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David Kolb
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Has Architecture Lost its Bearings?
David Kolb
Abstract: The talk starts with some remarks on the meanings of the word "bearing" as
demeanor, relevance, orientation, and center. Then it talks about three changes that are
decreasing the bearing of architecture. They are (1) the diminished central role of the architect in
the building process, (2) the fragmentation of communities which decreases the importance of
central buildings/monuments, and (3) the growing dematerialization of buildings, both in the
sense of turning buildings into screens, the invasion of digital links to other real and virtual
spaces, and smart buildings. These trends reduce hierarchical unities in the planning, meaning,
and inhabitation of buildings, and favor parataxis over syntax. Architects now have to be
creative and adaptive in new ways, seeking new spatial and social forms and grammars.1
The word "bearing" has many meanings. We start with orientation, as in
"we lost our bearings, we're not sure which way we are heading." Architecture
today seems to be heading in all sorts of directions. In a global economy with
multicultural demands and myriad sources of funding, that is not surprising.
There was a question posed in the call for papers for this conference: "Is
architecture constituted by its history or by an a-temporal, formal structure?"
Like many philosophers today I am skeptical of essentialisms that push diverse
phenomena into one restrictive set of necessary and sufficient conditions, and
today's architectural scene is quite disjointed and multiple. Yet there is a prima
facie continuity in architecture, which always appears to be doing the same
thing. And architecture pays attention to and uses its history more than many
other arts and crafts. We are in an important ways doing the same tasks that
Greek and Chinese and medieval builders did. But we are doing them in a new
context with new meanings, and our tasks are not quite what theirs were.
Perhaps we could say there is the continuity of a process, described very
abstractly. For instance: architecture might be said to be the construction of
1 My thanks to Martin Donogho for perceptive comments on an earlier draft
of this essay.
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spaces that we move through and live in, and which embody various social
meanings. That's not a foolproof definition but it goes some way; and it is
general enough that we can see how its embodiments might alter as social
meanings change, bodies change, modes of living change, as well as with
changes in the methods of construction and the institutionalizations of the
building process.
Another of the questions posed in the call for papers was: "Is architecture
always the re-presentation of other content, or does it create its own meanings?"
Hegel said that architecture assembles brute unmeaning matter into structures
that receive their purpose and meaning from outside, from the social practices
and values that surround buildings. (This is in distinction to, say, poetry or
painting, which work with parts already possessing their own meanings.) So
Hegel would argue that architecture is always presenting or embodying other
content. It may not be a RE-presentation; it could be a first embodiment, but the
meaning comes from more than the arrangement of stones and wood.
To be a bit more precise, we can distinguish between causal effects and
social meaning. If, for instance, you go from a narrow closed space to a large
high open space, there is a feeling created by the sequence of spaces. Similarly if
one moves from a chaotic space to a harmoniously proportioned space. This is
partly cultural, but largely determined by our biology and evolution of our
perceptive faculties.
These and many other spatial sequences are architectural effects, and
architects learn how to use them artistically, as a painter learns how to use color
effects. But these effects do not in themselves produce social meaning. The effect
of moving from a constricted to an expansive space can be brought to bear with
different social or individual meanings in a church, a civic building, a fun house,
or a private home. These effects have different meaning and impact as society
and technology change.
I want to talk about three of those changes, asking how architecture takes
its bearings in an increasingly complex environment. The 1st trend is the loss of
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centrality; the 2nd is the fragmentation of communities; the 3rd is the
dematerialization of buildings. These trends lead to more juxtaposition and less
centered or hierarchical unity: in the design and building teams, in the
community of users, and in the building's functions, spatial unity, and social
uses. Does that mean less unity or new modes of unity, or perhaps very old modes
of unity?
Centrality
First, the loss of centrality. And that in two senses: the central role of the
architect, and the central role of at least some architectural works in our
social/cultural life.
