Sandra Anitowska
Tobb University Department of Architecture , Ankara Turkey
Keywords
Urban Archi-scapes, Rem Koolhaas, OMA, AMOMA, The carpet theory, Scape,
contemporary city, The City of the Captive Globe (CCG), Singapore,CCTV, Delirious New York,
“an (exploded mountain, a highrise, and a rice field in every
direction—nothing between
excessive height and the lowness of a continuous
agricultural/light-industrial crust, between
7the sky-scraper and the scraped. Scape©, neither city nor landscape, is
the arena for a terminal
juxtaposition between architecture and landscape, the apotheosis of the
Picturesque©”
Archiscape, landscape, introduction and genesis of terminology
The term SCAPE © introduced by Rem Koohlas, articulates to us how to free ourselves from traditional
terminology and thinking. The dialectical nouns town-scape and land-scape are
not considered separately, but are conjoined to form a singular expression.
SCAPE © is an idiom for the city, in which the distinction between center and
periphery, between inside and outside, between figure and ground is erased.
Kolhass defines “a city” as a combination of various shapes and spaces
that extend beyond our field of vision (it is continuous). In other words, he
looks at a city in terms of its Topology, which is defined as the mathematical
study of shapes and spaces. A city might be made up of structures of different
shapes, sizes and material, all in all
everything that makes up that city comes together to form a complete picture
that represents an urban area with a personality.
Each part or structure in the city serve the purpose of working together
to form a fully functional institution which Koolhaas calls a city. In other
words, the city is an “interconnected tissue”
Metaphorically a beautiful city follows the same rules that we follow in
our daily lives. We expect harmony and patterns and smooth transitions in our
lives, but the excitement, the lessons and the beauty in our live comes from
the unexpected moments and the random actions, that we decide to take.
Similarly a “beautiful city” in todays modern world is defined by its
differences. The differences in, for example the heights of the structures, the
different shape of them, their different functions and smooth spaces give the
city a hint of randomness, thus making it spontaneous and beautiful. This idea
of differences making a city beautiful, is different from the traditional
architectural expectations of evenness and order in the urban landscape.
In Koolhaase’s perspectives iInfrastructure, architecture, and landscape
represent one union. Instead of highlighting their differences and treating
them as separate ideas, Koolhaases approach aims to represent these three
concepts as one.
When architecture is thought to
be landscape, infrastructure to be architecture, and landscape to be
infrastructure, then the ideal city can be understood on other basis than those
conventionally presumed. Tis idea of combining infrastructure, architecture and
landscape represents a hybridization of terminologies, identified by Koolhaas
with the term MERGE©. An example of the term “MERGE” is combining the terms:
‘landscape and city = SCAPE©, business and pleasure = BUSINESS VACATION©, golf
course and urban fabric = SMOOTH© green crust of THIN© urbanism.’
The different things that make up a city (infrastructure,
architecture,landscape) have different components but they come together to
give the idea of universality or uniformity. In Koolhaas’s perspective the
“smoothspace” is a particular space that
is not bound by a specific place but is mainly marked by straight lines,
multiplicities and different intensities of the solid objects around it. There
are multiple ways to look at the same smooth space through. Smooth space is a 3
dimensional in nature and it is a smooth transition from one structure into
another. A city according to Koolhaas should not have hierarchy, it should not
have a centre, and should be a chaotic/nomadic nature. And this chaotic nature
of the city means that there are always a pleasant surprise around the corner,
when it comes to architectural design.
Koohlas during his very long and intensive architecture and filozofical
career reflect a lot about the casual connection that exist between
architecture and urbanism, and on their contribution to modern metropolitan
culture. First he saw that concepts as a parallel, later they achieve
symbiosis.
The City of Captive Globe
One of the earliest Koohlas design in this topic was “The City of the
Captive Globe”. It could be intoroduced as a conceptual “fast forward of the
life, death and eternal rebirth” of the metropolis. The image is a timeless and
placeless grid in the middle of which is a half-buried globe. For Koolhaas a
grid is a “dry archipelago” in which every block is and ‘island’. The islands
are inhabited by design’s precursors like Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe or
Salvador Dali. And in effects, each “block” in the basis for ideological
labolatory that attract the masses
inside, and keep them spin around, and that’s how the architecture contribute
grows of ideology, and in effect development of culture at general.
Moreover, in Koolhaas opinion, people voluntarily accept confinement
within scycrapers, that is whats make an concept of “dry archipelago” neutral.
The metropolitan architecture, erected on there islands is the representation
of
“the entire culture and especially the way in which architecture can
still contribute to a formulation of culture instead of to the definition of
itself”.
And also in my opinion, that is the bottom line of every analysis, every
project and even every design of AMOMA/Rem Koolhaas. His ambition was to
explore contemporary cities which now exist and develop without any
recognizable archicetrural or systematic approach. He marked, that what we
experience now is not a global impossibility of planning, but that is a
personal mantra against that planning. The architect’s main contribution to this
world is dedication to the ideology of metropolitan architecture, plus, staying
confortable with the image of The City of the Captive Globe:
“So the city of the future, and in fact even the city of today,
constitutes not a whole but an archipelago of different enclaves, where
ideological values could be installed in limited, strong, and specific places,
but with no pretence at being universal” (…)
The architect has to be able to adapt himself to the new conditions.
