Struggles to escape form as a manifestation of various norms and  constraints are as old as architecture itself. But the formless is also  increasingly in the air today, explicitly as in discussions of the  “formless” quality of the city, and implicitly in talk of atmospheric  buildings, randomized structures, and the dematerialization (or  increased mediation) of architecture. No doubt part of its appeal lies  in the fact that the formless is frequently found at the intersections  between architecture and other fields, from art to ecology or  engineering. Nevertheless, the formless has not yet been theorized  rigorously in architecture. It seems to underpin a wide range of  tendencies that have not yet been connected, or even explicitly  acknowledged or identified.
 
        Struggles to escape form as a manifestation of various norms and constraints are as old as architecture itself. But the formless is also increasingly in the air today, explicitly as in discussions of the “formless” quality of the city, and implicitly in talk of atmospheric buildings, randomized structures, and the dematerialization (or increased mediation) of architecture. No doubt part of its appeal lies in the fact that he formless is frequently found at the intersections between architecture and other fields, from art to ecology or engineering. Nevertheless, the formless has not yet been theorized rigorously in architecture. It seems to underpin a wide range of tendencies that have not yet been connected, or even explicitly acknowledged or identified. This book represents a fi rst step toward this articulation.