone to be adapted than
dismantled, yet the appropriation of this typology becomes a challenge to
break away from a commercial strategy. In Venezuela, an example of such
an appropriation occurred in La Torre de David. The change in political
power stalled major construction, leaving incomplete buildings and a large
demand for housing. La Torre de David in Caracas was one of these
incomplete buildings: a 45-story skyscraper that was appropriated by local
people facing hardship. The unfinished structure was adapted in an ad hoc
fashion, filled with markets, gyms, services, shops, and dwellings. The
dwellings were constructed from leftover and found construction materials;
each family personalized their own unit, creating a real sense of diversity in
this vertical city.
Figure 43.1 Metropolitan Architecture Definitions; digital drawing by Rafael Luna, June 2015
Image credit: PRAUD
Left, Figure 43.2 Hybrid Transplanting; digital drawing by Rafael Luna, June 2015
Image credit: PRAUD
Right, Figure 43.3 :Hybrid Appropriation; digital drawing by Rafael Luna, June 2015
Image credit: PRAUD
The civic core would define the city center, which was once the heart of the
old city, and would act as an attractor. “This recentralization process
demands the creation of new cores that will replace the old ones that the
unplanned growth has destroyed.”7
Recentralization needs to be better understood as reconcentration
of activity, and rather than focusing on a single civic core, the metropolis
must be understood as a collection of urban cores. These centers are
resultants of singular buildings that infringe upon a hierarchy in the urban
fabric and therefore attract development around them. In shrinking and
postindustrial cities where either the population or an industry is declining,
a variety of building stock is left abandoned, causing a loss of activity and
gaps of metropolitanism. The challenge is appropriating these buildings with
programming that injects new industries, making them act as catalysts. In
2012, the 22-story abandoned Middlesex County Jail was put up for sale in
the city of Cambridge, Massachusetts. The state expected to have developers
transform this brutalist shell into an attractor that brings more activity to
that neighborhood. Developers proposed turning the building into a mixed-
use building with luxury residential condominiums, offices, and retail to
appease the neighbors. If the goal is to create a catalyst, then programming
cannot be derived out of real estate speculation. Instead, it should be
conceptualized as an urban core that aligns with the city’s objectives for
keeping young entrepreneurs interested. If we think about the needs of
recent graduates and young entrepreneurs, there is a large demand for more
affordable housing, affordable office space, access to venture capitalists and
financing, access to human capital, and exposure to the public for
networking. The building could have been conceptualized as a micro-
industry building filled with smaller offices and micro-housing units that
would allow startups to have working space while sharing bigger facilities,
create a mixing between industries and a merger between work space and
living space. The building should include spaces for financial institutions,
exhibition spaces, and lecture spaces, as well as shared amenities. In Korea,
these types of building and programming exist as micro-factory buildings,
where a single building houses hundreds of factories that produce
merchandise in small rooms, with each room being its own company. These
buildings could be adapted by integrating additional social and commercial
programming to invite outside people into these scenarios and promote the
industry. A catalyst building needs to be an extrovert and cannot rely on
programming that promotes monoculture. Commercial appropriations
hinder the creative programming process for diversity, especially if the
purpose is to have multiple cores.
Polycentrality would also require conceptualization of
metropolitan hybrids as urban systems. This would change the notion of a
“city within a city” to a “system within a city.” In 2014, the City of Boston
announced its bid for the 2024 Olympics. To do this, it needed to meet
certain requirements. It would need visitor centers, of which there is
currently only one, and it would need to build an additional 15,000 hotel
rooms in order to bring the count to the necessary 45,000 required by the
Olympic committee. This would mean that Boston would need to build
about seventy-five new hotels of two hundred rooms each. Instead of
building seventy-five new chain hotels, it could address the need for visitor
and information centers and the need for hotel rooms by hybridizing both.
This would create a network of recognizable information centers, visitor
centers, and accommodations that not only benefit tourists but residents as
well, rebranding the city by providing a perceptible typology of organization
and city navigation. Through adaptive reuse, a city could brand itself by
creating these systems, as seen in Venice for the Venice Biennale, where the
whole city functions as a museum by distributing exhibitions in various
palaces throughout the city. This encourages visitors to navigate the whole
city, as opposed to just visiting key sites, and transforms potentially
mundane buildings into part of a bigger agenda.
The second intent of the metropolitan hybrid is to maintain a
continuous urbanity. The majority of disruptions in the urban fabric occur
from infrastructure. As new technologies emerge and new infrastructure is
developed, old infrastructural systems become obsolete, leaving empty voids
in the urban fabric. Transportation infrastructure creates the most apparent
disruptions; train lines bisect the city and elevated highways leave
underutilized spaces. Yet, transportation infrastructure presents the biggest
potential for adaptability and reuse because of their existing structures. In
Tokyo, highway infrastructures merge with retail or residential, making the
best use of a structure that already exists. The High Line in New York City
transformed an old elevated train track into a linear park to provide a new
pedestrian network. In the Netherlands, NL Architects adapted a highway
overpass into a series of urban programs that activated the space with a
market, flower shop, skatepark, kayak canal, and parking.
The continuity of growth and prosperity in our cities depends on
understanding different programmatic intents. It should not confuse the
commercialization of real estate and the true potential of injecting hybrid
programming that intensifies the core, generates systems for the city, and
optimizes infrastructure. The metropolitan hybrid allows the evolution of the
city as real estate speculation, changes in industry, changes in political
power, and urban renewal have created abandoned or unfinished structures
across cities worldwide.
Notes
1 John McMorrough, Good Intentions, in The Harvard Design School Guide to Shopping, ed. Judy
Chuihua Chung, Jeffrey Inaba, Rem Koolhaas, and Sze Tung (Koln: Taschen, 2001), pp. 370–379.
2 Elia Zenghelis, “Syllabus for Urban Design Course at the Architectural Association”,
Unpublished manuscript, London, 1969, selected pages.
3 Elia Zenghelis, Urban Design Course: Introduction (London: Architectural Association, 1971),
selected pages.
4 Bernard Tschumi, “Abstract Mediation and Strategy”, in Architecture and Disjunction, 6th edition
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001), p. 205.
5 Deyan Sudjic, “The Image of the City”, “The Hundred Mile City”, in The 100 Mile City (New York,
London and San Diego: Harcourt Brace and Company, 1992), pp. 295–309.
6 Jose Luis Sert, “The Human Scale in City Planning”, in New Architecture and City Planning: A
Symposium, ed. Paul Zucker (New York: Philosophical Library, 1944) [reprint: New York: Books
for Libraries Press, 1971], pp. 392–412.
7 Ibid.
Chapter 44
Design activism
Commingling ethics of care and aesthetics
Lorella Di Cintio
manufacturers.
1
Here, we can begin to understand that the sheer size of humanity makes it
inseparable from morality and dignity, concluding that justice needs to be
rendered. As a result of this above-noted discourse, I believe that
contemporary designers are currently facing new questions about design.
Has the time come to end the practice of market-driven aesthetics? Is design
dead?
Discussions about excess and responsibility have revealed
discriminatory practices found within the design profession and have
simultaneously fueled dissenters attempting to make change. In A Theory of
Justice, John Rawls offers designers some insight for change as he stressed
the need to consider sociocultural behavior as involving a mixture of
equality and justice.6 This chapter draws from Rawls’s most well-known and
often-quoted term, “justice as fairness,” along with his concepts of a “veil of
ignorance” and the “original position.” Thus, this discussion is based on the
premise that if justice is to be fairly distributed, and the legality of the social
construct of equality is to be solidified, then a new design discipline must
emerge.
This chapter asks the reader to consider some important design
questions: If design is creatively purposeful, then what purpose does design
serve? Can the rubric of consumption be a two-way street between
prosperity and sustainability of humans, the environment, and the
economy? What would happen if designers took on ethical pursuits when
designing toothpaste, interior spaces, or toys before conceiving aesthetic
considerations? Is it possible to design in opposition to the demands of the
market and still meet the basic needs of enjoyment, shelter, and health?
The following will comingle philosophical ideas about the ethics of
care and aesthetics within the design practice. Conceptually using a legal
terminology – piercing the veil – this discussion seeks to provide evidence
that a breach of trust has occurred within the design community.7 How has
this happened, and who is responsible? Have corporate market demands
denied designers the opportunity to pursue or practice ethical behaviors?
Are designers being used as agents for global capitalism? If a breach of trust
has occurred, is it time to seek justice for the users, makers, and waste
collectors of designed objects or spaces? Should we go so far as to call for
the end of design and designers?