Another meaning of "bearing" is a person's demeanor. We speak of regal or
military bearing. Here are some photographs of people showing their bearing,
their style of holding themselves in the world. Here is FLW with an authoritative
demeanor. Here is Mies looking haughty.
That look is not so common nowadays, because the architect is not as much
in control. Developers bring their own ideas, and constraints, and their own
engineers. At times the architect is reduced to decorating the surfaces of
preplanned efficient boxes. Even if the architect is able to manipulate the interior
spaces and massing of the building, the program is constrained by financial
factors and other specialized members of a team that has no one center.
There is also "bearing" as relevance and importance. You might say that the
architect cannot adopt the regal demeanor of Wright or the haughty demeanor of
Mies because architectural works have less bearing on the larger social and
financial processes. There are flows of capital, and of people and ideas and
symbols and goods and brands: the architects ride the waves.
You could argue against what I just said, by citing the current system of
heroic international star architects. Often the star is asked to design a central
symbol or monumental facility: capitals, museums, concert halls, libraries,
stadiums. Such works are at least advertised to be central to the social life and
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identity of a city or region. Sometimes they succeed at this, but too often they
result in clones or self-aggrandizing monuments. The buildings enter a self-
reinforcing cycle of celebrity rather than having a significant bearing on the
society.
You could on the other hand argue that where the architect is most central
is in domestic architecture, which is less dependent upon other teams and
professions, and may well have a client who is more open to experimentation. It
is true that there is more freedom in domestic architecture for private patrons,
but while as a sector domestic architecture is crucial to identity and culture, any
individual home is less so. Most of the innovative houses celebrated in
architectural publications remain one-time wonders, notable because they depart
from rather than because they change the direction of homebuilding.
Back, then, to bearings. A "bearing" is also that part of a machine which
smoothes out friction and allows shafts to turn and wheels to rotate. These
bearings are at the center of motion. We can sum up the last few points by asking
to what extent are architects and their works at the center of building and public
life.
As for the architects, it's getting quite crowded near the center. The
architect has to share control of projects with hordes of other professionals. As
for architectural works' bearing on social life, expressing and realizing that part
of the social machine around which everything turns, is there a single center for
the social machine?
Fragmentation
This leads to my second trend: The fragmentation (to put it negatively) or
the multiplication and enrichment (to put it positively) of communities.
Martin Heidegger says that it's the task of architecture to "gather" and
"open up a world", and to help create the unity of true dwelling on the earth. In
his examples of the bridge in Heidelberg and the Greek temple, he sees the
physical structures as unifying and bringing together different social trajectories
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of action, and holding open a horizon of possible actions and values, as in the
case of the bridge, and by the practices, central values and images affirmed and
realized in and around the temple.
Architecture provides orientation by creating/opening a practical,
meaningful space that allows strings of actions and movements and social roles
to be gathered into a unified horizon of social meaning and value. Taking off
from Heidegger, Christian Norberg-Schulz and especially Karsten Harries argue
that a true community needs to have a place where it celebrates and recognizes
itself, its history, its natural setting. This central gathering need not be a temple
or a cathedral; it could be a theater, or a park, or a civic building, or a plaza, or
some mundane building, perhaps a general store, around which people gather
and values are affirmed. There should be a place where the community finds its
unity. If that seems lacking, they think that is a loss for us. (Although Harries is
well aware of the potentially restrictive and oppressive nature of highly unified
communities.)
Not all architectural products fulfill what they declare to be the highest
calling of architecture. A bicycle shed, for instance, does enable or gather
together a set of practices, but these are not so central to the identity of the
community. Though this might depend on the community; a bicycle shed in
some towns (such as Eugene or Portland) might become a place of central
affirmation. That would result, though, from changes in the social context, not in
the design of the building. So, the claim that true architecture gathers a
community's central mode of being bases the distinction between true
architecture and mere building upon a second essentialism, the identity of the
social world's horizon of meaning and practice.
However, both Heidegger and Harries speak of relatively homogeneous
communities: the agricultural village, the New England or Bavarian town, the
Greek city, all perhaps imagined as more unified than they actually were.
