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Draw like a builder, build like a writer (and the crack is in the detail)

Draw like a builder, build like a writer (and the crack is in the detail)

Frith, Ed and Graef, Alexander (2007) Draw like a builder, build like a writer (and the crack is in the detail). The role of the humanities in design creativity international conference, 15-16 Nov 2007, Lincoln, UK. University of Lincoln, Lincoln. ISBN 9781860502224

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Abstract

As the inevitable building by numbers ensues, London’s Thames Gateway becomes one of many playgrounds for bar charting enthusiasts. Houses measured by the thousands and little clues as to where it is, that ghost in the machine, what they are, the structures of everyday contemporary life, and who's life it is anyway.
Fernand Braudel, Georges Perec, Jorge Luis Borges, amongst others, are employed to examine just how Wittgensteins radiators find their ways into Barratts South East catalogue. They supply the container for Dickensian content with Sinclairesque detail, while late Jan Turnovski's epic lunacy will help to once and for all allay widespread popular fears that Wittgenstein 1 and 2 may add up to one-and-a-half, simple as that.
Never has the ideal of treating technology involved with building as an intellectual discipline been further removed from any notion of genius, loci or otherwise; housing policy housing, building policy building. Against the backdrop of mass housing and landmark buildings with little space or time for anything in between, five years of studio work with diploma students at the University of Greenwich, Vienna University of Technology and University Innsbruck, concerned themselves with the structural narrative of the Thames Gateway.
This paper, as well as the projects presented through it, is a premature attempt at anchoring buildings on the words they are built on, technology on the sentence structure of its description, assembly instructions written in the most specific of dialects. It describes techniques, suggesting an architecture read backwards, sideways, horizontal and in parallel, free associative sequence, thus discussing issues of site, context, detail and conceptual adhesion.
It also poses questions: concerning locality, history, ritual, conceptualisation and intellectual detachment. Above all, in view of the sheer relentlessness of commercially driven urban expansion, questions of soul and character, of design sustainability in terms of creating space to accommodate viable structures social, cultural, narrative. Allowing history to continue, creating place worth telling tales about.

Item Type: Book Section
Additional Information: This paper is part of a published proceedings from The Role of the Humanities in Design Creativity International Conference East Midlands Media and Technology Centre University of Lincoln UK 15-16th November 2007
Uncontrolled Keywords: Thames gateway, architecture, literature, architectural concepts
Subjects: N Fine Arts > N Visual arts (General) For photography, see TR
B Philosophy. Psychology. Religion > BH Aesthetics
N Fine Arts > NA Architecture
Pre-2014 Departments: School of Architecture, Design & Construction
Related URLs:
Last Modified: 28 Jan 2020 15:45
URI: http://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/3005

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