At times, in this chapter, the two principal themes – the ethics of
care and of aesthetics – will be explored separately to provide historical
context; at others, they will be discussed together. Similar to Jacques
Ranciere’s investigation of what ties aesthetics to politics, here design is
explored as it relates to justice.8 Finally, this discussion will explore the
possible need to redirect design practice toward design activism. It
challenges designers to practice the ethics of care, or ethical aesthetics, and
to politicize their production as a daily pursuit. These processes would
encourage a paradigm shift in which education and practice must change,
expert knowledge methods must be diffused, and market-driven practices
must be scaled back drastically.
These dreamers, who are often at the margin of society, will find
their way to the place they belong, among the politicians, only if
the very spirit of politics changes towards a deeper responsibility
for the world.15
Havel wrote that we have become “blind … to perpetual economic growth
and never ending consumption, no matter how detrimental to the
environment, the dictates of materialism, consumerism, and advertising, the
voiding of human uniqueness and its replacement by uniformity.”16 He and
many others have provided important historical insights about reexamining
the dominating paradigm, which equates technological advancement with
economic prowess. Science and technology were initially considered ideal
models for the pursuit of human betterment: innovation, capitalist practices,
and the birth of the market-driven design paradigm at one time seemed
immutable.
When discourse about the environment began to be linked with
political and social change in the early 1960s, Thomas Kuhn and others
began to question the mechanics of the scientific paradigm.17 By the early
1970s, the environmental movement had gained momentum. Comparisons
can be drawn between Arne Naess’s philosophical work, “The Shallow and
the Deep, Long-Range Ecology Movement: A Summary,” and the work of
Victor Papanek, an educator, UNESCO designer, and author of Design for
the Real World: Human Ecology and Social Change.
18 Both authors
Notes
1 Thomas Debrowski, “Mattel’s Executive Vice President for Worldwide Operations”, 2007,
www.reuters.com/article/2007/09/21/us-china-safety-mattel-idUSPEK10394020070921.
2 From Di Cintio’s lecture notes. Mattel recalled 10,000 toys due to excessive levels of lead paint.
Recalls have also been issued for drywall (causing respiratory problems) and toothpaste
(containing antifreeze), among other products.
3 Jean Baudrillard, The System of Objects (London: Verso, 1996).
4 Franco Berardi, After the Future, eds. Gary Genosko and Nicholas Thoburn (Edinburgh, Oakland
and Baltimore, MD: AK Press, 2011).
5 Jean-Luc Nancy, Being Singular Plural (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2000), p. 178.
6 John Rawls, A Theory of Justice (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press,
2005, reprint of original edition).
7 “Piercing the veil,” most often used as in “piercing the corporate veil.” Taking my cue from legal
terminology, I take the concept of “piercing the veil” to provide evidence that a “breach of trust”
has occurred.
8 Jacques Ranciere, The Politics of Aesthetics, trans. Gabriel Rockhill (New York: Continuum, 2004).
9 Immanuel Kant, Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals, trans. and ed. Mary Gregor
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 38.
10 Ibid., p. 12.
11 Michel Foucault, “On the Genealogy of Ethics: An Overview of Work in Progress”, in Michel
Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics, ed. Hubert L. Dreyfus and Paul Rabinow
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983), p. 231.
12 Michel Foucault, The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmentality, eds. Graham Burchell, Colin
Gordon, and Peter Miller (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991).
13 Irene Diamond and Lee Quinby, eds., Feminism & Foucault: Reflections on Resistance (Boston,
MA: Northeastern University Press, 1988); Lois McNay, Foucault & Feminism: Power, Gender,
and the Self (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1992); Caroline Ramazanogğlu, ed., Up Against Foucault:
Explorations of Some Tensions Between Foucault and Feminism (London: Routledge, 1993).
14 Author’s insertion/design; Keith Ansell-Pearson, An Introduction to Nietzsche as Political
29 Attributed to B. Stevens in V. Packard, Waste Makers (1960) vi. 58: “Our whole economy is based
on planned obsolescence… . We make good products, we induce people to buy them, and then
next year we deliberately introduce something that will make these products old fashioned.”
www.oed.com/view/Entry/145131?redirectedFrom=planned+obsolescence#eid29997289.
30 Le Corbusier, Towards a New Architecture, trans. Frederick Etchells (Mineola, NY: Dover
Publications, 1985), Originally published in 1923.
31 Anthony C. Antoniades, Poetics of Architecture: Theory of Design (New York: John Wiley, 1992),
p. 34.
32 Ibid., p. 33.
33 Ibid., p. 34.
Chapter 45
Caryn Brause
In the coming years, interior architecture has the potential to occupy the
very center of architectural design practice. As a proportion of all dollars
spent within the construction market, the sector of “alterations” has risen to
new heights during the last decade. This trend is projected to continue as
demographics and other factors, such as commercial vacancy and an
increasingly mobile workforce, lead the industry to devote less market share
to new construction and more to renovating existing facilities.1 In a future
likely characterized by increasing resource scarcity, finding the most
appropriate solution to a given design problem may mean favoring an
inventive reimagining of current infrastructures rather than a focus on new
construction.2 Claiming this central role in an altered practice will require
interior architecture practitioners to develop new attitudes and analytical
skillsets for future success.
To address the realities of this future practice, the field of interior
architecture must attend to more than the visible, physical surfaces that we
can see and touch; rather, it must advocate spatial intelligence as one of its
core professional services. This spatial intelligence enables practitioners to
first assess existing building stock for both immediate programmatic
potential and “next use,” and then apply tactics that foreground flexibility
and adaptability. This chapter examines the value of spatial intelligence in
light of emerging conditions and suggests material strategies that can be
applied to future practice (such as reconfigurability, modularity, and
planning to accommodate future renovations) and designing to enable
ongoing personal customization.
Reconfigurability
As a material strategy, reconfigurability considers space mutable rather than
fixed and anticipates its use over time in a multifaceted and
programmatically layered manner. Reconfigurable designs enable us to use
less space while meeting multiple programmatic needs. Frequently applied
in dense, high-priced urban areas, this strategy has many well-publicized
examples. MKCA’s Unfolding Apartment, for example, compresses the
functional elements of living, working, sleeping, dressing, entertaining,
cooking, dining, and bathing into a 400-square-foot space in Manhattan
through the use of an oversize cabinetry piece packed with the apartment’s
functional components.9 Gary Chang’s Hong Kong apartment squeezes
twenty-four “rooms” into a mere 344 square feet by combining cabinetry
mounted on low-tech rails with smartphone-controlled curtains.10 Most
often custom fabricated, the sliding panels and pivoting cabinetry of these
handcrafted interiors enable domestic space to expand and contract at the
occupant’s will.
Modularity
In contrast to these bespoke residential projects, reconfigurability in
commercial interiors has led to an increasingly generic office landscape
composed largely of modular furniture systems. The original intent of these
systems was something very different. The Action Office, instigated by
Robert Propst, President of Herman Miller Research Corporation, and
designed by George Nelson in 1964, aimed to keep pace with the exponential
rate of change characteristic of modern work life, particularly the increased
volume of information employees were required to process.11 Propst’s
second iteration, Action Office II, employed a modular system but utilized
freestanding vertical partitions connected at 120-degree angles, capable of
forming complex trapezoidal spaces. From these panels, work surfaces and
filing systems could be hung in diverse configurations. Propst’s
multidisciplinary research led him to conclude that changing work modes
required a new office landscape to support employees in their productivity.
That new landscape replaced the rows of traditional desks in a large, open
bullpen with discrete yet flexible spaces that provided workers with greater
degrees of privacy and personal choice.
“One of the regrettable conditions in present offices,” Propst wrote
in his 1968 manifesto, The Office: A Facility Based on Change, “is the
tendency to provide a formula kind of sameness for everyone. It takes a
serious organizational rebel to overcome this institutionalized expression.”12
Propst’s chosen method for overcoming “sameness” was ongoing individual
customization. His Action Office II used preplanning tools and computer
simulation to assess workers’ needs and initially configure workspaces.
Components and configurations could be changed gracefully, with minimal
disruption, as tasks changed. Employees could, for example, raise or lower
their desks throughout the day, depending on whether they chose to sit or
stand.
Figure 45.3 Action Office Illustration
Image credit: Courtesy of the Herman Miller Archives
Notes
1 Kermit Baker, “How to Talk About the Economy” (Intern Development Program Coordinators’
Conference, Miami, FL, 2 August 2014).