Compare such communities to the multi-centered flow in the large cities
today. From Jane Jacobs to current boosters of return to the central city, one of
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the claimed advantages of urban over rural or suburban living has been the
richness and complexity found in the juxtaposition of different, perhaps
opposed, sub-communities.
There is an analogous multiplicity in the suburbs, too, except that there, if
you traced the activities of groups of people, you might find an interpenetrating
net of paths limning archipelagoes of places, where various sub-communities do
their shopping, worshiping, and recreating, but without constantly encountering
each other as a whole suburban community. You would find monuments
commemorating wars or local heroes or celebrities, but with different sub-
communities interpreting the monuments in conflicting ways, perhaps protesting
the monuments' existence. Supposedly common centers, such as libraries,
stadiums, or civic buildings get strung out among complex class and cultural
divisions
We might then lament that cities, in one way, and suburbs, in another, have
lost the kind of unifying center that Heidegger and Harries celebrate.
But is this bad? Already in the nineteenth century Hegel saw society as
made up of segments with rather different "spirits": rural landowners and
farmers tied to the land and its values, bureaucrats tied to duty and process,
capitalists with market concerns and international connections, workers in their
various guilds, church and academic functionaries, the poor who are without
skills. These segments do not share any unified set of folk values. But they do
participate together in a modern system of law and equality. In addition they
should have some allegiance to their nation as a political community with its
own distinctive French or Italian style. But that national character is always being
eaten away by the partial spirits of the different sub-communities. The unity of
the nation comes about through and in dialectical relations among groups with
different approaches to the world. It's the job of the political system to balance
and unify these. There is no central monument in Hegel's state, except perhaps
war memorials and parliaments.
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In short, Hegel would say that spirit has moved on from the kind of unified
community Heidegger and Harries celebrate. In this new modern society the
architects' task may be to "gather" in a new sense.
If we ask what architectural product now gathers us -- all of us, city and
suburban dwellers, all of us, not just people who go to museums, or to stadiums,
-- what brings all together today, we might say shared infrastructure, and malls
and train stations and highway systems and airports and tourist resorts: these are
where people come together from different sub-communities with different
histories and different values.
But, when they enter these places they become in some ways less than they
were outside. As they enter they are defined as drivers or consumers or holiday-
makers or passengers. These are real but thin social roles; they don't have the
deep history and value content that Heidegger and Harries want to celebrate.
These places abstract from, rather than incorporating, the richer identity you may
have as a person with your unique birth and trade and religion and interests.
If you define a place as gathering and ratifying deep identities, then those I
have just mentioned are not places. Indeed the French anthropologist Mark Augé
describes them as 'non-places'. Such non-places are, however, fully real social
places in the sense I describe in Sprawling Places. But they provide only a thin
functional identity shared with people who have different deep identities.
So are the architects now to design non-places like these? They do so. Over
and over. In his discussion of Bigness, Rem Koolhaas points out how the sheer
size of some of these buildings "can no longer be controlled by a singular
architectural gesture" (Koolhaas 1995, 494f). Such a building's mass or extent can
make a single architectural gesture look tacked on or overblown (as in some
malls). So an attempt to have the building gather up a community's single
identity can make that identity look pretentious or ironic.
More importantly for my theme of juxtaposition, Koolhaas sees the elevator
as disrupting architectural continuity and producing abrupt "mechanical" rather
than "architectural" connections between separate modules within a structure.
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A building with such separate modules can have its exterior and interior
"become separate projects." The disjunction between inside and outside
programs relativizes any asserted identity; if asserted only on the outside it is
undermined by the varying inside modules. If asserted as one of those inside
modules, it is undermined by being only one of many. If asserted as a decorative
theme inside everywhere, it will be something that is seen as changeable.
So such buildings push what are supposed to be deep identities toward
thinner social roles, seen as contingent and changeable, like joining a club. Such
an architectural work may claim center stage by its size or showiness, but it will
fail at the central gathering Heidegger and Harries seek.
