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October 2007

Introducing Superspatial

Zaha Hadid parametric urbanism

Just a quick note to mention the launch of a new collaborative weblog, called Superspatial, that I am involved in.

Superspatial will focus on architecture, urbanism and architectural speculation, while Kosmograd will hopefully become more refined in tackling issues of disurbanism, urban representation and virtual space.

Currently the only other author on Superspatial is Lewis Martin, from the excellent Helsinki-focussed archi-blog lewism. If you are interested in joining in, get in touch.

Some recent posts on Superspatial:

004. The urban futures of rising tides

003. A bridge too far?

002. Parametric Urbanism on the Thames Estuary

001. Seattle Art Museum Sculpture Park

36 posters by Willi Kunz

Willi Kunz montage

Whilst browsing the MOMA recent acquisitions site, as you do, I noticed that 39 Posters by Willi Kunz,, created for Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture Planning and Preservation lecture series, have been added to the MOMA collection.

These brought back some powerful memories. I saw them pinned up at college by a tutor who must have been on Columbia's mailing list - I knew I should have pinched them off the wall. And I was in New York in 1990 and went to the Jean Baudrillard lecture shown here.

I've created a Flickr set of 36 of them. Taken as a whole they are quite overwhelming, too much to take in - I find myself sucking for air. Poring over them individually, you can see a master at work, a perfect blending of typographic control and expressive composition.

Willi Kunz posters for Columbia GSAPP

Willi Kunz. (American, born 1943). Columbia University, Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation Lecture Series Fall 1984. 1984. Lithograph, 24 x 12" (61 x 30.5 cm). Gift of the designer


As Ellen Lupton wrote in an essay originally intended for Kunz' book Micro + Macroaesthetics:

"Kunz explained in Octavo, “Through the translation of architectural elements into typography, the posters present a visual summary of the quality and spirit of the events they announce.” In a series of posters for architectural lectures and exhibitions at the GSAPP, this act of “translation” takes form through grid-like geometric frameworks, partially filled in with color or expressed with rules, which serve both to create abstract compositions and to organize information. Kunz uses typographic bars and the play of positive and negative space to suggest metaphoric “floors” and “foundations,“openings in a wall surface, and symbolic staircases.

 

Kunz began designing this series of bi-annual posters in 1984. The series, which Kunz continues to produce today, is a remarkable document of one designer’s work for a single client over more than a decade. The posters’ consistent format and precise focus link them into a coherent sequence, while allowing Kunz remarkable room for variation. It is fascinating to watch his use of color, form, and typography shift to reflect changing ideas in the architectural world."

SimCity Societies

SimCity Societies

SimCity Societies

SimCity Societies

SimCity Societies

Due out in November, (you can preorder it here), SimCity Societies promises to let you build cities anyway you want to. Taking a different approach to previous SImCity incarnations, it's less about planning infrastructure and more about shaping a society.

It looks like it'll feature a fairly sophisticated 3D building editing toolset too.

Perhaps I'll get further with simulating Okhitovich's Red City of the Planet of Communism with this version than with previous versions of SimCity.

EDGE CITY CHRONICLES

Recent Comments

RECENT READING

  • OM Ungers

    Ungers

    The late Oswald Mathais Ungers is much missed, but this book from 1997, published by Skira, is a fascinating document of a truly original architectural thinker.

    The book is divided into 2 parts. The first part of the book is the essay The Dialectic City, a meditation on the nature of the modern city that shows Ungers influence on Koolhaas and others.

    The second half of the book, is a series of 8 competition projects created by Ungers and 1991-1995, under 2 themes: The City as Layer and Complementary Places, exploring and expanding concepts from the initial essay.

  • Smout Allen

    Augmented Landscapes

    The latest in Princeton Architectural Press' Pamphlet Architecture series, this booklet by British duo Mark Smout and Laura Allen is, like most of the PA series, a jewel of a book.

