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Investigating the 21st Century Emerging Approaches to Practice: Codification of Architectural Epistemes, from Discourses to Practices

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Claudia Mainardi

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Abstract

Given the timeframe of the last 20 years, the research investigates the codification of diverse forms of tacit knowledge in architecture, its transfer, and translation from institutional narratives to principles and conventions that are crystallized in the everyday practice of selected design offices. Positioned into the lines of theories that see architecture as “a product” of a socio-political-economic condition, the aim is to understand how events that have occurred/are occurring in current times influence the professional practice and, consequently, its codes. The work is imagined to be developed through three phases. A first part –conceived as macro- analysis– is proposed as an attempt to reconstruct a historical framework of events not yet historicized; a second and intermediate one identifies the protagonists –or the practices that the research is interested at–; and a third one –as micro- analysis– made of in-depth investigations of case studies selected through the protagonists of the second phase.

Introduction

The research is part of the EU-funded network “TACK: Communities of Tacit Knowledge. Architecture and its ways of knowing” involving 10 PhD candidates over 10 European universities, and 12 non-academic partners between cultural institutions and architecture offices. The general aim of the program is to investigate the tacit-knowledge, or the specific type of knowledge that architects employ when designing, focusing on its particular characteristics, dissemination and heuristic potential within the architectural design practice.

Given the frame and scope, the research –looking at the contemporary panorama, and more precisely the 21th century– aims to investigate –within the European context– the codification of diverse forms of tacit knowledge in architecture, its transfer and translation from institutional narratives to principles and conventions that are crystallized in the everyday 1 Mota, Nelson and Agarez, Ricardo (2015): “The ‘Bread & Butter’ of Architecture,” in: Footprint 9, no. 17. practice of selected design offices. The reflection on the history of the present 2 Robert, Frančois (1993): Écrire l’Histoire Du Temps Présent, Paris: CNRS. could in fact provide useful and significant interpretative tools for both critics, professionals, and teachers.

Background

As outlined by Charles Jencks, the evolution of architectural discourses in the last century could be unpacked in streams 3 Jencks, Charles (1971): Architecture 2000: Predictions and Methods, London: Studio Vista. based on a shared cultural background. Following this analysis the model of authorship in architecture reached the climax at the beginning of 2000 with the affirmation of the star-architect system 4 Picon, Antoine (2016): From Authorship to Ownership: A Historical Perspective, London: Architectural Digest. . Subsequently, as stated by Alejandro Zaera-Polo 5 Zaera-Polo, Alejandro (2016): “Well Into the 21st Century: The Architectures of Post-Capitalism,” El Croquis, no. 187. , in the last decades, the architectural debate seems instead undergoing a fragmentation into a constellations of micro-discourses. Emerging through an increased variety of preoccupations and positions, object of several collective exhibitions that involve a large pool of participants, they epitomize different agencies 6 Cupers, Kenny and Doucet, Isabelle (2009): “Agency in Architecture: Rethinking Criticality in Theory and Practice,” in: Footprint, no. 4, pp. 1–6. . A common thread among current practices is the increased impact of facts external to the disciplinary debate that influence the practice much more than in the past 7 Grossman, Vanessa, Malterre-Barthes, Charlotte, and Miguel, Ciro (2021): Everyday: A Discreet Power in Architecture, Berlin: Ruby Press. and seems to have a strong repercussion in the definition of new aesthetics 8 Nowadays, the most evident challenges of the current societal shift, such as an increased awareness of equality at large –with a particular attention towards the role of women and minorities–, a search for alternatives solutions to globalization and a critical take on the environment and technology after the optimism that had characterized the beginning of the new millennium (Roberts, Bryony (2020): “Expanding Modes of Practice,” Log 48, p. 10.), are the preoccupations that inform the architectural discourse. . Appearing over tacit epistemes 9 Foucault, Michel (2001): The Order of Things: Archaeology of the Human Sciences, New York: Routledge. regardless of manifestos, independently from their geographical location and in most cases without a direct link to consolidated trajectories or traditions, these agencies represent the forefront of the current ways of practicing and the pioneers in the contemporary cultural, social and political context. If, following the position outlined by Petra Čeferin and Cvetka Požar, it is assumed that architectural production is the result of the effort to respond to complex sets of socio-economic, political, cultural, and technological conditions 10 Čeferin, Petra and Požar, Cvetka (2008): Architectural Epicentres: Inventing Architecture, Intervening in Reality, Ljubljana: Architecture Museum of Ljubljana. , nowadays “geopolitical forces, legislative anomalies, environmental situations, and economic and social contradictions redefine every assumption about how to practice architecture” 11 Garutti, Francesco (2020): From Within an Ecology of Practice. CCA, https://www.cca.qc.ca/en/articles/issues/28/with-and-within/73634/from-within-an-ecology-of-practice. . In this sense, the economic crisis of 2008 has represented a major factor in accelerating these tendencies 12 Zaera-Polo, Alejandro (2016), cit. and it is assumed by the research project as a line of demarcation that questions the consolidated structures of the profession. In addition, technological advancements in communication have encouraged exchanges between architects, producing an unprecedented condition of shared epistemes across the globe. In this sense, the argument by Michel Foucault in The Archaeology of Knowledge (1971) on the need to understand a social constructed knowledge 13 Foucault, Michel (1971): The Archaeology of Knowledge. London: Routledge. beyond individuals and cultures, in recent years has not only demonstrated its validity, but it has also become a global phenomenon that can be taken as reference for the analysis.