And, “This is not necessarily utopian” [Reem Koolhaas, quoted in Lotus no. 84,
1995, p. 121]
Synthetic carpet + Potemkin villages = Singapore
In his essay “Singapore Songlines” (1995, from S,M,L,XL) Rem Koolhaas
diagnose Singapor’s contemporary metropoly as a collections of cardboard
elements, where artificality reigns boths inside and outside. In other worlds,
the artificiality, which at first was confined to the interiors of scycrapers,
now it is taking over the surface area, defined as a “synthesic carpet”.
Singapore have no geometrical stability and vision. Moreover, the surface area
ceases to be neutral, and they acquire identity and ideology so that it starts
to compete with the architecture.
Koolhaas notion of the relation between architecture and metropolis is
conceptually clear: the scycraper neider develop nor satisfies the urban
culture. The atrium is the empty heart of the skyscraper that sucks the masses
inside and cripples them ideologically, and skycrapers are placed so far from
one another that they become urbanistically ridiculous and programmatically
useless. They are empty and impotent phallic icons. The public space between
them is not a dry archipelago, but an artificial morass, a synthetic condition.
In Singapore a Western modernity was interpreted the wrongest way – It
is stripped of any ideology, It has stopped thinking about the city and
architecture and clings stubbornly to its phallic image. According to Koolhaas, this separation
between city and architecture can only lead to insidious or iliferation or
metastasis. The skyscraper no long plays a pivotal role or contributes to urban
culture. Instead of that, It become a virulent cancer, and as well as the
Singapore it the most developed and influential city in China, that will spread
modernizartion throughout the all Asian continent. That’s why the next project
of Koolhaas is so important.
CCTV
Within the article “Beijing Preservation” in content, Koohlas gets
involved in the debate about urban modernization of China, trying to understand
the culture and lying bare its motivations, possibilities, expectations and
underlaying views on architecture and urbanism. In the combination of the
desing for the headquarters of Chinese state television network (CCTV) and the
idea behid “Beijing Perservation” Koolhaas analyses of and designs for
architecture and urban development come together in one operational plan. So
the project is both an attack on the skyscraper and an argument in favour of
urban modernization project.
Kolhaas also had the another, not so obvious motivation: the CCTV
project is to China what the Rockefeller Center in “Delirious New York” was to
manhattan. The latter was the architectural hight point and symbol of greatness
of Manhatan cutrule. There, in the city area, building was erected with “the
simultaneous existence of different programs on a single state, connected only
by the common data of elevators, service cores, columns and external envelope…
the very medium that denies the need for congestion as condition for desirable
human interaction” [Deliroius New York, p. 197]
Considerind that, Koolhaas created a formalist-functionalist
architecture; non phallic, but vaginal, one that contributes both to the
modernization of communist culture and to the definition of architecture. His
desire was to rethink the future of the city in the contest of the public
domain, which should make a fundamental contribution to urban life, as a
“Central Business District Carpet”.
As he observed, the increasing ubiquity mobility of information
technology paradoxically stresses the importance of face-to-face human
interaction so that, at the dawn of the 21st century, business is
communication. The essential question became one of how the CBD Core could
distinguish itself in a forest of towers with isolated cores that minimized interaction.
“In Beijing, you have these needles and they collect their own little
pathetic communities while breaking down the larger community around them. It’s
an incredible squandering of the potential for exchange. It creates isolation
right in the center of the city.”
What he proposed (as the solution) that the same amount of urban
substance can be configured in many different ways from a compact tower to a
dispersed network. CBD Core evolved to become a lowrise network of dispersed
cores and flexible office courtyards combined with commercial and recreational
activities that not only maximize interaction, but also offer the opportunity
for a CDB with a 24-Hour urban life. As a compliment to this series of
dispersed horizontal nodes, a dense network of vertical connections (including
offices, apartments, and hotels) is proposed over one of the peripheral urban
highways. That how Beijing’s CBD Core ultimately becomes 100% Park and 100% Program.
Kill the skyscraper
So is “Kill the skyscraper” an interesting way of achieving symbiosis
between functionalist and formalistic ? Is that an answer for the real
requirement of contemporary city? For everyone, who once thought in terms of an
architecture and urbanism as a one unity, yes. In Koolhaas point of view, skyscraper
had quite deliberately separated that two, that’s why he renounces its as a
formal and ideological promoter and generator of urban culture. But that
doesn’t mean that the modernization of the city has now reached a point of no
return. It goes without saying that
Koolhaas and AMOMA are prepared to deliver the blueprint. The urban
modernization of Beijing provides Koolhaas with both an architectural icon and
planning strategy. And the two support one another. Preservation and
modernization go hand in hand and are to designed to propel the city into
permanent state of progress. Kolhaas see
contemporary urban modernization as a deed of eternal salf-imposed curtular
change that’s finds expression in the architecture. And I am sure that this
task will result in urban and architectural satisfaction.
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