2 Brad Ewing, David Moore, Steven Goldfinger, Anna Oursler, Anders Reed, and Mathis
Wackernagel, “Ecological Footprint Atlas”, Global Footprint Network, 2010,
http://www.footprintnetwork.org/content/images/uploads/Ecological_Footprint_Atlas_2010.pdf.
3 Traci Lesneski, email message to author, 7 May 2015.
4 Traci Lesneski, “Step 3: Use Less for More Impact”, 2011, http://msrdesign.com/step-3-use-less-
for-more-impact/.
5 Traci Lesneski, “10 Steps to a Better Library Interior: Tips That Don’t Have to Cost a Lot”, Library
Journal, no. Library by Design Supplement, 15 September 2011.
6 For more detail on this project, see Jeremy Till and Tatjana Schneider, “Invisible Agency”,
Architectural Design 218 (August 2012): 38–43.
7 Architecture 00:/ (‘zero zero’), 2012, https://vimeo.com/34978105.
8 “Ground/Work: A Design Competition for Van Alen Institute’s New Street-Level Space”, 2013,
http://groundwork.vanalen.org.
9 “Unfolding Apartment”, MKCA//Michael K Chen Architecture, 2007,
http://mkca.com/projects/unfolding-apartment/.
10 Virginia Gardiner, “24 Rooms Tucked Into One”. New York Times, January 15, 2009.
11 Robert Propst, The Office: A Facility Based on Change (Ann Arbor, MI: Herman Miller Research
Corporation, 1968), p. 12.
12 Ibid., p. 37.
13 Changes in the 1960s tax code allowed businesses to depreciate assets such as cubicles in seven
years, as compared to permanent structures, which require 39.5 years. See Julie Schlosser,
“Cubicles: The Great Mistake”, Fortune Magazine, 9 March 2006.
14 See, for example, Herman Miller’s research including case studies and white papers:
www.hermanmiller.com/research/topics/all-topics.html.
15 See the Living Office, Herman Miller website, 2013, www.hermanmiller.com/solutions/living-
office.html.
16 Propst, The Office, pp. 38–41.
17 From 2010 to 2013, the square footage allotted per person dropped from 225 to 150. Half of large
global companies surveyed indicated that this number will drop as low as 100 square feet per
person by 2018. Corenet Global, “Office Space per Worker Shrinks to 150 Sf”, Building Design +
Geographies
Chapter 46
Tasoulla Hadjiyanni
At a time when ideas, people, and products move around the globe at
unprecedented speeds and scales, interior architecture theory is called on to
explore questions and practices that extend beyond the comfortable and the
familiar. Instead, they allow for the exposure of “differences” and “biases,”
translating into mediums for dialogues around the role of design in
processes that can create marginalization and inequality. Exploring how
interiors inform life in a world of movement adds new layers to our
understanding of what it means to be human and complicates the questions
scholars and designers need to be asking. In what ways does movement
change the human experience of space and place? How are interiors
impacting meaning-making processes? What are the implications of this
understanding for theory development and how it can translate to
education, policy, and practice? Answering these questions takes an
interdisciplinary approach, one where design-related discourses are fused
with knowledge from fields such as anthropology, sociology, philosophy,
psychology, geography, and gender/ethnic studies.
Globalization discourses are tied to interiors in ways that are
much more complex and difficult to untangle than those dictated by the
present scholarship on design and culture. Migration, displacement,
transnationalism, and multiculturalism create an urgent call to action that is
partly linked to current inequalities experienced by those whose lives are
enmeshed in political, economic, and social systems that often conflict with
and negate one another. My research with refugees, new immigrants, and
minority populations brought to the forefront the constraints faced by many
in creating a supportive home environment, one where individuals and
families can practice cherished traditions, from cooking favorite foods to
hosting friends and relatives and passing down to the next generation long-
standing religious rituals (Figure 46.1).1 Coming from lower socioeconomic
strata and lacking English proficiency, many new immigrants to the United
States are often limited to menial and low-paying jobs. Over one-third of all
Mexicans, for example, have incomes that fall below the poverty level,
compared to 13% of the total United States’ population, which can limit their
choices of where and how to live.2
Income inequality is accompanied by health disparities. The
example of Minnesota, one of the healthiest states in the nation, illustrates
this point. The state faces some of the greatest disparities in health status
and incidence of chronic disease between populations of color and whites.3
Health disparities have been linked to a host of factors, including housing
conditions and access to healthy foods. As projections show that in 2040
almost half of Minnesota’s population is expected to be people of color (and
close to half of the growth in the state’s population is expected to come from
international immigrants), the need to delve deeper into exploring the
intersections of design and culture has never been more crucial.4
In this global era, the question that confronts us is not whether
interiors matter but how they matter. Interiors’ fluid character manifests
itself as a social, economic, cultural, or political construct that changes and
evolves in response to fluctuating borders, a multiplicity of identities, and
varying layers of sense of belonging. Interiors can be positioned as what
Stuart Hall calls “a form of representation which is able to constitute us as
new kinds of subjects, and thereby enable us to discover places from which
to speak.”5 From within this theorization, Mexican traditional patterns,
colors, and motifs that adorn interior walls become an opportunity for
dialogues around the process by which a color palette came to be associated
with Mexicans – and the implications of that association (Figure 46.2).
Designs that allow room for questioning how a group is defined move away
from the paradigm of “culture” as static and isolated, provide a forum for the
sociopolitical context in which “culture” is constructed to emerge, and allow
issues such as colonization, globalization, immigration, and power
differentials to come to the surface.6 I have called this line of work
Culturally Sensitive Design (CSD), design that is characterized by flexibility
and adaptability and that recognizes the multiplicity of ways by which
people construct meaning in life.
Figure 46.1 Poor ventilation limited a Hmong family’s ability to cook traditional foods that generate
smells
Notes
1 My cross-cultural study of differences in housing needs includes the experiences of Hmong,
Somali, Mexicans, Native Americans, and African Americans. See examples of papers: Tasoulla
Hadjiyanni, “Bounded Choices – Somali Women Constructing Difference in Minnesota Housing”,
Journal of Interior Design 32, no. 2 (2007): 17–27; Tasoulla Hadjiyanni, “Transbodied Spaces: The
Home Experiences of Undocumented Mexicans in Minnesota”, Space and Culture 18, no. 1 (2015):
81–97.
2 To begin to understand the adjustment issues faced by many new immigrants, see Nicholas De
Genova, Working the Boundaries: Race, Space, and “Illegality” in Mexican Chicago (Durham, NC:
Duke University Press, 2005); Alma Garcia, The Mexican Americans (Westport, CT: Greenwood
Press, 2002).
3 Good starting points for those interested in health disparities are the following: Craig
Helmstetter, Susan Brower and Andi Egbert, “The Unequal Distribution of Health in the Twin
Cities”, Amherst H. Wilder Foundation, Saint Paul, MN, October 2010, www.wilder.org/Wilder-
Research/Publications/Studies/Health%20Inequities%20in%20the%20Twin%20Cities/The%20Unequ
al%20Distribution%20of%20Health%20in%20the%20Twin%20Cities%202010,%20Full%20Report.pdf
(accessed 8 April 2012); “Priority Health Areas of the Eliminating Health Disparities Initiative”,
Minnesota Department of Health, http://www.health.state.mn.us/divs/che/ehdi/priority.html
(accessed 13 September 2017).
4 “What Lies Ahead: Population, Household and Employment Forecasts to 2040”, Metropolitan
Council, Saint Paul, MN, April 2012,
www.minnpost.com/sites/default/files/attachments/MetroStats_Forecasts.pdf (accessed 8 April
2012).
5 Stuart Hall, “Cultural Identity and Diaspora”, in Identity: Community, Culture, Difference, ed.
Jonathan Rutherford (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1990), p. 237. Hall’s theoretical framework
on how the cinema can position Black Caribbean identity can be employed to guide architectural
and design responses to immigration and displacement.
6 An example of how to move in this direction can be found in Tasoulla Hadjiyanni and Kristin
Helle, “Kitchens as Cultural Mediums – the Food Experiences of Mexican Immigrants in
Minnesota”, Housing and Society Special Issue on Kitchens and Baths 35, no. 2 (2008): 97–116.
7 Jean Pierre Warnier, “A Praxeological Approach to Subjectivation in a Material World”, Journal
(Indianapolis, IN: Indiana University Press, 1994); Andrew Shryock and Nabeel Abraham, “On
Margins and Mainstreams”, in Arab Detroit – From Margin to Mainstream, ed. Nabeel Abraham
and Andrew Shryock (Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press, 2000), pp. 15–35.