Our built landscape is less and less oriented to a Center, but juxtaposes
places for different deep identities, along with shared places that join us in
thinner more abstract social roles that do not offer so much for architecture to
celebrate.
Dematerialization and Juxtaposition
Hegel thought that the most harmonious form of architecture, where inner
and outer meshed most perfectly, was the classical architecture of the Greeks and
Romans. He thought that classical architecture expressed best the basic function
of resisting gravity and supporting a space for social use.
In classical architecture the brute stuff, stones and wood, is arranged in
columns and arches and walls that resist gravity in the most expressively self-
conscious way. A column only supports, a peaked roof only covers, a non-
weight-bearing (that word again!) wall only surrounds. The whole comes
together in harmonious proportions to show human reason and creativity and
house human social life.
If we take up the idea that resisting gravity is a or even the central task of
construction, then certain things follow. Resisting gravity demands that the
building have a solid foundation, and the building needs heavy parts that rise up
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from that foundation in a unified system for bearing weight and elevating a roof
over social space. The building needs to be a well-founded system.
A word here about philosophy: Philosophy could seem to have lost its
bearing these days, in the sense that it has less influence or relevance. At least to
many outsiders, and to some academic administrators, philosophy has lost its
centrality for education. We see university departments being threatened with
closure under financial constraints, and professional philosophers struggling to
deal with new modes for less specialized communication.
One of its problems is the perennial disagreement among philosophers. Yet
despite its fractured existence, philosophy usually holds out a goal of systematic
unity. And it sees architecture as a metaphor for its systems: philosophers speak
of the architectonic of systems of thought that rest upon foundations and build
firmly to support conclusions. This is not the only model for philosophy and it
has been questioned lately. But it has been very influential and the parallel with
architecture has provided a metaphorical guide for searching for foundations,
supporting conclusions, strengthening weak links in a system, and so on.
Then the philosophers feed back into architecture the ideal of the
systematically unified building with the firm foundation and every part
contributing to the overall unified system. Recall Aristotle's doctrine that in a
work of art every individual part should be necessary to the total effect, so that if
one part were disturbed the whole would be altered or weakened. That provides
a powerful guide for architecture.
But if we look at the metaphor and that ideal more carefully we realize that
they are misleading.
A building does have to resist gravity. But there are other forces as well,
wind and earthquakes and fire and flood and hot and cold and the daily wear
and tear of use, and the building has to deal with all these too. There are many
forces needing many kinds of reinforcement against many kinds of threats, and
many systems for heating and cooling and ventilating and electricity and water
that have to be mated into the building. These are separate systems that may
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have little or nothing to do with each other. Buildings have never been as
hierarchical or as unified as the metaphor taken from them suggests. A building
is not a totally unified system but rather a juxtaposition of different systems. The
heating or plumbing or wiring of a building might be replaced without changing
the rest of the building.
A building may offer a very unified lived experience of its spaces, but be a
congeries of diverse systems whose independence is covered over. Or a building
could be constructed of a deeply unified set of systems and yet be an aesthetic
jumble. The two kinds of unity (causal and aesthetic) are separate from one
another. How something works and how it looks are not the same. Designing the
ductwork is a causal-mechanical problem; deciding how to reveal the ductwork
well is a choice among aesthetic alternatives. Architects are trained to bring
together causal and aesthetic issues. Philosophers are trained to bring diverse
questions and types of language together. In both architecture and philosophy
there is a dream of a hierarchically unified and well-founded system. And this is
questionable in both domains.
The architectural ideal of foundation and support is weakened in another
way, for a building does not always need to stand up resisting gravity: think of
the cave dwellings in Cappadocia, where construction consists of hollowing out
rather than building up.