What, Why, How

The research aims to disentangle the transfer of implicit forms of knowledge between discourses and practices by isolating the process of codification, from institutional narrations to the everyday work of architectural offices. Considering the evolution of the contemporary socio-politic-economic conjuncture 14 Piketty, Thomas (2020): Capital and Ideology. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. and due to the possibility to have access to first hand sources, the research assumes the last twenty years as the frame of the investigation. Even if the exact chronological boundaries have still to be defined, the chosen time-frame –moving in the lines of Ecrire l’histoire du temps Présent (1993) by François Robert as theoretical and methodological reference– will allow to enrich a reflection on the contemporary, reaching relevant, meaningful, and useful discoveries for present times: providing an uncharted knowledge, a theoretical framework and some categories of interpretation for architectural critics, defining new design tools for practitioners, and opening up a reflection on terminology that highlight the emergence of a set of concepts, notions and words as a brand new vocabulary for pedagogy. The work is imagined to be developed through three phases complementary in terms of structure, object and intentions.

The first one –conceived as horizontal macro-analysis– is proposed as an attempt to reconstruct a historical framework in which to outline a system of events not yet historicized aiming to produce tentative cartography of the practice 15 Cuff, Dana (1992): Architecture: The History of Practice, Cambridge: MIT Press. in the 21st century, building up the context of the contemporary debate in architecture –ideally expanding Charles Jencks’ Evolutionary Tree Diagram–. Within this phase, selected institutional occasions such as Biennales and Triennales held since 2000 are used as the research ground, conceived as an observatory on the current practice in order to highlight major themes, recurring protagonists, emerging “epicenters” and geographies 16 Požar, Petra and Čeferin, Cvetka (2008), cit. , and eventually marking paradigmatic shifts 17 Kuhn, Thomas S. (1996): The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. in the discourse. These occasions, due to their recurrence, represent an objective source of information and an instrument of confrontation in its interrelation with the context through time, providing an homogeneous body of knowledge. Among a long list, that in the last decade has grown exponentially making these events act as “new disciplinary agents in architecture” 18 Szacka, Léa-Catherine (2020): Biennials/Triennials: Conversations on the Geography of Itinerant Display, New York: Columbia University Press. , a number of editions was selected in relation to their mediatic impact 19 which indicates the penetration of the concepts described in a single edition among practitioners and the general audience. and relevance for the recent discourse. The exhibitions were selected for different reasons that made them particularly relevant for the research goals: either because they approach an innovative theme that opens new streams of research –i.e., the Istanbul Design Biennale in 2012 for the first time spoke about open-source in relation to architecture and design– or because they contribute to consolidate in a single occasion a series of fragmented discourses into a unique narrative that offers instruments of interpretation for the discipline at large –i.e., the 2nd Chicago Biennale in 2017 curated by Johnston Marklee titled “Make New History” investigated the revival of historicism in contemporary practices 20 Epstein-Jones, Dora, Davidson, Cynthia, and Roberts, Byony (2014): “New Ancients,” Log 31. .– Once the analysis to define the time-frame of the research is formulated, the second phase will identify the protagonists of the contemporary debate, which will focus on the subsequent parts of the research. These practices are offices born in the 21st century whose production has become a reference for professionals and academics at large, after the so-called “architecture of exuberance” –that coincides with the financial crisis of 2008, which triggered the beginning of the decline of the star-architect system as a model–. The research sees such practices as a reaction to a context in which the market is adverse, global public commissions are decreasing, and construction is no longer at the center of production for architecture offices that instead assume research as a fundamental instrument to find models suitable for the current conjuncture.