10 A seminal piece that broadens how culture is understood and approached is Renato Rosaldo’s,
Culture & Truth – the Remaking of Social Analysis (Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 1989).
11 Akhil Gupta and James Ferguson, “Beyond ‘Culture’: Space, Identity, and the Politics of
Difference” Cultural Anthropology 7, no. 1 (1992): 14.
12 Language is one indicator of culture, ethnicity, and difference and in the U.S., 20.1% of
311,591,917 people speak a language other than English in the home. http://quickfacts.census.gov.
13 bell hooks and Amalia Mesa-Bains, Homegrown: Engaged Cultural Criticisms (Cambridge, MA:
South End Press, 2006); see, for example: Hadjiyanni, “Transbodied Spaces”, pp. 81–97; Setha Low
and Denise Lawrence-Zúñiga, The Anthropology of Space and Place: Locating Culture (Malden,
MA: Blackwell Publishers, 2003).
14 An example of the challenges faced by veiled Somali women can be found in Tasoulla
Hadjiyanni, “Bounded Choices”, pp. 17–27; for more on undocumented immigrants see
Hadjiyanni, “Transbodied Spaces”, pp. 81–97.
15 Martha Nussbaum, Creating Capabilities: The Human Development Approach (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 2011), p. 18.
16 Innovative pedagogies can be used to expose students to the complexity of cultural discourses.
As an example, see Tasoulla Hadjiyanni, “Beginning With Concept – Deconstructing the
Complexity of ‘Culture’ Through Art in Design Education”, International Journal of Education
Jodi Larson
In 1959, leaders of the Soviet Union and the United States, two world
superpowers locked in a Cold War, held an informal debate. The debate is
taught in history courses, written about by scholars, and was about the
global policies and techno-politics of … the kitchen. Dubbed the “kitchen
debate,” this friendly pop-culture battle on the world stage was the
culmination of decades of machinations that used the discipline of interior
architecture as a means to debate not just modern living, but life as we know
it. Interior architecture, often labeled a new discipline, was in fact the tool of
choice in fighting for philosophical dominance in the Cold War. While
design as a whole has always been key to social and political maneuvers, the
post-WWII years focused specifically on the design of home interiorities and
the layout of space and infrastructure in the domestic arena. It was interior
architecture that was chosen as the way to the hearts and minds of Cold War
participants. The “kitchen debate” did not became an iconic showdown of
world power on its own. Reshaping the home and its interiors had been a
constant theme throughout the twentieth century, with American Taylorism
meeting German Wohnkultur (dwelling culture), and produced such results
as the Frankfurt Kitchen (1926).1 After World War II, however, design
collaboration became design competition.
By 1948, while Germany still struggled with consumption at the
most basic levels of food and shelter, the U.S. State Department responded to
Soviet propaganda in Germany against the “American way of life” with
some counter propaganda of its own, emphasizing living standards and
suggesting that Europe “try it our way.” The Office of the Military
Government in U.S. occupied Germany (OMGUS) busied itself with the
planning of a design exposition of American housing trends. Opening in
1949 in Berlin, So Wohnt Amerika (How America Lives) presented eight
scale models and 150 display panels featuring designs and photographs from
architecture schools at Harvard, Columbia, and MIT (featuring, of course,
designers and architects who had been heavily influenced by European
design and institutions such as the Bauhaus).2 As a series of Cold War crises
erupted in the late 1940s around the Marshall Plan and the European
Recovery Program, how America lived became a weapon in the war of
domestic space.
Berlin was again the ground zero of these consumption wars in
1950 as the America at Home exhibit debuted at West Berlin’s annual
German Industrial Exhibition (and just as a national election was happening
in East Berlin). Among other exhibits, a prefabricated suburban home
shipped from Minneapolis was constructed by carpenters working around
the clock. The resulting home, complete with carport, embodied the
American promise that citizens benefitted more by supporting innovations
than by pushing against them. John McCloy, the U.S. High Commissioner
for Germany, responded to the exhibit by calling it a living monument. An
internal government memo praised it as a “patriotic reaffirmation of our
way of life” and a symbol of a “struggle as vital to the peace and prosperity
of the world as any military campaign in history.”3
A similar exhibition a few years later, at the 1952 German
Industrial Exhibition, again pitted two political systems against one another
by using interiorities. U.S. State Department documents clearly delineate
“consumer goods designed to raise the standard of living” as the primary
directive of the unified display in order to have the maximum effect on the
average East German visitors. The title chosen for that year was We’re
Building a Better Life. This optimistic statement echoed the East German
The prefab home with its middle passage was dubbed “Splitnik” in
reference to the Soviet satellite Sputnik that had pushed the Soviet Union to
the forefront of the space race. The ranch-style home was replete with the
American infrastructure that marked the middle class: a dishwasher, a
combination freezer and refrigerator, a garbage disposal, and a countertop
cooking range. Very little is ever mentioned of the other rooms of “Splitnik”;
it is the kitchen that is dissected. It is into this sunny, bright yellow kitchen
that Vice President Nixon pulled Premier Khrushchev close and said, “I want
to show you this kitchen.” The exchange that followed was the climax of
interior architecture’s role in the Cold War, and was often dubbed a turning
point in the Cold War.
The exchange, despite the name history has given it, was hardly a
debate. It was a series of remarks, perhaps even a series of barbs and witty
rejoinders. It was entirely informal except for the presence of a horde of
media and interpreters. Taking place during a brief thaw in the Cold War,
the lost-in-translation humor and jibes lend the entire affair an awkward
joking air. While no comprehensive transcription exists of all that was said
between the two leaders (audio and television cameras did not record every
part of the mobile exchange), the discussion of the interiorities of Splitnik
and all it entailed was to offer, at several points, strong connections between
domestic home infrastructure and world conflict. To a modern scholar, the
way in which food and domestic labor was connected to the home’s interiors
and then to world peace seems surreal. At the time, however, when the food
politics of agriculture, airlifts, and post-WWII price control of food and farm
commodities were still hot topics, the kitchen was, perhaps, the exact right
place to exchange ideas on the interiorities of two rivaling political and
economic ways of living and governing.9
Khrushchev turned the United States’ ban on shipping strategic
goods to the Soviet Union into a barb about the United States inability to
trade now that it has grown older (and presumably lazier about such things).
Khrushchev called for the U.S. to seek some trade “invigoration.” Consumer
goods and interior amenities were quickly turned into a political gambit.
Nixon later tried to compare the two countries’ technological advancement,
conceding the Soviet domination of the Space Race by saying,
There may be some instances where you may be ahead of us, for
example in the development of the thrust of your rockets for the
investigation of outer space; there may be some instances in which
we are ahead of you – in color television, for instance.10
Notes
1 Greg Castillo, Cold War on the Home Front: The Soft Power of Midcentury Design (Minneapolis,
MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2010), p. 9.
2 Ruth Oldenzeil and Karin Zachmann, Cold War Kitchen: Americanization, Technology, and
Public spheres
Hong Kong’s interior urbanism
Jonathan D. Solomon
Hong Kong is a city where extreme conditions bring the everyday into
sharper focus.1 It is also a city in which intense artificiality belies the simple
divisions between public and private that tend to dominate the politics of
the interior. Hong Kong’s density, topography, and economy create an
urbanism that lacks any of the figure-ground relationships that traditionally
bring order to public space in either Western or Eastern tradition: there is no
axis, edge, or center. Even the ground itself is elusive: streets, courtyards,
and squares are replaced by multilevel walkways connecting shopping malls
and transit terminals.2 The pedestrian networks stretching for kilometers
across Hong Kong create an urbanism of continuous “interiority” that does
not always correlate to the “indoors.” These distinctions are further blurred
by the highly manufactured quality of the city’s outdoor atmosphere;
pungent with smells, heavy with particulate matter, buffered by light and
noise, and hemmed in by walls, the “outdoors” is no less a manufactured
environment than the indoors. The city – indoors and out – is a vast and
continuous interior.
It is common to find pedestrians streaming through corridors
routed through corporate lobbies, above public parks, or under streets
(rather than at grade) in order to stay cool and dry. Cooled, dehumidified,
perfumed air distinguishes cultural and economic strata that are spatially
contiguous and largely indistinct from one another. The full range of human
senses are implicated: in Central, a high-end shopping mall branded by
Armani is distinguished from an adjacent and connected mall catering to
Filipino foreign domestic workers by, among other things, prodigious scents.