Then, and especially, think of architecture where gravity is absent. Imagine
constructing habitats in orbit where what you build does not have to resist a pull
of gravity downward but does have to resist the outward force of air pressure in
all directions, and where a building can expand in three dimensions in an
organized or in a most disorganized way, with tight or loose links between parts
that connect but do not support one another. There is architecture, but without
gravity or foundations, where there is no one-way support but instead there is
mutual aid in all directions. Philosophy too plays with this different ideal.
Closer to earth, think of pneumatic inflated buildings for fairs and shows,
and then buildings whose walls have become screens, where the resistance to
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gravity happens but is not shown at all. Think of Venturi's old Las Vegas where
buildings become signs. And Jean Nouvel's buildings with walls as screens. And
buildings whose walls become illuminated screens.
But the dematerialization of architecture can go further; so far we have
talked about buildings that are still made of brute stuff, but which no longer
express their resistance to gravity. Instead they turn their walls into images and
screens; but this is only the first step in the approach of the digital.
I am not talking here about cyberspace as another world, as described by
William Gibson or Neil Stephenson. What interests me here is not migration to a
netherworld but the juxtaposition of plural worlds, in the production of mixed
places and buildings.
It's becoming common nowadays for academic departments to interview
job candidates using Skype. In effect this joins the space where the interviewer
sits with the space where the interviewee sits. If the video were presented not on
a small screen but on a wall-sized screen, as is done in some professional
videoconferencing sites, then the feeling that the two rooms are two parts of one
space becomes very strong. This is mixed reality, where two physical spaces are
juxtaposed by digital means. We could imagine a suite of offices where each
room was in a different city but was connected to the others.
Both spaces need not be physical. A physical room could have one wall
open out into a virtual world, perhaps a virtual committee meeting room,
perhaps a fantasy landscape. My house could have extensions, some of which are
to purely virtual spaces, some to other physical spaces. There would be abrupt
transitions among these juxtaposed spaces, and the linkages might change
rapidly.
We are also beginning to see augmented reality, as in the recently proposed
Google glasses (and some apps already available for the iPhone) that label things
as we look at them. This is another mixed reality and it could be adopted for
architectural purposes. In the extreme case, suppose, your room could be quite
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bare, but your glasses painted the room with a special decor (and changed it as
you wished or according to your mood or purpose).2
In mixed and augmented reality we don't have two separate worlds, but the
mixture of digital and physical simply becomes the world. "The Internet to us is
not something external to reality but a part of it: an invisible yet constantly
present layer intertwined with the physical environment" (Czerski 2012).
Mixes of virtual and physical challenge the architect in ways similar to
Koolhaas' Bigness. Beyond a certain level of connectivity, a building becomes a
web of juxtapositions that can no longer be controlled by a singular architectural
gesture. Even more than elevators, digital connectivity and imaging establish
abrupt juxtapositions between different geometries and spaces. And a façade can
no longer reveal all that happens inside; interior and exterior architectures can
become separate projects, or both join in the instability caused by multiple
programs.
There are still further challenges coming along. For one thing, just as the
production of music or video can now be done on a small scale at home, the
production of decor and architectural effects by digital means will become an
amateur possibility. You could download apps to change the decor of your room,
or link you with your partner's office. This might lead to a renewed emphasis on
scenography, which might stimulate new reactions toward abstraction.
But buildings will also be dematerialized in yet another sense, because that
brute opaque stuff is beginning to talk back, to be intelligent on its own. Sensors
in concrete beams and joints are already reporting on the structural strength of
bridges; soon a building will be able to indicate its needs for maintenance.
Buildings already can react to changes of temperature and lighting. Maria Lorena
Lehman points out that with additional sensors in furnishings, and perhaps also
2 For an extreme example of projected decor, see Norman Spinrad's Riding
the Torch (1978), and for pervasive augmented reality, see David Brin's Existence
(2012).
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in the inhabitants' clothes and tools, a building could adapt itself and work to
adapt its inhabitants' behavior.
