ABSTRACT

Digital Monuments radically explodes "iconic architecture" of the new millennium and its hijacking of the public imagination via the digital image. Hallucinatory constructions such as Rem Koolhaas’s CCTV headquarters in Beijing, Frank Gehry’s Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao and Zaha Hadid’s Performing Arts Centre in Abu Dhabi are all introduced to the world by immortal digital imagery that floods the internet—yet comes to haunt the actualised buildings.

Like holograms, these "digital monuments," which violently push physics and engineering to their limits, flicker eerily between the real and the unreal—invoking fantasies of omnipotence, immortality and utopian cities. But this experience of iconic architecture as a digital dream on the ground conceals from the urban spectator the social reality of the buildings and the rigidity of their ideology.

In 18 micro-essays, Digital Monuments exposes the stereotypes of iconic architecture while depicting the savagery of the industry, from the Greek and Spanish crises triggered by financialised iconic development to mass labour-deaths on construction sites in the UAE.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Architecture’s fake left

part |64 pages

Iconic architecture is the opiate of the masses

chapter 1|8 pages

Digital ghost 1

chapter 2|5 pages

Modernity’s opiate

chapter 3|9 pages

Anti-iconic

chapter 4|6 pages

Reflections from damaged modernity

chapter 5|11 pages

Elysium

chapter 6|11 pages

Loop

chapter 7|12 pages

Sacrifice

part |39 pages

Santiago Calatrava: the Goldman Sachs of the iconic architecture industry?

chapter 9|8 pages

The look of money

chapter 10|8 pages

Futurist iconic

chapter 11|10 pages

The architect-financier

part |70 pages

Just because something bears the aspect of the inevitable one should not, therefore, go along willingly with it.

chapter 12|6 pages

The abuses of iconic architecture

chapter 13|10 pages

The Zaha Hadid scandal

chapter 14|15 pages

Iconic dystopias and moral law

chapter 15|7 pages

The moral contents of the digital image

chapter 16|5 pages

Vagina stadium

chapter 17|7 pages

Autonomy and vanity

chapter 18|18 pages

After iconic architecture