Just across a footbridge over Chater Road, varying access to natural light
affects retail rents at the Landmark Mall. Up the hill along the Central and
Midlevels Escalator, a crowd of tourists and Western expatriates gathers on a
street of steep steps in much the same way. Cool air is not the only
atmosphere generated by the adjacent pubs: the smell of beer, cigarettes, and
grilling beef, the sounds of generic rock and roll, English-language chatter,
and clinking glasses form a microclimate distinct from the local street
market just a block away.
Figure 48.1 Central Temperatures. Temperature and humidity gradients define the Public “Spheres of
Hong Kong.”
Drawing by Adam Frampton, Jonathan D Solomon, and Clara Wong
Figure 48.3 Anti-capitalism protestors encamped in the atrium beneath the HSBC Main Building in
Hong Kong (2012)
Image credit: Adam Frampton
Urbanism in the 21st Century, ed. Tom Verebes (New York: Routledge, 2014), pp. 68–74; and from
Jonathan D. Solomon, “Ad Hoc Admiralty”, LEAP (31 January/February 2015): 54–67.
2 Adam Frampton, Jonathan D. Solomon, and Clara Wong, Cities Without Ground (San Francisco,
CA: Oro Editions, 2012).
3 Mark Wigley, “The Architecture of Atmosphere”, Daidalos 68 (1998): 18–27.
4 Reyner Banham, Architecture of the Well-Tempered Environment (London: The Architectural
Press, 1969); Sylvia Lavin, Kissing Architecture (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2011);
Jeffrey Kipnis, “The Cunning of Cosmetics”, Herzog & de Meuron: El Croquis 84 (1997).
5 David Gissen, “APE”, in Design Ecologies: Essays on the Nature of Design, ed. Lisa Tilder and
Beth Blostien (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2010), pp. 65–66.
6 Peter Sloterdijk, “Atmospheric Politics”, in Space Reader: Heterogeneous Space in Architecture,
ed. Michael Hensel, Christopher Hight, and Achim Menges (London: Wiley, 2009), pp. 173–174.
7 Mason White, “99.7 Per Cent Pure”, in New Material Boundaries, AD Architectural Design, 79,
no. 3 (May/June), ed. Sean Lally (2009): 21–22.
8 “Diller Scofidio + Renfro”, http://dsrny.com/ (accessed 7 July 2012).
9 Peter Sloterdijk, “Foam City: About Urban Spatial Multitudes”, in New Geographies, 0 (2009):
136–143.
10 Zoe Ryan, The Good Life: New Public Spaces for Recreation (New York: The Van Alen Institute,
2006), p. 29, 31, 56, 61.
11 Peter Sloterdijk, “Spheres Theory: Talking to Myself About the Poetics of Space”, Harvard Design
Magazine 30 (Spring/Summer 2009), pp. 126–137.
12 David Howes, “Architecture and the Senses”, in Sense of the City, ed. Mirko Zardini (Baden: Lars
Mueller Publishers, 2005), pp. 326–327.
13 “Occupy Hong Kong Camp Cleared From HSBC Headquarters”, Associated Press in Hong Kong,
2012, http://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/sep/11/occupy-hong-kong-camp-hsbc.
14 Shirley Zhao, “Record-High Turnout for Anti-National Education Protests”, Time Out, 8
September 2012, http://www.webcitation.org/6AVyS2c6x
Chapter 49
Altered (e)states
Architecture and its interiority
David Erdman
Figure 49.1 Two projects showing the interventionist and interiorized capacities of architecture in
contemporary Hong Kong. Both projects are emblematic of projects in dense urban cities where a
multitude of disciplines and approaches are required of the architect. They also (in different ways)
articulate larger urban interiorized spaces. Top, Asia Society Hong Kong Center, Admiralty Hong
Kong, 2012. Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects | Partners. Aerial photograph of Asia Society showing
new structures and existing renovated structures layered on top of and beside one another. Photo
Credit: © Michael Moran/OTTO Bottom, Central Police Station Compound, Central Hong Kong.
Under construction. Herzog & de Meuron. Rendering showing one of two “infill”
intervention/additions on top of and surrounded by renovated existing structures articulating the
corner of the courtyard. View from within the courtyard.
Image credit: © Herzog & de Meuron
Alteration
Mid- to late-twentieth-century obsessions with digital technology often
relied on biological models to resolve how architecture could adapt to its
changing context. This applies to both the interior and exterior spaces of
architecture, from the endlessness of Kiesler to the metabolic capacities of
architecture, as seen in Japan.8 While there have been some notable
advances in this subject manifested in a host of formal, parametric, and
geometric experiments, it is difficult to ignore the role of adaptation in the
profession through ideas of “adaptive reuse.” Used more often as a marketing
ploy than a conceptual opportunity, adaptation is, however, ripe for
theoretical expansion and tectonic interrogation – particularly in relation to
ideas of interiority. For the most part, architectural “adaptation” projects are
conceived from the ground up, introducing a comprehensive and whole
architectural system into a context. The contemporary field of architectural
software favors this continuous, smooth, singular, and fully integrated
approach. “Alteration,” on the other hand, opens up fresh discursive territory
that builds upon the ideas of adaptation by affronting standardization – with
a few distinctions. It is an approach that is somewhat more restrained, fine
grained, and interiorized. Alteration could be called a more “centripetal,”
rather than “centrifugal,” approach to design, one that pulls and tucks
architecture into shape, rather than deforms a structure to adjust it to
adjacencies.
Because of its episodic characteristics, strategies of alteration are
not only in line with the emerging qualities of twenty-first-century cities,
but they also open up the potential to reconsider the theories of disjunctive
or fragmented architectures prevalent in the 1980s.9 To a large extent, those
theories are absent from digital architecture today due to an obsession with
continuity and an intellectually stubborn insistence on designing the whole.
From a postdigital perspective, however, disjunctive theories offer a limit for
testing. To what extent do alteration and an emphasis on interiority allow us
to rethink the architectural whole? Can strategies of alteration be pushed
close to the disjunctive extreme of fragmentation while maintaining enough
cohesion to be understood as forming new types of architectural wholes?
Does alteration allow for a way to engage new ways of thinking that
embrace, rather than exile, interiors-based work from architecture?
Speculative realisms
In many ways, alteration is a call to be more resourceful as designers. There
is the obvious advantage of recycling an existing building fabric and limiting
the resources of development, both of which underscored the opportunities
in the Repulse Bay Complex. Alteration may also unleash other types of
resources, from the conceptual to the experiential. Learning from the
disjunctive theories of the eighties and transforming them in new,
innovative ways (including the direct embrace of interiority and its
objecthood) allows room to build resources for architecture, and bring into
the scope of architecture, work that is in danger of being done by others
and/or pejoratively and arrogantly tossed to the side as unworthy of an
architect’s attention. Architectural practices need to embrace the realities of
the cities in which they practice, and at the same time speculate on how to
transform them and subsequently to transform our understanding of the
architectural whole.
Experimenting with the limits of continuity and fragmentation
through alteration allows for a greater degree of compatibility with existing
architectural systems, as well as an even greater plurality of experience and
effect. The Repulse Bay Complex serves as an interesting testing ground in
this context, where diverse material assemblies and moods augment
heterogeneity in experiences, while also producing enough cohesion to give
the property a new identity. Alteration can be seen as a way to resituate
interiority in architecture, highlighting disjunctive capacities of alteration,
while ushering postdigital themes relevant to the academy and cultural
trends in the industry. If we can employ alteration to rethink the
architectural whole, the future of interiority and its related praxes may open
up fertile speculative realities.
Acknowledgement
Portions of this chapter appear in AD’s “Mass Customized Cities” and the
DADA 2014 exhibition catalogue both written in collaboration with Clover
Lee, Director, davidclovers, now plusClover.
Notes
1 The Interior Architecture Reader is a case in point, being among the first Readers to focus on the
subject of interiors. Mark Taylor and Julieanna Preston, eds., Intimus: Interior Design Theory
Reader (Wiley, 2006) is perhaps the first and only a few others have been published to date
including Lois Weinthal, Toward a New Interior (Princeton, NJ: Princeton Architectural Press,
2011).
