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Volume 46. SHELTER | Arjen Oosterman, Nick Axel | 9789077966464 | ARCHIS

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Volume 46. SHELTER

Publisher:ARCHIS

ISBN: 978-90-779664-6-4

  • Paperback
  • English
  • 120 Pages
  • Dec 15, 2015

Shelter is most immediately associated today with conditions of disaster, displacement and destitution. There is an inherent urgency to the word; it is first and foremost a necessity, a human right even. Yet thought of as the absolute minimum necessary to survive, shelter is an architectural stigma. Shelter is not a thing though; shelter is a verb; if there is such a thing as shelter, it is because whatever it is, shelters. Volume #46: Shelter is dedicated to the question of how shelter can be reformulated as an architectural project.

CONTENT

Editorial by Arjen Oosterman and Nick Axel
The making of a universal human right, Abla el Bahrawy
Shelter’s Political Violence, Léopold Lambert
You can tell who they are, Lluís Alexandre Casanovas Blanco
The New Sleep, Aristide Antonas
A Room of One’s Own, Dogma
Empire Hotel, Jack Self
Dwelling on Dwelling, Dick van Gameren interview

A Piece of England to Call One’s Own, James Taylor-Foster, Jon Lopez and Hikaru Nissanke
Practices of Decentralization, Vinay Gupta interviewed by Ben Vickers
Winter Garden City (Redux), Martti Kalliala
Rituals of Privacy, Space Caviar
Parallel Clouds, Vere van Gool
The Language of Crypto-Architecture, Ryan John King / FOAM
Bad European, 
Sean Monahan & åyr
Sheltering the Rolling Society, Andrés Jaque / Office for Political Innovation
The Human Ratio, Alexey Buldakov / Urban Fauna Lab
Endangered pieces of nature and the architecture of closed worlds, Lydia Kallipoliti
How to live in toxic environments, Nerea Calvillo
Let’s Touch, Sean Lally
The Matter of/with Skin, Benjamin H. Bratton

Shelter is most immediately associated today with conditions of disaster, displacement and destitution. There is an inherent urgency to the word; it is first and foremost a necessity, a human right even. Yet thought of as the absolute minimum necessary to survive, shelter is an architectural stigma. Shelter is not a thing though; shelter is a verb; if there is such a thing as shelter, it is because whatever it is, shelters. Volume #46: Shelter is dedicated to the question of how shelter can be reformulated as an architectural project.

CONTENT

Editorial by Arjen Oosterman and Nick Axel
The making of a universal human right, Abla el Bahrawy
Shelter’s Political Violence, Léopold Lambert
You can tell who they are, Lluís Alexandre Casanovas Blanco
The New Sleep, Aristide Antonas
A Room of One’s Own, Dogma
Empire Hotel, Jack Self
Dwelling on Dwelling, Dick van Gameren interview

A Piece of England to Call One’s Own, James Taylor-Foster, Jon Lopez and Hikaru Nissanke
Practices of Decentralization, Vinay Gupta interviewed by Ben Vickers
Winter Garden City (Redux), Martti Kalliala
Rituals of Privacy, Space Caviar
Parallel Clouds, Vere van Gool
The Language of Crypto-Architecture, Ryan John King / FOAM
Bad European, 
Sean Monahan & åyr
Sheltering the Rolling Society, Andrés Jaque / Office for Political Innovation
The Human Ratio, Alexey Buldakov / Urban Fauna Lab
Endangered pieces of nature and the architecture of closed worlds, Lydia Kallipoliti
How to live in toxic environments, Nerea Calvillo
Let’s Touch, Sean Lally
The Matter of/with Skin, Benjamin H. Bratton

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