The Evolution of Radical Urbanism: What Does the Future Hold for Our Cities?

Earlier today in Shenzhen the 6th Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism/Architecture (UABB) opened its doors to public. Under the overall theme "Re-Living the City," curators Alfredo Brillembourg and Hubert Klumpner of Urban Think Tank headed up the "Radical Urbanism" exhibit in the main venue. Brillembourg and Klumpner invited the exhibition participants to show how we can learn from ad-hoc and "bottom-up" initiatives for alternative urban solutions. In the following essay - originally printed in the UABB 2015 catalogue - the curators call for us to "rethink how we can operate within the city, learn from its emerging intelligence and shap[e] its outcomes to radical and tactical ends."

The notion of a radical urbanism draws us unavoidably into the realm of the political. Imagining a more equitable and sustainable future involves an implicit critique of the spatial and societal conditions produced by prevailing urban logics.[1] As such, we are not only reminded of Le Corbusier’s famous ultimatum, “architecture or revolution,” but its generational echo in Buckminster Fuller’s more catastrophic pronouncement, “utopia or oblivion.”[2] Both were zero-sum scenarios born of overt social disjuncture, whether the deprivations and tensions of the interwar period, or the escalating conflicts and ecological anxiety of the late 1960s. While the wave of experimental "post utopian" practices that emerged in the early 1970s positioned themselves explicitly in opposition to perceived failures of the modern movement, these disparate groups shared a belief – however disenchanted – with their predecessors in the idea that radical difference was possible, as well as a conviction that a break was necessary.

The Evolution of Radical Urbanism: What Does the Future Hold for Our Cities? - More Images+ 4

Buckminster Fuller's Montreal Biosphere. Image © Flickr user rodmaia licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

It is precisely this potent mix of idealism and criticality that we wish to explore under the rubric of "radical urbanism" – utopian dreams tempered by an unflinching engagement with social reality. We are interested in those who advocate for the exceptional while cloaked in the trappings of routine. Those who infiltrate peripheral disciplines, embed themselves as outside observers, and leverage a proximate vantage point to influence decisions and policies. Those who relinquish direct control in favor of distributed autonomy and instrumental feedback. We are interested in projects that seek distance from disciplinary bounds, and from legal, political, and societal norms. That render complicit the immanently possible and the highly improbable, the absolutely necessary and the prohibitively taboo. A radical project does not necessarily view design as a solution, nor as a means to elucidate a question, but as a fundamental restructuring of assumptions in the way we live, and the environments that are necessary to support that life. [3]

The history of architecture and urbanism is littered with individuals, groups, movements, structures, unbuilt work, conceptual projects, research programs, theories, exhibitions, publications, and performances that collectively trace a potent tradition of radical intention. What ties these diverse activities together is not a desire to escape disciplinary boundaries entirely, but instead to redefine the very possibilities of architecture and design as a means to usher in an alternative to the status quo. Though radical urbanism can assume countless forms, one can point to three potential fields of contestation that embody alternative modes of practice, thought, or engagement. The first is by outlining a provocative vision that challenges the normative thinking of the time. The second is by recasting the role of the architect in order to question what is pragmatically possible when intervening in an urban environment. The third is to operate at the vanguard of political change, or, in other words, architecture as revolution.

Kisho Kurokawa's Nakagin Capsule Tower. Image © Arcspace

If one accepts the foundational modernist belief that addressing the realities of contemporary life means working in (and through) the city, then architecture and urbanism can represent a radical subversion of established social structures beyond material questions of form and aesthetics. From unrealized visions and plans like Antonio Sant’Elia’s La Citta Nuova, Yona Friedman’s Ville Spatiale, Constant Nieuwenhuys’ New Babylon, and Cedric Price’s Potteries Thinkbelt, to the avantgarde provocations of Archigram’s Plug-In City, Superstudio’s The Continuous Monument, and Archizoom’s No-Stop-City, the inclusive humanism of the Smithsons, the animist hybridity of Pancho Guedes, the techno utopianism of the Metabolists, and the politically charged agit-prop of groups like Ant Farm, Utopie, and Haus Rucker Co, we can see a shift from the limited understanding of architecture as the design of discrete structures, to an expanded notion that architecture and urbanism can embody a form of cultural critique, or venture even more decisively into the realm of social and political action.[4]

The Plug in City by Peter Cook of Archigram. Image © Peter Cook via Archigram Archives

This dovetails with a parallel line of thought that views the role of the architect as extending beyond "pure" design, to support the agency of the individuals and communities whose everyday life shapes the evolving built environment. We see this in the flexible open building concepts of John Habraken, the simple modular housing system of Walter Segal, the self-build and self management theories of John Turner, the cooperative strategies and "pragmatic anarchism" of Colin Ward, the tecnica povera of Riccardo Dalisi with children from the Traiano Quartiere in Naples, and the "action planning" of Otto Koenigsberger in India. Besides a common concern with the groups or "users" most often marginalized or excluded by formal processes of authority and control, these projects are linked by a modesty that contrasts starkly with the heroic projections of the modern movement. It is a radical urbanism characterized by sensitivity to scale and time, an appreciation of context, and a shift from author to enabler.[5]