2 From Vitruvius’s “Ten Books on Architecture” (1500s – precise date of publication unknown) to
Le Corbusier’s Vers Une Architecture (Toward a New Architecture – 1923), the architectural
whole is reasserted as a primary goal for the beauty, function, and pleasure of architectural
design. Arguably, it was not until CIAM 9 (1953) when the Smithsons critiqued Le Corbusier’s
Athens Charter (1933) and subsequently formed Team 10, that ideas about fragmentary and
disjointed cities and architectures emerged. Readers on those theories and architects do not
appear until the late twentieth century. Examples are Joan Ockman’s Architecture Culture 1948–
68 (Columbia: Columbia Books of Architecture, 1993) and K. Michael Hays’s sequel Architecture
Theory Since 1968 (Columbia: MIT, 1998). Each of these expose theories that counter the
architectural whole.
3 This observation draws heavily upon Sylvia Lavin’s reading of architectural discourse in her
book Kissing Architecture (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2011) and in particular the
chapter “Current Kisses”, pp. 65–115.
4 See United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs World Urbanization Report – 2014
Revision, http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/Highlights/WUP2014-Highlights.pdf; see also United
Nations DESA Development Policy and Analysis Division “World Economic Situation and
Prospects” report at www.un.org/en/development/desa/policy/wesp/.
5 See Asia Society Hong Kong Center, Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects/Partners (2012). This
project was incredibly complex in its planning, preservation, conservation, landscaping, and
interiors and took over ten years to design and execute. It was the first of its kind in Hong Kong,
followed by an onslaught of similar projects like the Police Married Headquarters and Western
Market, which reuse obsolete colonial structures (as well as other types of property) to reinvent
the cultural landscape of HK. These projects are often federal/private joint ventures of the Build
Operate and Transfer typology emerging in Asia. Asia Society HK exemplifies the blurring
between various practices and the interventionist nature of design. Technically, it is an addition
to an existing property. The Central Police Station Compound, Central Hong Kong (under
construction) incorporating two additions by Herzog & de Meuron has a similar sociopolitical
and economic structure and resolves itself in an architecture of episodic interventions.
6 Hong Kong’s population increase occurred from 1931 to 1961, roughly forty to fifty years earlier
than cities like Shenzhen, Beijing, or Shanghai (Sources Figure 01, Wendell Cox “The Evolving
Urban Form: Hong Kong”, New Geography, 2012, www.newgeography.com/content/002708-the-
evolving-urban-form-hong-kong. See also Figure 03, Wendell Cox “Pakistan: Where the New
Population Bomb is Exploding”, New Geography, 2012,
www.newgeography.com/content/002940-pakistan-where-population-bomb-exploding), making
it among the most mature modern cities in China. It is the third densest region in the world
(Source UN Demographia – “Population Density” chart) and the most expensive city to build in
(Sources EC Harris and Langdon & Seah 2013, International Cost Comparison chart ranking the
average of the cost of construction).
7 This practice is common even among the top developers in Hong Kong, like Swire or Hong Kong
Shanghai Hotels – both of whom are distinguished by their devotion to design and who have
worked with notable architects and interior designers such as Frank Gehry, Kengo Kuma, and
Peter Marino. Tenders are increasingly broken up in this manner, which is in part a democratic
effort to spread the wealth to the design community (and not bias any one practice), evident also
in recent Urban Renewal Authority projects in Hong Kong. This practice is also in part a method
to capitalize opportunistically on a spectrum of markets and styles within any one property. This
is most prevalent in private residential housing estates. The Pacific Century Premium
Development’s Bel-Air On The Peak development in Pok Fu Lam is an example, which shifts
from faux neo baroque interiors (phase four) to the sleek curvilinear modernity of Norman
Fosters’ 8 towers that form phase six (branded separately as Bel-Air No.8).
8 See Friedrick Kiesler’s Endless House project (1950) and the Nakagin Capsule Tower by Kisho
Kurokawa (1972), both of which can be seen as benchmark projects using the subject of biological
adaptation to underpin their form, geometry, and massing.
9 In particular here I am referring to Deconstruction (see the exhibition of this title at MOMA
1988), its predecessors like Aldo Rossi’s seminal book Architecture and the City (Institute for
Architecture and Urban Studies and MIT, 1982) and perhaps most importantly its antecedents like
Bernard Tschumi’s book Architecture and Disjunction (MIT Press 1996). Largely formed in a
predigital era, the projects associated with these theories were explosive fields of objects that
were syntactically related but conceived as separate autonomous follies. With the advent of
digital computing, continuity and wholism became increasingly important; think single-surface
Yokohama Port Terminal (FOA 2002) among numerous other projects. The benefit of looking back
at this work after twenty years of smooth and continuous digital projects is to embrace the
agility of the fragment and the disjunctive while trying at the same time to explore how those
interventions do not remain entirely separate follies but instead form new types of more complex
architectural wholes.
10 I am specifically drawing upon Michael Fried’s article “Art and Objecthood” (Art Forum 5, June
1967) as a means to understand the architectural object. Of particular importance is that Fried’s
definition of objecthood is distinguishable from the current interest in Speculative Realism and
Object Oriented Ontology. This is because Fried’s article discusses objecthood as a predominately
perceptual and sensual idea within the practices and aesthetics of art – something more directly
aligned to architecture and its potential praxes when compared with Graham Harmon’s Triple O,
Meillasoux, and philosophical discussions of Kant’s object of knowledge. While Fried has a direct
relationship to Harmon’s work, Fried’s discussion of objecthood is explicitly more experiential
and architectural.
11 Ockman, Architecture Culture 1948–68; Hays Architecture Theory Since 1968. See endnote 2.
12 Ground Floor Area (GFA) calculations limit the economy of buildings in Hong Kong, which tend
to prioritize the monetization of floor plate areas over design. As such, one sees an intensively
Fordist production of housing throughout the city and over many decades limiting the extent to
which architects can “branch out.”
While Hong Kong occupies only one-third of its total land area, the remaining two-thirds are
seen as both an asset and economically unfeasible to develop. These areas provide the city with a
robust network of country parks and recreation which are difficult to develop due to their
intensively steep terrain. Ongoing debates about whether to release this land for development
continue; however, they are unlikely to resolve themselves in a sea change of land releases,
reasserting the idea that Hong Kong has very little land to build upon.
13 While de Ricou Tower is among the first A+A projects of this nature, it appears that these types
of projects are becoming more common in Hong Kong as evidenced by Pacific Place with its
commissioned interventions by Thomas Heatherwick (2011) or several recladding projects
undertaken by developers since the 1980s.
Part ten
Epilogue
Chapter 50
Gregory Marinic
The Interior Architecture Theory Reader offered its authors the opportunity
not only to define the field of interior architecture, but also to explore and
critique the margins between architecture and interior design. As a rising
discipline that lives at the periphery, interior architecture represents an
incremental maturation process motivated by intersectional inquiries
surrounding spatiality. For interior design, interior architecture embodies an
ongoing migration toward complexity, while for architecture, it seeks a
deeper analysis of the interior parameters of building design. Interior
architecture challenges the conventions of both disciplines and creates a new
space of inquiry to provoke transformational change.
In practice, new capacities have significantly altered the means
and methods of designing the built environment. As evidenced herein,
emerging understandings of interior architecture view its discourse as
breaking down boundaries and distinctions between the historically siloed –
and generally contentious – territories of architecture and interior design.
This blurring, in turn, has restructured how we work and how design
services are delivered, as well as how designers, clients, and fabricators
collaborate. Furthermore, the agency of interior architecture loops back into
the academy to challenge how we teach the next generation a broader
knowledge base which supports higher levels of expertise in spatial design.
From a pedagogical standpoint, innovative forms of teaching and scholarship
in interior architecture endeavor to reform the longstanding biases of both
architecture and interior design. Expanded engagement with adaptive reuse,
historic preservation, resource remobilization, ecology, digital fabrication,
and speculation has generated rich streams of research in interior
architecture programs worldwide. This global new wave has begun to gain
considerable momentum and prosper.
As a conceptual and methodological design philosophy, interior
architecture fosters new potential for spatial networks, fields, systems, and
gradients to be investigated, represented, constructed, and deployed. This
mining of an interstitial zone between architecture and interior design has
made some members of the established disciplines grow skeptical of the
intentions and motivations of interior architecture. Yet the strength of
interior architecture, in fact, rests in its current marginalization by both
architecture and interior design. It is unfortunate that architects and interior
designers often reject the binding potentialities which interior architecture
offers to their shared, building-oriented field. In light of this, interior
architecture is often viewed by conservative architects and interior designers
through a lens of “otherness” representing an alternative, controversial, and
resented form of practice. Advocates of interior architecture often confront
pointed questions which seem defensive rather than constructive and
inclusive. What are the specificities of this discipline? Who does it represent?