    Through five projects, Smout Allen explore territories at the margins of cities, limnal areas, man-made landscapes such as the marshes of Essex, the dunes of north Norfolk, or the fens of Cambridgeshire.

    There's a playful approach to landscape and architecture in the work of Smout Allen, perfectly fitting the Pamphlet Architecture format, but there are also serious issues, looking anew at interzones and hinterlands that have been neglected by mainstream architectural thought, and barely considered by a landscape profession that is still dominated by the picturesque.

  • Arjen Van Susteren (designed by Joost Grootens)
    Metrpolitan Atals
    Now in it's second edition, this book from 010 Publishers in Rotterdam is great to dip in and out of. Beautifully designed by Joost Grootens, it sits at the intersection of cities, graphic design and typography, and offers an abstract graphical, visual and analytical comparison between the various cities and conurbations of the world.

    While there are some inconsistencies, especially in English place names versus local place names, this is a great reference book on density, population and other urban indicators such as data, travel, expenditure etc. The maps demarcate a hard urban edge for each cities, and defining their urban form as abstract shapes.

  • Stephen Holl
    Edge of a city

    I've been carrying this book around with me for a while now, and it's been infecting my dreams. I've dreamt of flooding Potters Bar and Enfield Chase, creating a lake, a hard edge onto which a shimmering new London skyline could be built.

    This book, number 13 in the Pamphlet Architecture series, explores a number of strategies for restraining growth and countering sprawl on a city edges. The theoretical projects proposed by Holl over megalithic structures defining hard edges between urban and rural. In Pheonix, for instance, Spatial Retaining Bars are series of housing blocks (looking like mini CCTV towers) which define the desert's edge.

    Great stuff, and like the rest of the Pamphlet Architecture series, food for thought.

  • Metis

    This book by Metis (Mark Dorrian & Adrian Hawker) documents 4 theoretical projects undertaken by Metis exploring different urban conditions in 4 different cities, plus an installation at a gallery in Edinburgh. The proposals combine rigorous analysis with acts of supreme wilfulness, bringing that spark of imagination, the moment of inspiration, that adds a lyrical narrative edge to the creative process.

    Perhaps the most intriguing proposal featured is set in Ottawa, Canada. Called Micro urbanism, the project for the edge of Parliament Hill, explores the notion that the city might be folded within the confines of the site, creating a dense multiplicty of functions and relations. Metis then take 18 sections from the grid of Ottawa as the basis for a set of narrative elements, which are then compressed into the site via a series of topological transformations. Great stuff.

  • MVRDV

    After FARMAX - Excursions on Densities, comes another blockbuster from Dutch architectural practice MVRDV: KM3 - Excursions on Capacities. It's another info-dense roller coaster into a world of improbably solutions to all-to-real problems. "KM3 is a city that is constantly under construction, with space for limitless populations and possibilities. Yet KM3 is a hypothesis, a theoretical city, and a possible urban theory."

    This is the best kind of architectural science fiction.

  • Mike Davis

    Mike Davis turns his sights away from Los Angeles and towards the phenomenon of global slums, and starts shooting away with his trademark machine gun prose style, a rat-a-tat-tat staccato of globalized urban poverty, misery, and exploitation, backed up with plenty of reading and research, but no first hand experience.

    Davis' doomsaying Marxist critique of Structural Adjustment Programs, government housing reforms and micro-economic self-help is relentless, but ultimately nihilistic - nothing works, the population of an urban poor underclass is growing, and things are getting worse.

    There are no solutions offered in the book, not even glimpses into possibilities, small scale case studies or broad brush strokes to start a debate. It's powerful stuff, but it must be hard being Mike Davis.

  • Sophia Vyzoviti
    The follow-up to Folding Architecture, these exploration by Vyzoviti and her students, an intuitive, hands-on process of paper-folding is used as the starting point for architectonic investigations, a perfect antidote to much computer modelling and form-making.

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