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Continued
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But all is not lost,
for architects abound in two other groups, The
NYC Infrastructure Task Force, headed by Marilyn Taylor
from SOM and New York/New Visions,
an "unprecedented coalition of planning, architecture, engineering
and design organizations representing over 30,000 professionals"
but, which is in actual practice largely run by the New York AIA. SOMs
offices were close to Ground Zero but despite its genuine concern as a
member of the downtown neighborhood, Taylors organization has become
less visible. In no small measure, I suspect, because of Skidmores
unseemly ties to the developer. For sheer volume of declarative output,
NYNV takes the prize. This group has shown remarkable generosity and worked
unbelievably hard. They are as earnest as the day is long. But, ultimately,
their good intentions have produced a remarkably conventional and unsurprising
set of ideas and proposals given the extremely unconventional circumstances
that have produced one of the most significant urban planning projects
in modern history.
It is precisely these
unconventional circumstances that have all of these organizations banging
heads. But the head-banging is not contentious, no one is trying to bushwhack
or undercut the other. It is rather like very good friends groping their
way along in the dark, apologizing to their neighbor each time a toe is
stepped on. Overt criticality is unseemly, full democracy is perceived
essential to the polity, and the autocratic specialist speaks circumspectly
and defers to popular sentiment. Niceties abound in these weirdest of
days and, so far, the "vision thing" has not been very persuasive.
To further complicate
matters, this straining to see the inchoate future of the World Trade
Center site is burdened by the intense gaze of both the global community
and, at a more local scale, the tourists. Both constituencies have a legitimate
claim to what is a national and international tragedy. Yet, while deliberative
and governing bodies in the international community await a geo-political
response beyond a global attack on Al-Qaeda, and an urban response that
might reflect new US attitudes toward the environment, mega-risers, defensible
architectures, and public space, tourists from many nations have swarmed
to the periphery of Ground Zero.
The city, spurred
on by lost revenue in the wake of the event, suddenly caught its post-9.11wind
and began to move quickly to organize the tourist spectacle.
In January, the Diller+Scofidio,
David Rockwell, and Kevin Kennon Viewing Bridge opened
and artist Mary
Miss project for the chain-link fence facade around the site was
given the go ahead.
As the streets of
Lower Manhattan filled once again, a number of police officers and recovery
firemen complained bitterly of the undue stress that managing the city-encouraged
tourists imposed on them but I also know they were thinking of their peers
who to this day continue quietly and in small groups to rake the ground
before the heavy machinery in search of bodies.
It is easy to forget
that less than half the firemen and police officers killed on 9/11 have
yet to be found or identified. Private affairs as public spectacle is
hard duty.
And that, as they
say, is the News from New York.
Although my remarks
may appear patronizing or cynical here, truly, at heart, I am trying not
to be either. We should all be deeply grateful for the genuine
efforts and good intentions of our colleagues. I also believe that, down
the line, what will be distilled from all of this will be of genuine value.
At the same time, I suspect that whatever this value proves to be, it
will be most unexpected. Indeed, the more dogmatically prescriptive any
one of these groups is, the less it will have to contribute to the others.
We seem to be engaged in a social process that knows no other way to conduct
itself and which feels frustratingly inadequate.
And that brings me
to the issue of the space of Time, the time of Space, and some ideas about
their relationship to social practice in an environment.
II
Cognitive
Maps, Docile Bodies, and Ecological Niches
Earlier I had mentioned
architectures odd capacity to both reflect and determine social
practice. What strikes me as odd is the fact that this seemingly paradoxical
condition of being able to both engineer and exemplify our social activities
seems to have both a synchronic and asynchronic nature. Characteristic
of feedback loops - that cybernetic and counter-intuitive notion which
has screwed forever our romance with the smooth flowing River of Time
- it is a condition that seems to fall weirdly outside of coherent temporality
because of the built-in reflexivity of the relationship and because it
is intrinsic to architecture while often disjunctive in its social consequences.
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The feedback loop works like this: The social body (all of us), which
most of the time barely notices the material and institutional constraints
that architectural space places on it. By this, I mean things as simple
as directing our bodies to turn leftward, say, into the sun and not rightward
into deep shadow, or as complex as the Anita Hill and Clarence Thomas
Hearings where the institutional formation of the rooms classical
space-shape and formal detailing, panoptic arrangement of male-attended
furniture, Washington DC urban milieu rather than, say, Hills home
territory at the University of Oklahoma, and the prime-time scheduling
surely contributed more to their fates than any specific testimony.
Also, of course, is
the often-noted example of the perceptual & conceptual collision between
bin Laden and most Americans architectural understanding and use
of the Twin Towers
pretty different attitudes here of the poetics
of the skyscraper in relation to gravity, Id say as well.
But, getting back
to the feedback loop
the social body, taking care of its daily business,
barely notices these material and institutional constraints that architecture
places on it. Yet, when it does take notice, it typically begins
to question what it is our architectural configurations (whether object
buildings or land-use patterns, etc.) signify about us. It then begins
to imagine new configurations (symbolic, formal, and spatial). These new
architectures, by placing new constraints on our activities, produce,
yet again, new social configurations which, then, acquire new significations
which, in turn, are questioned anew, and so on, and so on. It seems that
it is this critical looping that propels us onward in creative
change and makes for what we call the history of architecture among other
histories, sociological and otherwise.