Who is welcome to participate in its development, refinement, and
stewardship?
Unlike architecture, in its desire for hegemony, or interior design,
in its pursuit of autonomy, interior architecture offers a more malleable way
to navigate contingent conditions via adaptive practices that acknowledge
imperfection and temporality. Confronting deeply held expectations for
interiors, the discipline gives resistance to normative practices by casting a
lens on overlooked opportunities for spatial design. When considered as a
whole, the work contained in this book forecasts the future of interior
architecture as a heterogeneous ecology of distinct attitudes and expertise.
As an expansive field rather than a reductive discipline, it suggests how we
can pursue specialized scholarship and practice in interiors ranging from
domesticity to urbanity.
In closing, my personal belief in the limitless potential of interior
architecture rests in its current marginalization. Interior architecture
represents not simply a shift in nomenclature, but a unique approach and
critique of the historically iconoclastic, purist, and paradigm-oriented
tendencies of architecture, while simultaneously challenging the
assumptions and underinvestigated boundaries of interior design. The more
nuanced form of logic found in interior architecture—animated by its
capacity to collect, collage, clarify, and reveal—renders disciplinary
contradictions somehow compatible. This innovative, insightful, and
enlightened discipline thrives at the periphery.
Index
fabrication 67–73; digital 33, 70–71, 70–73, 83–84, 132–133, 141, 143, 145, 149–150, 153, 156, 187, 274,
433; technology of 136–139
Facebook 392
Fairey, Shepard 344
Federal Civil Defense Administration (FCDA) 408
feedback 166–167
Feelings are Facts (Eliasson) 246
Ferguson, James 400
fine element modeling (FEM) 190
Fink, Eugen 169
Fliess, Wilhelm 182
Flight Assembled Architecture exhibit 132
floors: in Japanese homes 281–284; systems that capture and store energy of movement 232
Fluxus 360
FogScreen 260
Fold, The (Deleuze) 319
folding space inside 318–325
follies, English 156
Foreign Office Architects 132
form-function relationship 13, 75, 276, 278
Formless Discourse: The Impossible Knowledge of Change of Use (Guggenheim) 353
Fornes, Marc 132, 143
Forty, Adrian 139–140
Foucault, Michel 271, 300, 306, 378
Frankenstein (Shelley) 29
Frankfurt Kitchen 407
Frascari, Marco 100, 105
Freshwater Pavilion 55
Fresh Window (Duchamp) 109
Freud, Sigmund 178–184
Fried, Micael 314
frisson 352
Fry, Maxwell 235, 238–239
Fuller, Buckminister 116, 245–246
Fuller, Gillian 54
functionalism 276
Furniture House 117, 119–120, 120, 122–123
Future Cities Lab 163, 165
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence 203
garages 327–333, 328, 333
Gasometer City, Vienna 31
Gaudí, Antoni 292–295, 298
Gehle, Shawn 390
Gehry, Frank 84, 132, 138
Gehry Technologies 84, 136
Gensler 390–392
geography: cultural 61–63; disciplinary 59–60; urban 63–65
German Expressionist movement 15
Giddens, Anthony 141
Giebelhausen, Michaela 44–45
Giedion, Siegfried 225–226, 231–232, 321, 322–323
Gillet, Jacques 323
Gissen, David 415
Glanville, Ranulph 56
global constructs, interiors as 397–405
Godard, Jean-Luc 350
Goffman, Erving 300
Golub, Leon 235
Good Life, The (exhibition) 416
Grabar, Oleg 160
Grafe, Christopher 234
Graham, Stephen 53
Gramazio Kohler Architects
Gray, Eileen 295, 298
green buildings, market for 343
Gregory, Peter 235
Gropius, Walter 13, 15, 134, 138
Grosz, Elizabeth 292, 305
grotto(es) 153–161; English 156; as event space 157; historical 154–157; natural 154–155; Renaissance
155; Roman 155
Growth and Form exhibition 239
Groz, Elizabeth 319
Gruen, Victor 31, 32
Guggenheim, Michael 353–354
Guggenheim Museum, New York 327
Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao 132, 138
Gupta, Akhil 400
guru-shishya tradition 347
Gyroid, The (Yeung) 147, 149
Haag, Richard 30
hackability 390–391
Hack-able Buildings/Hack-able Cities initiative 390
Hall, Stuart 397, 402
Hamilton, Richard 236, 237–239
Hampton Court Palace 8–9.9
Handbook of Interior Architecture and Design, The 234
Happold, Buro 190
haptic perception 12, 14
Harman, Graham 247–248, 250
Hau’ofa, Epeli 125–127
Haussmann, Georges 415
Havel, Václav 379
Hawking, Steven 30
Hayden, Frances 207
Hayes, K. Michael 139
health status, disparities 398
Hegewald, Julia A. B. 352–353, 356, 358
Heidegger, Martin 172
Henard, Eugene 415
Henderson, Nigel 239
Henley-on-Thames regatta course 35–36, 36
Hensel, Michael 139–140
Heraclitus 195, 200
Herzog and de Meuron 232
heterogeneous interiority, building envelope and 274–279
Hight, Christopher 139–140
Hiorns, Roger 258, 259
historiography of interior architecture 3–10
history: interior architecture as spatial therapy 28–34; multilayered of buildings 347; of style and
modern interior 12–17
History of Interior Design (Pile) 3, 6
HMS Tamar 417
Hoare, Philip 125, 127
Hollein, Hans 207–208
HoloLens (Microsoft) 33, 34
Homeostatic Facade system 260–261
home size, average American 284–285
Hong Kong 414–420, 423–428; Asia Society Hong Kong Center 423, 424; Police Central Headquarters
423, 424; Repulse Bay Complex 427, 427–428
House in the Middle, The (film) 408, 410
house museums 291–299
houses: garages 327–333, 328, 333; as a machine for living 255; prefab 116–123
Howard, Katherine Graham 408
Howes, David 417
How Societies Remember (Connerton) 50
HSBC Main Building, Hong Kong 417–418, 419
Hubbard, L. Ron 314
Hughes, Robert 310
Hugo, Victor 225
human body as a ruler 281
“Human Locomotion” (Muybridge) 224
Husserl, Edmund 171, 316
Hyatt Regency, Atlanta 264–266
hybridized digital/analog space 33
hybrids, metropolitan 368–375, 372–373
HygroSkin pavilion 261
Hylozoic Soil (Beesley) 157, 158
Hylozoic Veil (Beesley) 137
hyperarticulation of differentiated envelopes 277–279
hypernaturalization of the interior 255–261; future implications 261; phenomena 259–261; processes
257–259; properties 256–257
Musk, Elon 30
Muthesius, Hermann 13
Muybridge, Eadweard 218, 224
MVRDV 370
quadrature 19–25
Queneau, Raymond 361
Raby, Fiona 55
Rael, Ron 188–189, 189
Rael San Fratello Architects 158–159, 159
Rain Room 260, 260
Ranciere, Jacques 377
Rand, Ayn 343
Raphael 229
Rattenbury, Kester 313
Raumplan 13
Rawls, John 377
Read, Herbert 235
realisms, speculative 428
reconfigurability 387–388
Redemption of Man Series (tapestries) 76
relocation 76
Remaking in a Post-Processed Culture (Massie) 192
Renaissance Center, Detroit 267–269
Rendell, Jane 301
renovation 387–390, 427
replicated original space, studio-museum as 312–315
Repulse Bay Complex, Hong Kong 427, 427–428
Re-readings 3–4
resonance 352–353
retail space, reinvigoration of 31–32
reuse 4, 343, 345, 412; adaptive 5, 30–33, 108, 113–114, 368–369, 371, 375, 423, 425, 433; appropriation
and 351–358; imperatives of 392
Reuse: The Art and Politics of Integration and Anxiety (Hegewald and Mitra) 352
Reuse Value: Spolia and Appropriation in Art and Architecture From Constantine to Sherrie Levine
(Kinney) 352
Rice, Charles 355
Rice, Charles 3, 7–8
Ricoeur, Paul 10
Riefenstahl, Leni 314–315
Riegl, Alois 12–15, 17
Roberge, Heather 190–191, 191–192
robotic assembly 132
Rogers, Richard 94