As technology becomes smaller and evermore mobile, sensors are being
embedded everywhere. This means that those objects which you use every day
will be able to convey data about the way they are used. . . . a smart building can
use its systems to detect patterns and form inferential decisions that impact the
building's behavior. . . . make the necessary environmental changes to qualities
like its temperature, lighting, and acoustics. Also, occupant stress levels could be
determined that could help an environment to regulate itself in an effort to lower
such stress levels. . . . such smart architecture can form a better relationship with
occupants by engaging with them in more meaningful and timely ways. . . . By
analyzing and responding to data being gathered from objects within an
environment, smart architecture can proactively take part in a building's
occupant activities. . . . If an occupant needs help engaging in any type of
behavior change, a smart building can help by providing just-in- time design
interventions. (Lehman 2012)
Such a paternalistic smart building will have come a long way
from Hegel's brute material with externally imposed purposes.
As buildings and the objects in them get smarter and the buildings have a
larger repertory of behaviors to offer, architects will need to extend designs over
time, as circulation patterns become more complex temporal choreographies.
There will be new tools for architects to employ.
Or, someone will employ those tools. Programmers and marketers will be
trying to set parameters for the architects. Again, there will be rivalry for control
and design. Who will program the programmers? And what happens when
different smart systems get juxtaposed? What if the system that controls sunlight
and temperature disagrees with the system that is monitoring your moods?
Eventually, the embedded computers might even get into self-
programming. David Brin imagines computers with access to personal data
acting up: "Air-traffic computers began rerouting flights to where they figured
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passengers ought to be, for optimized personal development, rather than the
destinations embossed on their tickets" (Brin 1998).
So as buildings are dematerialized they again lose their centered unity and
become juxtapositions of different spaces.
Am I then forecasting a hi tech future, magnified versions of early Rogers
and Foster, buildings with exposed bones slamming screens and smart materials
in your face? No, but the technical tools will be available. Admittedly, such
dematerializations will affect only some buildings. Others will be built strongly
opposed to linkage and smart transparency. But the digital and the virtual and
smart materials are likely to be tools increasingly brought inside even self-
consciously material buildings such as Herzog and de Meuron or Tadao Ando
can build.
Think of the most recent Pritzker Prize winner, Wang Shu, who is praised
for reusing and renewing old materials and older Chinese building patterns, but
also for mixing them with today's uses and technology. What is important is
fitting things together, finding new modes of unity within and among the
juxtaposed old and the new.
The capabilities for digital and smart buildings will be out there. Architects
will come to see them as tools that help in dealing with, among other things,
environmental and energy issues. And as in the case of life-cycle analysis of
building materials, architects will eventually have to justify why they are not
taking advantage of these new technologies.
So where are we?
The first trend shows an increasing need for architects to cooperate with
other professionals who may also be their rivals for business. Architects, who
have already been fighting for turf with engineers and interior designers and
decorators and landscapers and obstinate developers, will have to deal with
image makers and game designers and the multiple programmers of intelligent
systems, and soon with crowd-sourced amateur design and programming.
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The second trend points out that The Center is disappearing; there is no
gathering up the whole community in any deep historical identity. When we find
large architectural works that do gather the community, they mostly do so only
into thin social roles. But if we celebrate only thin social roles, our more
substantive history and values get abstracted away, which increases the danger
that everything gets reduced to consumption that maximizes exchange.
The third trend expands possibilities for the architect while posing new
problems. Connectivity, the intrusion of the image and screen, juxtaposition with
other physical and virtual spaces, intelligent buildings and objects with multiple
smart systems, these bring challenges about how to orchestrate transitions
among juxtaposed spaces, and manage conflicting rhythms over time.
Notice that these issues do not duplicate the old oppositions between
eclectic and pure, modern and postmodern, or ironic and sincere. These issues
are not solved by creating a new style; they will arise in any style.