The selection of the offices is based on their recurrence in the selected edition in Biennales and Triennales, which indicates an interest in their practice by curators, critics and the public. These practices are subsequently analyzed according to several parameters such as: typology of contribution to the events, general built production, role in academies, and critical engagement in the architectural debate in general. A particular attention is given to the way in which these practices define their own agenda, i.e. –just to name a few–: multi-disciplinary collective, research agency, international architectural studio, hybrid practice, etc. Such agencies have been subsequently classified according to two couple of opposed parameters: the impact of theory and practice in their production (from built projects to research –either unsolicited or outlined within academies and international exhibitions– ), and the impact of disciplinary and transdisciplinary preoccupations in their agendas (i.e., either using the historicism as a form of resistance to global markets 21 Zaera-Polo, Alejandro (2016), cit. or looking at other disciplines and current socio-political-economic urgencies as a field to draw upon to define new approaches to architecture). This led to the definition of four macro-approaches:

  1. Offices whose production is mainly theoretical and responds in a trans-disciplinary way to current issues;
  2. Offices whose production is both theoretical and design based, responding in a trans-disciplinary way to current issues;
  3. Offices whose production is mainly theoretical responds to current issues in a disciplinary manner;
  4. Offices whose production is both theoretical and design based, and responds to current issues in a disciplinary manner.

After this general classification, the second phase will culminate with the reconstruction of families/groups of practices in relation to their positioning towards the socio-political-economic conjuncture. The 3rd phase –conceived around “biographies of practices”– analyzes in depth four case studies, each belonging to a different group/agency extracted from the 2nd phase families chart, and ideally characterized by different codes and conventions. Due to the tacit nature of the investigated objects, the analysis are intended to be structured around an ethnographic approach. Such methodology is being tested over the secondment at onsitestudio 22 definied a-priori by the TACK board as part of the PhD offer. that –started in September 2020 and still running– is acting as a pilot case for the ethnographic research, whose analytical categories will be assessed and eventually reiterated with the other practices in order to extract a consistent body of sources 23 Mills, Daniel (2010): Stuff, Cambridge: Polity Press. . The research, finalized at investigating the studio’s method and approach, aims to look on the one hand at the actual design process, while on the other at a whole series of collateral elements that influence it, such as: the workspace, the background of the people participating in the process, the positioning of the firm within the discipline, the real estate market, the reference system and the networking, to name a few. All these subjects will constitute a blueprint eventually reiterated with the other practices. The intention is to place as few a-priori limitations as possible, favoring greater flexibility and adaptation to local contingencies. Rather than following a project vertically, the study is being developed transversally involving as many activities as possible, introducing a certain degree of subjectivity relying on a tacit relationship between research, researched and the final product. As will be shown over the CA2RE + conference in Hamburg, due to COVID-19 restrictions, the investigation has in fact undergone some changes, extending its action between the physical and digital realm: construction sites visits, face-to-face meetings, day-to-day observation of the office routine and design processes, and investigation of the physical archive, but also on-line meetings (both internal and with clients), interviews, production of surveys, on-line server survey, access to the study agenda, etc. All these elements are useful to outline a personal yet multifaceted picture of the design process of the office object of investigation, beyond the constructed image trough which they publicly self-represent themselves.

Product

The above research activities, beyond a volume that will collect the main outcome of the methodological achievements, could lead to two additional distinct products referring respectively to the first and third research phases. Given the amount of data to be processed, the first phase proposes the use of unconventional forms of restitution: –multi-layered thematic maps/interpretative cartography, diagrams, and time-lines–, which are themselves contributions and research tools. The diagrammatic exercise is seen as a search for a position and orientation through an expanded reading of relationality, experimenting methods and tools of the digital humanities 24 Marshall, Anne (2019: “Timeline Drawing Method,” in: Handbook of Research Methods in Preanee Liamputtong (Ed.), Health Social Sciences, Singapore: Springer. . The diagrams are not intended as a final product, but rather as a research instrument and database, a medium to communicate the relevant findings and to serve as mediator between the researcher and possible readers. The third phase instead, as a consequence of the ethnographic investigations conducted on select architectural offices, is proposed to be organized in publications consisting of statements and volumes, one per firm object of study. On the one hand, such format could reinforce the comparative nature of the investigation, on the other the series could embody the multiplicity of contemporary agencies. The objective of each publication should be in fact to extract the codes of each office, ideally offering an overview of today’s ways of practicing. Finally, positioning myself as a researcher with ten years’ experience 25 Practicing both as employee in various offices –ranging from Rem Koolhaas’ OMA/AMO to Stefano Boeri’s Multiplicity.lab passing through the Het Nieuwe Instituut, MVRDV and The Why Factory, among others,– well as with my collective Fosbury Architecture. in exhibition design as an instrument through which to communicate a research/project, in order to recollect the heterogeneous products (from interviews to publications, from videos to photographs, etc.), findings, and methodologies, the format of the exposition could be capable to implicitly unpack the codification process that the research project is looking for. On this purpose, Inge Daniels in her last publication 26 Daniels, Inge (2020): What Are Exhibitions For? : An Anthropological Approach, London: Bloomsbury. explores the potential of exhibitions as methodological tools to create forms of knowledge questioning two main points: on the one hand, the common opinion that exhibitions are the final outcome through which researchers disseminate their findings; on the other hand, the fact of being neutral arrangements of material culture with a primarily didactic purpose. The dissertation sees in fact in the exhibition product the possibility to unfold the project globally, still preserving the heterogeneous nature of its different components. The exhibition could be considered as a site of production, capable of bridging theory and practice, as a medium of experimentation, providing an alternative to the built project as a bearer of the practice of architecture 27 Van Gerrewey, Christophe, Vandeputte, Tom, and Patteeuw, Véronique (2012): “The Exhibition as Productive Space,” OASE, no.88 .