Rohe, Mies van der 15, 15
Rolex Learning Center 324–325, 325
roof, scrim 75
Room (Demand) 314
Rosaldo, Renato 400
Rose, Gillian 49
Rossi, Aldo 274
Roue de bicyclette (Duchamp) 108
Rowe, Colin 15
Rudolph, Paul 36
Rural Studio 133
Ruskin, John 128
Ryan, Zoe 416
Ryerson University School of Interior Design 147
S, M, L, XL 276
Sabin, Jenny 83
Sachs, Hans 180
Sacred Wood, The (Eliot) 348
Sadar, John Stanislav 286
Safdie, Moshe 70
Salvinio, Alberto 195–196, 198
SANAA 324–325, 325
San Fratello, Virginia 188–189, 189
Sant’Elia, Antonia 29–30
Saraceno, Tomas 246, 248
Sarkis, Hashim 276
Sasaki, Mutsuro 324, 324
Saynatsalo Town Hall 93–94, 94, 96
scale 338–339; architecture versus interior architecture 59–60, 61
scenography 300, 303
Schechner, Richard 301
Schneider, Tatjana 141–143
Schoenenberger, Erich 121
Scholarism movement 418–419
School of Athens (Raphael) 229
Schumaker, Patrik 244–245
Scientific Revolution 20
Scott, Felicity D. 166–167
Scott, Fred 3–4, 8–10, 354
Scott, Iwamoto 190
scrim roof 75
Sculpture House (Gillet) 323
sea 125–130
Sea Inside, The (Hoare) 125, 127
Seamon, David 171
Sears, Roebuck and Company kit houses 116
Sears Auto Center 32
Seattle Gas Works Park project 31
Secret of Aesthetics Lies in the Conjugation of the Senses, The (Howes) 205
sectioning 71
seed bank 257
Seed Cathedral pavilion 257
Seizure 258, 259
semiotic properties of a building 353
Semper, Gottfried 12–13, 17
Sennett, Richard 347
senses: deception of 20–22; disconnection from nature 154; engagement in Japanese architecture 281;
fostering museum visitor engagement 202–210; Hong Kong urban spaces 414
sensing and perceiving 171–172
sensorial interior landscapes 153–161
sensory adumbration 171–172
sentient spaces 162–168
Sert, Jose Luis 373–374
Seven Lamps of Architecture, The (Ruskin) 128
sexually exploited youth 403, 404
shape < surface < volume formula 146
Shelley, Mary 29
Shepeard, Paul 228
shoji 281, 284–286
SHoP Architects 84, 132
Silk Leaf 256
Silk Pavilion 84–85, 258
SILO AR+D 71–72
Simon, Nina 203
single-use buildings 369
SITE 35
situating productions 245–246
Situationists International 59, 63–64, 64, 360
Situation Room installation 132
Sketch-Up 337
skillsets for future interior architecture practice 385–392
skyscrapers 69, 371
Slave Ship (Turner) 128
Sloterdijk, Peter 415–416
Slutzky, Robert 15
Smell, The Beauty of Decay: Smellscape Central Park Autumn 2015 exhibition 208
smell experiences in museums 208–210, 209
Smith, Anthony D. 48
Smithson, Alison and Peter 239
Smithson, Robert 126
socially responsible design 381
social media whispering wall 165
sociological properties of a building 353–354
software 83
Solà-Morales, Rubió Ignasi 306–307
SOL Grotto 158–159, 159
solid-void 16
SOM 36
Southern California Institute of Architecture 190
Southern Food and Beverage Museum, New Orleans 207
So Wohnt Amerika (How America Lives) exposition 407
space: absolute, abstract, and differential 270; in architectural vocabulary 139; atmospheric 338, 340;
body and 335–336, 336, 339; definition of 139–141; folding space inside 318–325; heterogeneous 140;
oceanic 125–130; place and 62; potential 365; as a priori phenomenon and posterior social contract
133; prospect of the aspect 91–97; spatial therapy 28–34; structured 322; symbiotic spaces 43–51
space/place 358
Space Reader: Heterogeneous Space in Architecture (Hight, Hensel, and Menges) 139
space-shapes 219–221
space-time continuum 14–15
spacing 303; forming and 334–340; scale 338
Sparke, Penny 3–5, 6, 7
Spatial Agency: Other Ways of Doing Architecture (Awan, Schneider, and Till) 142
spatial agency of digital praxis 132–143
spatial design 300–307; performance model for 300–307; as weak architecture 306–307
spatial intelligence 385–387, 392
spatial practices, processes, and effects 242–251
spatial theories: of Baudrillard 263, 270–272; of Jameson 263, 270–272; of Lefebvre 263, 270, 272
spatial therapy, interior architecture as 28–34
Speaks, Michael 186
speculative realisms 428
Splitnik 410–411
Sponsler, Claire 349
Spuybroek, Lars 320, 323, 324
St. Ignatius, Rome 23–25, 23–25
standardization 13
Standard of Living Package (Banham) 162–163
State Hospital, The (Kienholz) 111, 111
Steelcase 389
Steinberg, Saul 361
Steiner, Rudolf 30
Stone, Sally 3–4, 8–10, 53, 57
Storefront for Art and Architecture 132
Strachey, James 179, 182
Stratus 261
structural limits 189–191
Strundtland, Carl 117
students, empowering 176
studio-museum, Brett Whiteley 310–313, 311, 316
Studios Architecture 60
style, modern definitions of 12–14
su11 architecture+design 121121
subtle revelation, phenomenology and 170–171
Sudjic, Deyan 371
Summerson, John 8–9
Sung, Doris Kim 137
Superstudio 162–167
suprematism 14, 107
surface 318–325; biophilia of the ornamental surface 157; shape < surface < volume formula 146;
transforming interior volumes and 145–150
surrealism 195–201
Swimming Upstream project 82–83
symbiosis 43
symbiotic spaces 43–51
Systems of Objects, The (Baudrillard) 376
systems theory 146–147
constructed territories 74–76; as located place 74; at scale of furniture 77; tapestries marking of 76;
transience 79
Teshima Art Centre 324, 324
Tesseract 3.0 (Odom) 243, 244
Tesseract 4.0 (Odom) 250
Teyssot, Georges 318, 355
Theatre and its Double (Artaud) 306
Theory of Games 237
Theory of Justice, A (Rawls) 377
THEVERYMANY 132, 143
thickened present 316
Three Faces (Léger) 15
thresholds 68, 94, 284, 318–319, 321, 324, 356, 357
Till, Jeremy 133, 141–143, 235
time 229–230; modernism and 103–104; prioritization of 32
time-based events, orthographic system and 215–217
time traveling concept 47
Tinguely, Yves 239
Titlecase (typography studio) 76–78, 77
Tolaas, Sissel 208
tools: access to information and digital 83; authoring new 83–84
topology and interiority 318–325
Topology of Everyday Constellations, A (Teyssot) 355
Totem and Taboo (Freud) 182
touch experiences in museums 203–205
Touching the Prado (art exhibit) 205
Towards a Plastic Architecture (van Doesburg) 108
town 368
trafficking 403, 404
transforming interior volumes 145–150
transient interior 79
transparency 15
Treatise on Light (Descartes) 21
Truffle house 259
truth 22, 25
Tschumi, Bernard 302, 304, 371
Tsien, Billie 96
tsubo 281
tsunami 129
Turing’s test for intelligence 56
Turner, Decimus 415
Turner, Joseph Mallard William 128
Turrell, James 247
Tyrrell, James 35
Vale, Lawrence 45
Valevicius, Mecislovas and Martynas 257
Van Alen Institute, New York City 387, 388
van Berkel, Ben 249
van der Rohe, Mies 132, 312
van de Velde, Henry 13–14, 189
van Doesburg, Theo 14–15, 108–109
van Eesteren, Cornelis 14–15
VarVac Wall 85–88, 86–88
veil of ignorance 377
Veltruský, Jiří 304
Venice Biennale 375
Venturi, Robert 92, 114, 243
Venturi effect 159
Vertical Intelligent Architecture 389
Victoria University of Wellington 334
Vidler, Anthony 107
village 368
Virgin Atlantic Upper Class Clubhouse 84
visual illusions 20–25
VitraHaus 232
Vodvarka, Frank 356
Volkan Alkanoglu Design 331–332, 333
volume: shape < surface < volume formula 146; transforming interior volumes 145–150
Voussoir Cloud project 190
Vrachliotis, Georg 161
Yanow, Dvora 43
Yeadon, Decker 260
Yeung, Janine 147–149, 148–149
Yim, Rocco 417
Yokohama Ferry Terminal 132, 274
Yoshioka, Tokujin 261