ABSTRACT

Projecting forward in time from the processes of design and construction that are so often the focus of architectural discourse, Consuming Architecture examines the variety of ways in which buildings are consumed after they have been produced, focusing in particular on processes of occupation, appropriation and interpretation. Drawing on contributions by architects, historians, anthropologists, literary critics, artists, film-makers, photographers and journalists, it shows how the consumption of architecture is a dynamic and creative act that involves the creation and negotiation of meanings and values by different stakeholders and that can be expressed in different voices. In so doing, it challenges ideas of what constitutes architecture, architectural discourse and architectural education, how we understand and think about it, and who can claim ownership of it.

Consuming Architecture is aimed at students in architectural education and will also be of interest to students and researchers from disciplines that deal with architecture in terms of consumption and material culture.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

part 1|87 pages

Occupations

chapter 2|16 pages

House Behaviour in the Australian Suburb

Consumption, migrants and their houses

chapter 3|13 pages

Performing Their Version of the House

Views on an architectural response to autism

chapter 4|19 pages

Transformation Unwanted!

Heritage-making and its effects in Le Corbusier's Pessac estate

chapter 5|19 pages

A Progressive Attachment

Accommodating growth and change in Álvaro Siza's Malagueira neighbourhood

part 2|93 pages

Appropriations

chapter 6|20 pages

Becoming Visible

Transforming the spaces of apartheid South Africa

chapter 7|21 pages

Simla or Shimla

The Indian political re-appropriation of Little England 1

chapter 8|15 pages

Ideological Regeneration

The Cafesjian Centre for the Arts and the new Yerevan

chapter 9|16 pages

‘The Winter of Discount Tents'

Occupy London and the Improvised Dwelling as Protest

chapter 10|17 pages

On the Origins of Hip Hop

Appropriation and territorial control of urban space

part 3|92 pages

Interpretations

chapter 11|16 pages

‘Why Does it Never Rain in the Architectural Review?'

Photography and the everyday life of buildings

chapter 12|20 pages

Scenarios 'for Poetry Makes Nothing Happen' 1

Art and architectonic urban experimentations

chapter 13|17 pages

Doors Don't Slam

Time-based architectural representation

chapter 14|16 pages

Se11: [Re]Generations

chapter 15|19 pages

Between the Cloud and the Chasm

Architectural journals, waste regimes and economies of attention