How Buildings Learn
August 27, 2008 6:52 PM Subscribe
How Buildings Learn--Stewart Brand, 1997, BBC, 6 Parts;
Flow,
The Low Road,
Built For Change,
Unreal Estate,
The Romance of Maintenance,
Shearing Layers. "What happens after buildings are built? Why do some buildings get better over time and others get demolished? Stewart Brand says architecture is a prediction, and all predictions are wrong, so the more monumental the architecture, the more wrong the building is. The buildings that thrive are those that can adapt to how people actually use them. The worst buildings for inhabitants are usually statement architecture -- buildings that look like art. The best buildings are often non-descript, and pick up character as they evolve. In other words they grow into art." Kevin Kelley
posted by vronsky (15 comments total)
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I spent several years in one of the buildings he talks about; the MIT Media Lab. It was, indeed, as frustrating and difficult as he described. Much more like a corporate office than a college campus. On the other hand I suspect the building fulfilled it's #1 function: helping raise money with a big name architect and dramatic design. Serving as a home to an academic program was probably an afterthought.
posted by Nelson at 6:56 PM on August 27, 2008