Architecture and Freedom [PDF ebook] 
Searching for Agency in a Changing World

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Architects are facing a crisis of agency. For decades, they have seen their traditional role diminish in scope as more and more of their responsibilities have been taken over by other disciplines within the building construction industry. Once upon a time, we might have seen the architect as the conductor of the orchestra; now he or she is but one cog in a vast and increasingly complex machine.

In an attempt to find a way out of this crisis, there is growing debate about how architects might reassert the importance of their role and influence. On one side of this argument are those who believe that architects must refocus their attention on the internal demands of the discipline. On the other are those who argue that architects must, instead, reacquaint themselves with what many still believe to be the discipline’s core mission of advancing social progress and promoting the public good, and at the same time the scope of their traditional disciplinary remit.

At root, this question is fundamentally about freedom, about whether architects still possess it – if they have ever done – and whether it is possible to find the professional, disciplinary and individual autonomy to be able to define the spheres of their own practice. Presenting a variety of views and perspectives, this issue of AD takes us to the heart of what freedom means for architecture as it adapts and evolves in response to the changing contexts in which it is practised in the 21st century.

Contributors include : Phillip Bernstein, Peggy Deamer, Adam Nathaniel Furman, Kate Goodwin, Charles Holland, Anna Minton, Patrik Schumacher, Alex Scott-Whitby, Ines Weizman, and Sarah Wigglesworth.

Featured architects : Atelier Kite, Scott Whitby Studio, C+S Architects, Anupama Kundoo, Noero Architects, Umbrellium, and Zaha Hadid Architects.

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Table des matières

About the Guest-Editor 3

Introduction: Architecture and the Paradox of Freedom 6

(Un) Free Work: Architecture, Labour and Self-Determination 16
Limits to Freedom Liberating Form Programme and Ethics 24

Architecture’s Internal Exile: Experiments in Digital Documentation of Adolf Loos’s Vienna Houses 32

Unlocking Pentonville: Architectural Liberation in Self-Initiated Projects 40
The Freedom of Being Three: The Art of Architectural Growing Up 48
Freedom from The Known: Imagining the Future Without the Baggage of the Past 54

Lessons from Launching an Alternative Architectural Practice 62

The Freedom from Aesthetics 68
Freedom Via Soft Order: Architecture as a Foil for Social Self-organisation 76
The Paradox of Safety and Fear: Security in Public Space 84
Seeds of Legacy: Hybrid and Flexible Spaces 92
Wild Architecture: The Potential of Self-Build Settlements 102
Cultivating Spaces to Take Risks: An Interview with the Royal Academy of Arts’ Kate Goodwin 110
Shared Memories of a Possible Future: An Interview with Umbrellium’s Usman Haque 120
Counterpoint: The Omniscience and Dependency of Practice 128
Notes 131
Contributors 134

A propos de l’auteur

Owen Hopkins is a writer, historian and curator of architecture. He is Architecture Programme Curator at the Royal Academy of Arts where he mounts series of events, lectures, discussions and exhibitions on architecture and related subjects. His writings feature widely in the architectural press.He is the author of Reading Architecture: A Visual Lexicon (Laurence King, 2012), Architectural Styles: A Visual Guide (Laurence King, 2014), From the Shadows: The Architecture and Afterlife of Nicholas Hawksmoor (Reaktion, 2015) and Mavericks: Breaking the Mould of British Architecture (Royal Academy Publications, 2016).

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Langue Anglais ● Format PDF ● ISBN 9781119332626 ● Taille du fichier 31.7 MB ● Maison d’édition John Wiley & Sons ● Pays GB ● Publié 2018 ● Édition 1 ● Téléchargeable 24 mois ● Devise EUR ● ID 6404563 ● Protection contre la copie Adobe DRM
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