About
With regard to its immanent powers, architecture today seems to be both under-challenged and over-charged at the same time. This biomorphic paradigm has reduced architecture's potential to just dealing with issues concerning geometry, form-making, and manufacturing, whilst depriving it of any political impact. On the other hand, there is a programmatic notion of practice which reduces architecture to a predominantly political project, ignoring the fact that a building must eventually embody its contents through its tectonic and formal definition.
At a time when the presence of architecture appears to be both larger than life (given its symbolical value as a media spectacle) and close to irrelevant (with regard to its influence in the actual construction of our overall built environment), it is vital to recalibrate the agency spectrum that architecture can truly inhabit. What is this not-less-and-not-more concept? What are the irreducible and quintessential assets that architecture is able to – and needs to – muster in order to optimise its contribution to the formation of our world? Which aspects of its alleged essence can architecture renounce, and which must it defend at all costs? In view of the increasingly market-driven transformation of the construction sector, architects are exposed to questions such as these on a daily basis. When subjected to constantly changing conditions such as a sudden budget cut, a change of developer or a redefinition of a building's programme, architects are required to develop a strategic intelligence regarding the balancing of effort and effect that needs to occur in order to strike a balance between the architectural effects that they desire and the level of effort permitted by the client or, indeed, the circumstances.
More about the event at Not More Not Less
Related categories
Uploaded videos:
Opening and introduction
Otvoritev simpozija Ne več Ne manj
Apr 22, 2011
·
2651 Views
Opening of the symposium Not More Not Less
Apr 22, 2011
·
2654 Views
Introduction to the symposium Not More Not Less
Apr 22, 2011
·
3000 Views
Lectures
Johnstonmarklee, USA
Apr 22, 2011
·
5032 Views
HHF, Switzerland
Apr 22, 2011
·
3524 Views
MVRDV, The Netherlands
Apr 22, 2011
·
4326 Views
Bel, Germany
Apr 22, 2011
·
3609 Views
History of Architecture and Art, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Apr 22, 2011
·
6606 Views
SADAR+VUGA
Apr 22, 2011
·
5522 Views
Discussion Panels
Discussion first day
Apr 22, 2011
·
2910 Views
Discussion second day
Apr 22, 2011
·
2865 Views