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USE -
Uncertain States of Europe | |||||||||||||||||||||
|||||||||||||||| The history of European architecture is not the
evolutionary history of one or more constant "styles," but rather a
succession of colonizations and external reinterpretations of monuments and
cultures of inhabitation within a tolerant and "open" system of rules.
Fundamentally, European space is transformed by accumulation, addition, and
superimposition, but rarely by outright replacement or elimination. The
invention of new urban entities, new typologies of habitat, does not depend on
tabula rasa, as it may in other cultures of inhabitation; rather it demands the
reuse and reconversion of the existing urban materials.
European space has
extended in the past toward Asia, it has colonized parts of America, and it has
more recently contracted with the phenomena of globalization: because the
European territory is not a system of national states, nor the perimeter in
which a tradition is perpetuated. It is a highly particular mode of change and
innovation of the space.But in the contemporary European city, the interaction
between global energies and local structural conformations has radically altered
the relation between the principles of variation and difference. Today the
principle of difference no longer acts between contiguous and diachronic urban
components (i.e. between the nineteenth century city and the Renaisssance city,
between the modern suburb and the 19th century grid, etc.) but rather between
the single molecules of the urban organism's vast territorial sprawl: between
the family house and the contiguous shopping mall, between the shopping mall and
the adjacent low rise building, between the car wash and the industrial shed
with the built-in house, etc. In the same way, the principle of variation does
not have effect within the boundaries of vast or compact urban parts, but rather
operates with the declination of a few families of urban forces that regulate
the composition of the emerging city. This variation is thus reduced to infinite
adaptations, conformations these elementary components can take on through
surprising leaps and improvised solutions in varying territorial
contexts.
The exploration of the new European territories marks the end of the
syntactical dispositif of territorial organization and innovation which seemed
to allow for a deeper identification of the distinctive features of European
cultural identity. The dynamics appear chaotic, unpredictable in their
trajectory, and therefore all the more powerfully charged with uncertainty.
Indeed, a gaze that observes the mutations in real time, that samples
portions of time and circumstances of transformation, can encounter forms of
autopoietic innovation of inhabited space. Places and territories that seem able
to adapt in original terms to the great global energies; limits within which the
local dispositif of innovation-and not simply change-begins to fully manifest
its staying power and long duration. In the new territories of diffuse
urbanization, all these forms of innovation in inhabited space encounter
an initial friction that rearticulates them into a limited series of
evolutionary assonances; a series of mechanisms that composes these individual
acts within the major waves of change. These mechanisms can be described
with the help of metaphors:
-Linear attractors
(heterogeneous sequences of linear development, especially along major axes that
establishes the orientation and constitutes the major reference
point);
-Bowling pins (introduction of autonomous elements on the
terrain);
-Islands (appearance of introverted "islands" within which
similar objects and lifestyles are reproduced);
-Cloning zones
(spontaneous repetition of the same urban elements within definite
limits);
-Grafts ("insertions" by the replacement of
elements);
-Zones of metamorphosis (molecular processes of "internal
transformation" susceptible of radically altering the symbolic but also the
spatial identity of an area).
These patterns reflect a
limited number of dynamics of basic interaction at work in the construction of
our territory through the self-organization of our society into subsystems,
conducted by "minorities" which act as microcosms of autopoiesis (extended
families, ethnic and professional clans, cultural communities, leisure or consumer
associations) … "Self-organization" in this context is not used to mean
only spontaneity, informal or non institutional character of the processes of
territorial change. Rather, self organization - which often creates spaces of
innovation- means above all that settlement rules (that give order to a certain
set of individual tremors) are produced and shared by subjects that participate
in the system itself.
European space, which is a palimpsest of projects sedimented in time,
is also today the field of action for an
indeterminate and changing number of subjects, many of whom maintain a temporary
relationship with the territory. A battle of codes and interpretations
ceaselessly unfolds upon this field, which is continually being rewritten, where
almost nothing is ever erased, where the long-term structures are often
temporarily hidden by others which are less powerful and enduring, but currently
more visible. I really think that the new themes for the architecture practice
are all there: the capacity to intervene in mechanisms of individual
variation, the care of new and temporary community spaces, the attempt to
use the economic power of certain building processes to produce a symbolic added
value that redeems them from their egotism. But a new paradigm for
interpretation of the emerging city is needed, one that can take the place of
the one we have inherited from the sixties.
Uncertain States of Europe
(USE) is an ongoing collective research project that explores the relation
between territorial mutation and self-organization. Whether born of need or
opportunism, innovation and change derive from unplanned and barely regulated
processes. Phenomena are created and shaped by the actors taking part in a
particular system, rather than by external and imposing institutions. Thus they
rely on individual or specialized, as opposed to centralized knowledge; they do
not correspond to hierarchical or centralized regulation systems but are the
result of a temporal thickening of local structures. To understand the relation
between territorial and social transformation, the USE Project has created
"eclectic atlases." We had to disperse our efforts, to spread out across a huge
environment (more than 60 people in over 50 different countries), recognizing
that the most interesting innovations are often not to be found in the center.
More often they are located in the periphery, in the marginal hidden areas
beyond the perimeter of our gaze. What we have seen is not simply change, not
architecturally recognizable change; we are seeing
processes of radical spontaneity really able to produce new effects in the
physical environment, which at the same time provoke a high degree of
uncertainty.
The documents are heterogeneous, but similar in their visual approach.
They take the form of an "atlas" in so far as they seek new correlations between
spatial elements, the words we use to name them, and the mental images we
project upon them. And they are eclectic because the basic criteria of these
correlations are often multidimensional, new and experimental … These atlases
most often observe the territory from several viewpoints at once: from above but
also through the eyes of those who live in the space, or on the basis of new,
impartial and experimental perspectives. By adroitly interlacing the viewpoints,
the eclectic atlases propose a multiple visual thinking that abandons the utopia
of a synoptic vision from an optimal angle of observation. This research
paradigm offers a new "strategy" of vision, and suggests four major revisions of
the techniques for the representation of the territory.
-First, the new paradigm seeks
to account for the mutations in real time, introducing a temporal element which
is generally absent from the disciplines that study inhabited
space.
-Second, it proposes observations limited to certain samples of the
territory, with an attitude of hunting for clues, testimony, and indicators that
are often temporary and have been left behind in the space by new, as yet
unstandardized behaviors.
-Third, this logic of
sampling supplements the zenith view through a system of coordinates and
criteria which are used for the choice of the punctual places of research, and
for the comparison of the results.
-And fourth, the new
paradigm inquires into the identity of those who inhabit the space and construct
its representations. In other words, it seeks to enrich the notion of the
"landscape" by research into the complex identity of its users, and into the
forms of the dynamic perception and memorization of the inhabited
territories.
The maps produced by interweaving these four "lateral" gazes are
attempts to observe the territory while it changes. The USE project is born of a
sampling of the places and processes of mutation, whereby
European space and its intense, unlimited activity finally comes to light. And
uncertainty transforms into innovation.

This is an excerpted, condensed version, edited by Joanne Richardson for subsol. Original published in ?
One of the USE case studies, Post-It City by Giovanni La Varra, can also be found in subsol.