|
Tremors
The "grammar" of the
new city is built of elementary phrases, rather than articulated statements of clearly
distinguishable categories. This is the
effect of the invasion of a multitude of solitary and agglutinated built
objects, produced by a society that has democratically constructed
territories that resemble itself. A multi-dimensional interpretation of
the contemporary city, however, reveals a territory which is not chaotic.
If one observes the forms through which this pulviscular innovation
condenses and coagulates into major tremors of physical space and major
evolutional patterns, one immediately notices the importance that
self-organizional processes take on in contemporary western
space.
Self-organisation Changes
The contemporary urban realm brings together a multitude of
distinct, asynchronous tremors within a series of regular movements -
distinct in rythm, duration and intensity- of material. Each of these
regular movements is replicated in distant, disconnected spaces and
reveals, in the tension flowing in the physical material and its jolts, a
certain specific self-organization of the social relations and
decision-making processes. "Self-organization" in this context is not used
to mean only spontaneity, informal or non institutional charatacter 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.
These are relational rules, designed and eventually readapted throughout
time by the forces acting within the system; rules that often take on,
together with the linguistic set appropriate to that system, a common and
coded meaning.
Syntax
Thus, behind the aesthetic
chaos produced by the apparently incongruous juxtaposition of monads aware
only of their own individual trajectories, we witness the appearance of an
entirely different phenomenon: the excessive power of a few principles of
order.The "syntax" of the new cities consists of a limited number of
organisational rules and a multitude of phrases; it is an impoverished
language making ever repeated use of only small parts of its rich
vocabulary.
Stefano Boeri teaches at the
universities of Venice and Lausanne as well as conducting independent
research and design. He contributes regularly to the cultural pages of "Il
Sole 24 Ore", main Italian economic newspaper. His research centers around
the interface of architecture and urbanism with a focus on new conditions
for European City. With the photographer Gabriele Basilico, he is author
of "Italy. Cross Sections of a Country" (Scalo publisher, 1998), an
eclectic atlas of contemporary Italian urban landscape. Recently, his work
has appeared in the Mutations exhibition in (AA.VV, Mutations, Actar,
Barcelona, 2000), where –together with the Multiplcity research group- he
exhibited the installation "USE-Uncertain States of Europe".His office is
involved in many transformation projects in portual areas in the
Mediterranean (Genoa, Naples, Mytilene, Salerno, Trieste). Recently, he
has been invited to represent Italy at the 'New Trends in Architecture
Europe-Japan' international exhibition (Tokyo, Porto, Rotterdam,
2001).
|
|