  1. Mota, Nelson and Agarez, Ricardo (2015): “The ‘Bread & Butter’ of Architecture,” in: Footprint 9, no. 17.
  2. Robert, Frančois (1993): Écrire l’Histoire Du Temps Présent, Paris: CNRS.
  3. Jencks, Charles (1971): Architecture 2000: Predictions and Methods, London: Studio Vista.
  4. Picon, Antoine (2016): From Authorship to Ownership: A Historical Perspective, London: Architectural Digest.
  5. Zaera-Polo, Alejandro (2016): “Well Into the 21st Century: The Architectures of Post-Capitalism,” El Croquis, no. 187.
  6. Cupers, Kenny and Doucet, Isabelle (2009): “Agency in Architecture: Rethinking Criticality in Theory and Practice,” in: Footprint, no. 4, pp. 1–6.
  7. Grossman, Vanessa, Malterre-Barthes, Charlotte, and Miguel, Ciro (2021): Everyday: A Discreet Power in Architecture, Berlin: Ruby Press.
  8. Nowadays, the most evident challenges of the current societal shift, such as an increased awareness of equality at large –with a particular attention towards the role of women and minorities–, a search for alternatives solutions to globalization and a critical take on the environment and technology after the optimism that had characterized the beginning of the new millennium (Roberts, Bryony (2020): “Expanding Modes of Practice,” Log 48, p. 10.), are the preoccupations that inform the architectural discourse.
  9. Foucault, Michel (2001): The Order of Things: Archaeology of the Human Sciences, New York: Routledge.
  10. Čeferin, Petra and Požar, Cvetka (2008): Architectural Epicentres: Inventing Architecture, Intervening in Reality, Ljubljana: Architecture Museum of Ljubljana.
  11. Garutti, Francesco (2020): From Within an Ecology of Practice. CCA, https://www.cca.qc.ca/en/articles/issues/28/with-and-within/73634/from-within-an-ecology-of-practice.
  12. Zaera-Polo, Alejandro (2016), cit.
  13. Foucault, Michel (1971): The Archaeology of Knowledge. London: Routledge.
  14. Piketty, Thomas (2020): Capital and Ideology. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  15. Cuff, Dana (1992): Architecture: The History of Practice, Cambridge: MIT Press.
  16. Požar, Petra and Čeferin, Cvetka (2008), cit.
  17. Kuhn, Thomas S. (1996): The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  18. Szacka, Léa-Catherine (2020): Biennials/Triennials: Conversations on the Geography of Itinerant Display, New York: Columbia University Press.
  19. which indicates the penetration of the concepts described in a single edition among practitioners and the general audience.
  20. Epstein-Jones, Dora, Davidson, Cynthia, and Roberts, Byony (2014): “New Ancients,” Log 31.
  21. Zaera-Polo, Alejandro (2016), cit.
  22. definied a-priori by the TACK board as part of the PhD offer.
  23. Mills, Daniel (2010): Stuff, Cambridge: Polity Press.
  24. Marshall, Anne (2019: “Timeline Drawing Method,” in: Handbook of Research Methods in Preanee Liamputtong (Ed.), Health Social Sciences, Singapore: Springer.
  25. Practicing both as employee in various offices –ranging from Rem Koolhaas’ OMA/AMO to Stefano Boeri’s Multiplicity.lab passing through the Het Nieuwe Instituut, MVRDV and The Why Factory, among others,– well as with my collective Fosbury Architecture.
  26. Daniels, Inge (2020): What Are Exhibitions For? : An Anthropological Approach, London: Bloomsbury.
  27. Van Gerrewey, Christophe, Vandeputte, Tom, and Patteeuw, Véronique (2012): “The Exhibition as Productive Space,” OASE, no.88