ABSTRACT

Chapter 1 delves into the growing significance of playfulness as a defining characteristic in contemporary architecture and establishes a novel conceptual framework to explore this phenomenon. Challenging long-held notions in mainstream architectural history, it presents a revised Vitruvian Triad that replaces the traditional principles of utility, stability, and beauty with the existential, the constructional, and the interactive. The chapter then historicizes the shifting tactics and state of playfulness in modern architecture, from the murmurs of spatial playfulness in the shadow of functionalism to intellectual playfulness in the era of the plural. This is followed by a discussion on the playful turn in contemporary architecture in the context of moving towards a weightless humanity, covering three overlapping dimensions: constructional, aesthetic, and programmatic playfulness. Breaking new critical ground to explore the trajectories of architecture and humanity from a global perspective, the chapter shows that the ludification of human experiences and built environments represents a peaceful approach to restructuring social relations in response to one of the most profound changes in history: the diminishing value of human labor in production.