ABSTRACT

Architectural Drawings as Investigating Devices explores how the changing modes of representation in architecture and urbanism relate to the transformation of how the addressees of architecture and urbanism are conceived.

The book diagnoses the dominant epistemological debates in architecture and urbanism during the 20th and 21st centuries. It traces their transformations, paying special attention to Le Corbusier and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s preference for perspective representation, to the diagrams of Team 10 architects, to the critiques of functionalism, and the upgrade of the artefactual value of architectural drawings in Aldo Rossi, John Hejduk, Peter Eisenman, and Oswald Mathias Ungers, and, finally, to the reinvention of architectural programme through the event in Bernard Tschumi and the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA). Particular emphasis is placed on the spirit of truth and clarity in modernist architecture, the relationship between the individual and the community in post-war era architecture, the decodification of design process as syntactic analogy and the paradigm of autonomy in the 1970s and 1980s architecture, the concern about the dynamic character of urban conditions and the potentialities hidden in architectural programme in the post-autonomy era.

This book is based on extensive archival research in Canada, the USA and Europe, and will be of interest to architects, artists, researchers and students in architecture, architectural history, theory, cultural theory, philosophy and aesthetics.

chapter 1|38 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|11 pages

Different ways of relating fiction to reality and architectural drawings

Object-oriented and subject-oriented modes of representation

chapter 3|21 pages

Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier and the modernist ethos

Around the spirit of truth and clarity

chapter 4|35 pages

Individual-community assemblages in post-war era architecture

The dissolution of universality

chapter 5|30 pages

Decodification of design process as syntactic analogy

The primacy of the observer in the 1970s and 1980s

chapter 6|33 pages

Identification of the architect with the architectural artefact

Autobiography vis-à-vis the design process

chapter 7|38 pages

Bernard Tschumi and the intensification of urban conditions

Uncovering the potentialities hidden in the programme

chapter 8|29 pages

Bernard Tschumi's architecture as the discourse of events

Disjunction and a new definition of metropolis

chapter 9|15 pages

Rem Koolhaas and the congestion of metropolis

How the artificial would replace the reality?