But what I want to
draw your attention to is the inextricability of this relationship between
the material world - architecture - and our self-identity within it. They
are so embedded in one another that it seems incoherent to think of one
without the other and, further, that even our language terms somehow
always falls short of being able to describe it precisely. One contributing
factor, I think, is that we are still so steeped in the essentialist Cartesian
vocabulary still spinning its wheels over what architecture is
, rather than what it does, not to mention the scratching
of heads over what humanity is
as if we self-studying
organisms could be meaningfully understood in terms of some pure psychological
nature apart from the environment in which we conduct our affairs.
The history of philosophy,
of course, shows this as a fundamental project. More recently, Frederic
Jamieson has edged toward this problem in his logic-of-late-capitalist
spin on Marxist historical-materialism, by suggesting the notion of cognitive
maps to describe how we construct our perceptual and conceptual worlds
in response to the material constraints of architecture. Foucault went
further in his notion of architectures material and institutional
disciplining of what he termed, our docile bodies. Both accounts, among
other things, challenge the idea of the unmediated self by suggesting
that essentialist/existentialist questions like "
who am
I?" dont make much sense in isolation from material, historical,
or social context.
Now, for my part,
Id like to briefly add another story to these because I think the
sweep of its implications is particularly broad. My story takes its theme
from the idea of the ecological niche.
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In ecological thinking, it is truly meaningless to separate the species
from its so-called niche in an environment. The term, ecosystem, stemming
from the Greek word, oikos, which roughly translates to mean "a
place to live", refers to a complex, interrelated network of living
organisms and their nonliving surroundings. Superficially, the relationship
of an ecological niche to a species seems very similar to the relationship
of architecture to Homo sapiens
our particular species. Furthermore,
one might suspect in this analogy that the difficulties I have suggested
in the way we think about the latter might pertain to the former. I dont
think so, if only for the fact that our study and understanding of the
natural world is developing quite nicely, that is, so long as we dont
include ourselves within it.
In any case, here
is the difference as I see it.
Firstly, the idea
of the niche has been reconsidered by most evolutionary biologists because
of what is viewed as an incorrect implication that it is an empty space
in nature simply waiting to be occupied by the likeliest faunal species
that happens to stumble upon it. Whether one is speaking of a savannah,
a mountain range, tidal pool, or whatever, this "stage set"
implication overlooks how the dynamics of biotic information coming from
the organism itself actually produces the niche. Just as there can be
no organism without an environment, so there can be no environment without
an organism. The point is not that a physical world couldnt exist
without the organism, it is simply that this physical world needs to be
constructed, in a sense, in order to become an environment in which
an organism can conducts its affairs. And it is the reciprocal interactions,
the feedback, between the organism and its outer world that makes this
possible.
Richard Lewontin,
the geneticist from your neighborhood, makes the comment that " the
properties of a species map the shape of the underlying external world
and (consequently) the study of organisms is really a study of the shape
of the environmental space. The organisms themselves being but the passive
medium through which we see the shape of the external world".
He goes on to suggest one ask an ornithologist for the description of
a bird and predicts you will hear something like the following: "The
bird eats insects in the summer when they are abundant, but switches to
seeds in the fall. It makes a nest of grass and small twigs held together
with some mud, built about three meters above the ground in the crotch
of a small tree. In the spring and summer, it is found as far north as
55 degrees, but in winter it flies south and is absent at about 40 degrees
latitude. In the spring, males return first to establish breeding territories,
which are later occupied by the returning females" and so on.
He concludes, "Every element in this specification of the environment
is a description of the activities of the bird. As a consequence of the
properties of the animals sense organs, nervous system, metabolism,
and shape, there is a spatial and temporal juxtaposition of bits and pieces
of the world that produces a surrounding for the organism that is relevant
to it." In a nutshell, so to speak, for Lewontin also implicates
the non-dynamic flora to make his case as well, it is almost impossible
to understand the spatial and temporal distribution of any species if
the environment or niche is characterized simply as a property of a physical
locale rather than of a space defined by the activities of the organism
itself.
The Feedback loop,
although most often identified with technological cybernetics and information
theory, has a deep, and some say, originary history, in ecology and field
biology. In fact, it is interesting to note the lexical similarity between
ecology-speak and that of the digital information community (not to mention
the latters excited interest in the computing capability of DNA).
But there is an interesting distinction between its technological use
and its use in ecology. While the concept of a servomotor might be an
example of the former where output and input are carefully regulated via
feedback inhibition to control the resultant condition, in ecology,
feedback into the system produces emergent and unanticipated resultant
conditions. As yet, there is very little conventional control or large-scale
predictability in ecological processes. And to steer a way back to architecture,
I believe this is also the case in our social practices. Worse for us,
the implications of the emergent surprises in our lives are more
dire and we see this each time we get rear-ended by our attempts to move
forward in our relationship not just to the natural environment but also
to the global community.
From our position
as a technology driven, language using, and symbol mongering species,
we have developed scientific thought (and by this I mean both the natural
and social sciences) which places us in the unique position of being capable
of speaking about all the species in the world without any of them speaking
back
"but wait one moment here, fellow, Im not sure you
have it quite right"
this kind of thing never happens. It is
only when we turn this science on ourselves that we get back-talk and
it usually is not to everyones liking. 9.11 is but one example.
And so, without intending
to commit the naturalistic fallacy here, my point is only that this analogy
to the "natural" world seems useful to ponder if only to force
us to think in evolutionary and environmentalist terms about humble origins,
constructing appropriate nests for ourselves, and deep time.
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