➔ Unfolding Maps — GIS API for Processing.
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Cities Are Not as Big a Deal as You Think
➔ Cities Are Not as Big a Deal as You Think — “The UN estimates that only one in eight people live in a megacity. “The seven of eight people who are not living in the megacity of the future are going to live in horizontal forms of cities that are disconnected in some way or another from their nearest center city,””
Léopold Lambert has prepared this meticulous “Chrono-Cartography of the 1871 Paris Commune”
Animal infrastructures
➔ Animal infrastructures — “The growing temptation will be to turn to engineered animals, rather than to existing equipment or inanimate machines, to perform future urban work for us.”
The Economist on Matthew Rognlie’s theory linking inequality to housing.
➔ The Economist on Matthew Rognlie’s theory linking inequality to housing. — “The return on non-housing wealth, in fact, has been remarkably stable since 1970 (see chart). Instead, surging house prices are almost entirely responsible for growing returns on capital.”
Neil Brenner asks if “tactical urbanism” is an alternative to neoliberal urbanism?
Owen Hatherley: What happened in Vegas should have stayed in Vegas
➔ Owen Hatherley: What happened in Vegas should have stayed in Vegas — “There is an alternative to ‘learning from’, and it’s not a return to arrogant form-giving, it’s ‘working with’.”
Sam Jacob on post digital representation in architecture
➔ Sam Jacob on post digital representation in architecture — “collage is now seamless, and not being able to see the join makes collage work in a very different way. In short, it’s Photoshop rather than Grasshopper that is the real site of productive digital speculation.”
Smart cities ‘will destroy democracy’
➔ Smart cities ‘will destroy democracy’ — “As the tech companies bid for contracts, Haque observed, the real target of their advertising is clear: “The people it really speaks to are the city managers who can say, ‘It wasn’t me who made the decision, it was the data.’””
Mackenzie Wark on Keller Easterling’s new book on infrastructure, ‘Extrastatecraft’
➔ Mackenzie Wark on Keller Easterling’s new book on infrastructure, ‘Extrastatecraft’ — “Infrastructure is how power deploys itself, and it does so much faster than law or democracy.”
Scripted Movement Drawing Series 1, Andrew Kudless
➔ Scripted Movement Drawing Series 1, Andrew Kudless — via BLDGBLOG. We give robots welding torches, vacuum grippers and saws; why not pencils or brushes?
Courtney Humphries, “The city is an ecosystem, pipes and all”
➔ Courtney Humphries, “The city is an ecosystem, pipes and all” — “Cities may strike us as the opposite of “the environment”: As we pave streets and erect buildings, nature comes to feel like the thing you find somewhere else. But scientists working in the growing field of urban ecology argue that we’re missing something. A city’s soil collects pollutants, but it also supports a vast system of microscopic life. Water courses beneath roads and buildings, often in long-buried streams and constructed pipes. And city ecosystems aren’t static; they change over time as populations grow, infrastructure ages, and different political structures and social values shape them. Seen this way, the city is a distinct form of “environment,” and an important one.”
The Marriage of Reason and Squalor: drawings by Pier Vittorio Aureli
➔ The Marriage of Reason and Squalor: drawings by Pier Vittorio Aureli — “Pieces of architecture-in-waiting that, despite rejecting a precise programme, are waiting sheet after sheet, to turn into something better defined, which is not necessarily architecture.”
socks-studio: Rock Drawings, by Richard Long…
Corner Solutions of Mies Van Der Rohe’s towers
➔ Corner Solutions of Mies Van Der Rohe’s towers — Details from a 1972 issue of Architectural Review, via SOCKS Studio.
