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Twelve Lectures On Architecture: Algorithmic Sustainable Design [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

Nikos A. Salingaros

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Kurzbeschreibung

10. Dezember 2010

Twelve Lectures on Architecture is a profound philosophical work presented as a set of architectural lecture notes. It reads very easily, explaining why certain buildings and places speak to our hearts, thus illuminating many of our old assumptions about taste. Salingaros establishes, using biology, why traditional architecture is perceived intuitively by most people as more natural and life-affirming than modernist architecture. A deep malaise of contemporary society is tied to the shocking state of architecture and urbanism in our times, characterized by distorted buildings and unusable urban spaces. Salingaros is the archetypal deep thinker and punctures the pretenses of our most respected architecture critics. He is a charismatic teacher, and manages to explain seemingly inaccessible concepts such as fractals, scaling, the golden mean, cellular automata, genetic algorithms, and complexity in simple hand-drawn sketches. He has found a way to translate the complexities inherent in the design of our environment into imagery that even a general reader can understand. Twelve Lectures on Architecture includes an excellent introduction to Christopher Alexander’s recent and remarkable work on how biology and architecture intersect in humankind’s unconscious perceptions. This book has the importance to change the world because it goes into things that people should have thought about but haven’t.

What They're Saying...

"With Nikos as our guide, we see through the invisibility of the emperor’s new clothes, and we laugh (or cry) all the harder at the joke played on mankind by modern architecture.”
The Providence Journal

“Salingaros is a charismatic teacher. The author presents mathematical concepts and computer technologies: fractals, cellular automata, genetic algorithms. He shows us the beauty of mathematics through its usage….Formulating his message through a broad spectrum of topics, Salingaros appears to be a true Renaissance figure.”
Jadwiga Zarnowiecka, professor and architect, Bialystok, Poland.

"This book is intended for students, yet I think it should be read by everyone who is interested in or works with the built environment. Those who teach urban planning do it for their own ego, not for people who are supposed to live there. The result is an architectural object for imaginary people."
Cristina Caramelo Gomes, professor and architect, Lisbon, Portugal

 


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 Nikos Salingaros is a mathematician and polymath known for his work on urban theory, architectural theory, complexity theory, and design philosophy. Salingaros is known for his critical analysis of conventional modern architecture and has proposed an alternative theoretical approach to architecture and urbanism that is more adaptive to human needs and aspirations, and that combines rigorous scientific analysis with deep intuitive experience.

Salingaros joined the Mathematics faculty of the University of Texas at San Antonio in 1983, where he remains today. In 1997 he was recipient of the first award ever by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation for research on architectural topics. In 2003, he was elected to the Committee of Honor, International Network for Traditional Building, Architecture & Urbanism (INTBAU), and to the INTBAU College of Traditional Practitioners.


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5.0 von 5 Sternen A fascinating and important contribution to evidence-based design 15. April 2011
Von Michael W. Mehaffy - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
These days architectural Modernism, it seems, is like the weather: everybody complains about it, but nobody does anything about it. From Rem Koolhaas to Peter Eisenman, Patrik Schumacher to James Corner, all the leading starchitects seem to be attacking the old dumb linear methods, the boxy forms -- the clearly unsustainable industrial paradigm.

Except that, funny thing, so many of them are still really doing the same old kinds of things, and merely draping them in ever more extravagant costumes -- as my friend Nikos Salingaros likes to point out. They haven't created a new paradigm, so much as fashioned some colorful new clothes for the old destructive emperor to wear.

Salingaros, a mathematician and urbanist, comes at the problem of cities with a modern mathematician's understanding of complexity. If you want elaborate semiotic games or bizarre, attention-getting new forms, this is not the book for you. But if you want insightful analysis of the actual occurrence in cities of fractals, algorithms, the Fibonacci Series, and much more -- and how we can actually use these insights to make better cities -- then you will find this a fascinating book. If you're like me, you'll find it an important and very hopeful book too.

It would be normal for me to say here that this is one of the great standout books in the science of environmental design -- except that, tellingly, it is the only book of its kind of which I am aware. Other authors employ algorithms, scripts, computational design and the like. (The aforementioned Patrik Schumacher, of Zaha Hadid's office, comes to mind.) But for what? For consumer eye candy; for cities as artistic "fashion statements"; for fabulous nonsensical structures that show no literacy in the real human problems of a city. (And worse, are likely to further damage the lives of real people, and the wellbeing of the planet).

Salingaros, virtually alone at present (with a notable exception of his long-time colleague Christopher Alexander) comes at the question of urban structure from the opposite direction: from that of human beings, and their ascertainable requirements to live well together in actual settlements. He readily identifies universal structural and mathematical patterns that are available and useful for the intelligent and humane designer, and he describes, in easy-to-understand terms, how to apply them. He wants to understand how to design with the participation of users, and the powerful processes of self-organization. He also takes into account the evidence-based design methods that are revealing the powerful role of "biophilia" and other properties of environments that promote well-being -- including some surprisingly familiar ones from the world of traditional design, now seen in the flattering light of complexity science. It's a wonderful tour de force.

Why is Salingaros' work not better known? For all the talk of "paradigm shift", the reigning paradigm of modern design culture is holding firm to power, and for this reason it does not care to make room for truly radical self-criticism. There is a reason that it much prefers the logically incoherent and ineffectual pseudo-criticism of the post-structuralists. You know the narrative -- "architecture is about expressing the angst of our condition, disrupting people from their conventional comfort," blah blah. Salingaros calls this self-serving nonsense for what it is, and offers a real paradigm shift: an architecture and urbanism founded on the actual evidence that we can again make humane, successful, beautiful cities. When will his work become better known? I for one suspect it will be soon.
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