Architecture and Its Dissonant
Sadie Wegner
How does one account for the undesirable parts of a city? Where are the coffee table books dedicated to the exposed conduit, neglected side elevations and illicit condenser units that make up so much of our shared urban experience? A majority of the built environment remains untouched by architects – yet it’s the territory that exposes the desires and hidden mechanisms that keep our buildings at work. This project proposes a taxonomy of such unseemliness, which at its root, challenges the architect’s natural impulse to see space as fundamentally abstract and malleable. Through this documentation of episodes of indecision, misalignment, error, the urgency of utility, and disavowed historicism, this project aims to accurately portray the authenticity of an evolving metropolis.
metro-polyptic accretion
thoughtful mistake.
material intersection.
urgency of utility.
coded stories.
the ‘big’ move.
additive nature of an evolving metropolis
Bauhaus style steel-framed windows and concrete in a cold climate calls for additive air conditioner in the summer months.
The famous SHED. Louvre’s appear after years of public gatherings indoors without efficient exhaust locations.
Stealing power, 1970’s style.
blocks - geometric platonic primitives. Pure, yet tainted by the pressures and undesigned corners of an evolving metropolis