ABSTRACT

At a time when the technologies and techniques of producing the built environment are undergoing significant change, this book makes central architecture’s relationship to industry. Contributors turn to historical and theoretical questions, as well as to key contemporary developments, taking a humanities approach to the Industries of Architecture that will be of interest to practitioners and industry professionals, as much as to academic researchers, teachers and students. How has modern architecture responded to mass production? How do we understand the necessarily social nature of production in the architectural office and on the building site? And how is architecture entwined within wider fields of production and reproduction—finance capital, the spaces of regulation, and management techniques? What are the particular effects of techniques and technologies (and above all their inter-relations) on those who labour in architecture, the buildings they produce, and the discursive frameworks we mobilise to understand them?

part I|25 pages

Architecture and the representation of industry

part II|46 pages

Architecture responds to industry

chapter 4|10 pages

The collaborations of Jean Prouvé and Marcel Lods

An open or closed case?

chapter 5|11 pages

The production of the Commons

Mies van der Rohe and the art of industrial standardisation

chapter 6|12 pages

Modular men

Architects, labour and standardisation in mid-twentieth-century Britain

chapter 7|12 pages

Post-1965 Italy

The ‘Metaprogetto sì e no'

part III|50 pages

The construction site

chapter 9|12 pages

Dessin/Chantier

An introduction

chapter 10|8 pages

Architecture as ensemble

A matter of method

chapter 12|10 pages

Construction sites of utopia

part IV|44 pages

The work of architects

chapter 13|11 pages

Architectural work

Immaterial labour

chapter 14|12 pages

Form as/and utopia of collective labour

Typification and collaboration in East German industrialised construction

chapter 15|11 pages

Tools for conviviality

Architects and the limits of flexibility for housing design in New Belgrade

part V|29 pages

Economy

chapter 17|7 pages

Building design

A component of the building labour process

chapter 19|11 pages

Financial formations

part VI|46 pages

Law and regulation

chapter 20|9 pages

French architects' use of the law

chapter 21|12 pages

The architectural discourse of building bureaucracy

Architects' project statements in Portugal in the 1950s

chapter 22|10 pages

Regulatory spaces, physical and metaphorical

On the legal and spatial occupation of fire-safety legislation

chapter 23|12 pages

Common projects and privatised potential

Projection and representation in the Rotterdam Kunsthal

part VII|45 pages

Technologies and techniques

chapter 24|12 pages

The electrification of the factory

Or the flexible layout of work(s)

chapter 25|11 pages

An ‘architecture of bureaucracy'

Technocratic planning of government architecture in Belgium in the 1930s

chapter 27|9 pages

Performativity and paranoia

Or how to do the ‘Internet of Things' with words

part VIII|34 pages

Contemporary questions

chapter 28|5 pages

On site

chapter 29|6 pages

Bim

The pain and the gain

chapter 30|8 pages

The sustainable retrofit challenge

What does it mean for architecture?

chapter 31|5 pages

Risk and reflexivity

Architecture and the industries of risk distribution