Also, we should note that while the trends I describe are real, they depend
on environmental and economic conditions that are fragile at best. For instance,
the technologies in the third trend can help architects deal with environmental
and energy problems, but those technologies themselves are vulnerable to
disruptions in global trade and shortages of energy and materials that may result
from more severe environmental or economic stress. On the other hand, under
such scarcity the second trend, social fragmentation, could be strongly
magnified.
My philosophical theme has been the move away from hierarchy, centers,
and foundations, and toward juxtaposition. From syntax to parataxis. But my
point now is that there is never only juxtaposition, never only parataxis.
Experiences are not simply juxtaposed isolated moments, now this
appearance, now that. Experiences come linked over time, and they stand in
contrasts to other possible experiences. If a juxtaposition can be experienced at
all, it might be synthesized under established rules, or it might be suggesting
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new contrasts and opening space for new concepts and new rules.3 The absence
of established rules and "grammars" cannot stop new juxtapositions from
bringing new possibilities for meaning and action. Even the most tightly
regulated sets of rules (for formal logic, say, or the game of baseball, or for
behavior in a courtroom) cannot control their borders. They can declare that
"ungrammatical" combinations and actions are illegitimate, but they cannot stop
them from generating new meaning and suggesting new practices. Juxtaposition,
metaphor, transfer, change cannot be walled out.
I have invoked Hegel because he can discern mutual constitutive relations
and mediations among what may seem merely juxtaposed concepts and entities,
especially in social systems.4
Hegel's books are meant to show how the encounter with a single isolated
item of experience, or the concept of a single determinate entity, or the freedom
of an individual property owner, or the meaning of a single art work, only
become possible within a tense skein of relations and mutual dependencies
among experiences, more complex categories of thought, and social institutions.
The innocent sounding idea I cited at the beginning, that "architecture assembles
brute unmeaning matter into structures that receive their purpose and meaning
from outside, from the social practices and values that surround buildings", turns
out to be one piece of a complex vision of art and civic life as a self-interpreting
process expressing itself in constructions. And as that process expands and
deepens insight into what may have seemed accidentally juxtaposed, it is up to
designers to capture those suggestions and invent new forms.
3 What is at stake here are the modes of unity and determinateness in
conceptual and social systems, and this connects to issues about conceptual
holism. Those issues go back to Kant vs. Hume on whether meaningful
experience can happen based on completely unrelated and unconceptualized
units of data. I have pointed at the Hegelian take on that issue, but it could also
be traced down from Neo-Kantians such as Natorp, through Carnap, Quine,
Sellars, and Hilary Putnam.
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New modes of unity are needed for the decentered and juxtaposed design
teams, for the juxtaposed spaces and functions in and among buildings, and for
the new assemblages of sub-communities that do not come together around a
common deep identity, but only in thin functional roles. Architects will continue
to be stretched between applying formulas and opening possibilities through
creating new forms and new modes of unity.
I'll end with Hegel talking in a relaxed mode, about the colonnades in the
vicinity of Greek temples. Listen to the quote keeping in mind our issues about
lack of centrality, community fragmentation, and changes opening new
possibilities:
In these . . . single and double colonnades, which led directly to the free
open air, we see people wandering openly and freely, individually or in
accidental groupings; for the colonnades as such enclose nothing but are the
boundaries of open thoroughfares, so that people walking in them are half
indoors and half outside and at least can always step directly into the free open
air. In the same way the long walls behind the columns do not admit of any
crowding to a central point to which the eye could turn when the passages were
full; on the contrary, the eye is more likely to be turned away from such a central
point, in every direction. Instead of having an idea of a gathering together with a
goal, we see a direction outwards . . . . the whole building is constructed for
standing about in or strolling up and down in or coming and going rather than
for assembling a collection of people and concentrating them there, shut in on
every side and separated from the outside world. (Hegel 1988, vol. 2, p. 675f.)
Can we find our bearings in this open world?
4 I could have invoked Derrida's studies of the way social and textual
"grammars" depend on their not having the absoluteness they claim to have, or
on the relation of decision and policing to the fertility of juxtaposition.
David Kolb
18
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