Houses built using the Walter Segal system in South London. Image © Chris Moxley

The third type of radicality emanates from the inside out, where urbanism is adopted as an institutionalized building block prefiguring a new way of life. Though discredited in its most deterministic guise – the hubristic belief in the ability to “correct society on the drawing board” – this direct alignment of architects and designers with revolutionary governance is perhaps urbanism at its most "radical."[6] While the emblematic case remains the "social condensers" of Mozei Ginsburg and the Russian constructivists, which were consciously designed to induce collectivism, it is echoed in Alvaro Siza’s involvement with the "brigades" of the Servico de Apoio Ambulatorio Local (SAAL) housing program following the Portuguese revolution, the Proyecto Experimental de Vivienda (PREVI) launched in Peru in the brief mid-1960s interlude between military dictatorships, and the peripheral new towns designed by BV Doshi’s Vāstu-Shilpā Consultants in post-independence India. In tune with emancipatory political agendas, these schemes sought to underpin alternative forms of economic and social development.

Reyner Banham has described dreams of a better world as the true “ghosts in the machine” of 20th century architecture, while Tahl Kaminer argues the loss of the “utopian horizon” means the idea of progress has been rejected as a myth.[7] Does it make any sense then to speak of a contemporary radical urbanism? In short, we are convinced it does. Cities are complex, hybrid spaces where divergent ways of acting, thinking about, and living urban life collide and transform. And in these spaces, a new generation of architects, designers, advocates, artists, sociologists, anthropologists, economists, and activists are collectively reimagining new tactics to tackle critical urban and social issues. The city today is perhaps more radical than those operating within it. It computes unknown possibilities, conducts high risk experimentation, and telegraphs previously unknowable futures more quickly and more completely than the raft of professionals tasked with its stewardship, analysis, or design.

Urban Think Tank's vision to transform the incomplete Torre David in Caracas

A discussion based around concrete and scalable projects is necessary to reframe the term "radical" and its potentials for design in the 21st century. The "Radical Urbanism" exhibition in this Biennale will bring greater visibility to alternative models of housing, mobility, production, and recreation grounded in the pursuit of social and environmental justice, diversity, and equality. It will highlight forms of radical praxis that question the role of the architect and redefine the discipline, claiming new territories, new functions, and new legitimacy for architectural and design thinking. It will give space to projects that are both courageous and provocative – that call attention to game-changing urban agents of tomorrow. It will show how it is possible to develop pathbreaking tactics of intervention and engagement while operating legitimately within the blind spots of existing power structures. And it will reaffirm the capacity of architects and designers to articulate empowering, transformative, confronting, and realizable visions of our collective urban future.

Image of the UABB Catalogue
Image of the UABB Catalogue
Image of the UABB Catalogue

Footnotes

  1. David Harvey, "The Crisis of Planetary Urbanization" in Pedro Gadanho, ed, Uneven Growth: Tactical Urbanisms for Expanding Megacities (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2014), 29.
  2. See Le Corbusier, Toward an Architecture, trans John Goodman (London: Frances Lincoln / Getty Trust, 2007), first published in French as Vers une architecture (Paris: G. Cres, 1924); R. Buckminster Fuller, "Invisible Future," San Francisco Oracle 11 (December 1967), 24.
  3. This and other portions of this text are excerpted from a curatorial statement authored by UABB curatorial advisors Ersela Kripa and Stephen Mueller from AGENCY.
  4. Fredric Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions (New York: Verso, 2005), 168.
  5. John R. Gold, The Experience of Modernism: Modern Architects and the Future City, 1928-53 (London: Thomson Science, 2013) 15-16.
  6. Meyer Schapiro, "Architect's Utopia: Review of Architecture and Modern Life," Partisan Review 4 (1938) 46, 89-92.
  7. Reyner Banham, Theory and Design in the First Machine Age, 2nd ed (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT: 1980), 12; Tahl Kaminer, Archi tecture, Crisis and Resuscitation:. The Reproduction of Post-Fordism in Late-Twentieth-Century Architecture (New York: Routledge, 2011) 19.

About this author
Cite: Alfredo Brillembourg and Hubert Klumpner. "The Evolution of Radical Urbanism: What Does the Future Hold for Our Cities?" 04 Dec 2015. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/778308/the-evolution-of-radical-urbanism-what-does-the-future-hold-for-our-cities> ISSN 0719-8884

Metro Cable Caracas / Urban Think Tank. Image © Iwan Baan

激进城市主义的演变:怎样的未来适应我们的城市

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