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Manmade Modular Megastructures | ![]() |
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Manmade Modular Megastructures | ![]() |
Humanity has come a long way since the first modular mega–structure was built at Ur, on land that is now Iraq. There, four millennia ago, and by hand, the Sumerians built a mud–brick ziggurat to their Gods. Today, the green deities of Nature we have invented for ourselves are worshipped with humility. Eco–zealots argue against the mechanised megaforming of landscape and the modularised production of megastructures.
The guest editors, Jonathan Schwinge and Ian Abley of the London based research organisation audacity, call for development on a bold scale. They argue that by rapidly super–sizing the built environment society is not made vulnerable to natural or man–made hazards, and that design innovation surpasses bio–mimicry. Designers can learn from materials scientists working at the smallest of scales, and from systems manufacturers with ambitions at the largest. This issue calls for creative thinking about typologies and topologies, and considers what that also means for Africa, China, and Russia. Megacities everywhere demand integration of global systems of transport, utilities and IT in gigantic structures, constantly upgraded, scraping both the sky and the ground, outward into the sea.
作者简介 Ian Abley, RIBA, is a practicing architect and founder of Audacity. Audacity is a campaigning company that advocates developing the man–made environment, using manufacturing on the grandest of architectural scales. It organizes authoritative international research, large conferences, and a provocative website – www.audacity.org Abley is also co–author with James Woudhuysen of Why is construction so backward?.
Jonathan Schwinge was a scholarship student at the Architectural Association. His fourth–year diploma project ‘Airlander’ was exhibited at Imagination’s Ford Journey Zone in the Greenwich Millennium Dome. His final–year project ‘Lost–Exchange’ won the Grand Prize and Category Prize for the Bentley Systems Student Design Competition, USA 2000. Jonathan currently works at Allies and Morrison architects. Jonathan is working with Ian to turn www.audacity.org into a commercial website – a portal for architectural ideas.
编辑推荐 Review
"[Abley′s] enthusiasm for the idea of the megastructure...is compelling" (Prospect Magazine, April 2006)
"...compelling...plots an intelligent course..." (Prospect Architecture Scotland, April 2006)
Review
"[Abley′s] enthusiasm for the idea of the megastructure...is compelling" (Prospect Magazine, April 2006)
"...compelling...plots an intelligent course..." (Prospect Architecture Scotland, April 2006)