Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Review of debate at the Berlage Institute, 27 march 2007

‘Gated Communities in the Age of Extreme Individualism’ by Stéphane Degoutin, Rients Dijkstra and Lars Lerup

The debate at the Berlage Institute on 27 march was one more of these useless debates. Very boring and very disappointing. Difference on European and American positions and the whole saga about American trying to realize European’s utopia dreams is also an outdated story belonging to the modern history. The discussion hardly extends outside LA and a bit of NL. South Africa was only briefly mentioned. I would like to add a few pointed with South African and Chinese references.

Rients Dijkstra talked about cars, as if automobile is synonymous as mobility. Mobility takes many levels and dimensions. Mobility has its price too- energy consumption, pollution, environmental crisis, etc.

In South Africa, gated community is so desirable, not only because fear plays a major factor in the mechanism, but also because of traffic congestions. People prefer to live in a secured and ‘complete’ surrounding, where they never have to get out anymore. They work online- a gift of mobility, so they can reduce traveling and ‘getting out’.

Maybe to find some clues of how to ‘re-fabricate’ gated community, what defines/makes gated community should have been outlined in the lectures:
Is gated community defined by the organizational diagram?
Is gated community defined by architectural style and dream-like environment, so people perpetually feel they are somewhere else and sometime else?
Is gated community defined by the mechanism of in-/ex-clusion?
Who governs gated community?
Who is keeping the demand of gated community going?
What really is the problem of gated community? What is ok and what is not?

One of the better points of Lars Lerup was to point out that overcoming and making distance at the same time is the ultimate art of gated community. To distant oneself from the undesirable, and to include all the desirables- the alike, facilities, golf course, etc- in one little world. In Chinese gated communities club houses are very crucial.; they are social centers of a ‘un-spontaneous/passive community’.

Lars Lerup made a point that walls and fences expel differences and include sameness. Behind walls there is a sort of commonality. I find examples in post-Apartheid South Africa very interesting. The enclave of Apartheid explodes into micro enclaves. Behind walls similar income brackets sort themselves out. Gated community does not know colors of skin. Gated community knows only have’s and have-not’s. Behind walls, difference of skin color is less important. Their collective enemy is who is outside. In order the perpetuate the speculative security development, fears has to be perpetually produced and propagated to maintain the demand for a secured environment.

St.Francis Bay, South Africa

What is also interesting is to understand gated community in a large economic dynamics. For example, Lars Lerup pointed out that land acquisition depends on land cost, which also dominates density and planning/design criteria. I would just say that this point does go very far, just think about a game of monopoly as example, one can have an initial idea of what the speculation is about. What I would like to add is that the phenomenon of gated community never exists alone. It is only symptomatic of a larger social illness. And gated communities never exist without the barrios, townships, or ghettos. Only focusing on the gated community is to ignore the complete ecology of have-havenot dynamics. It is the eternal struggle between master and servant.

Lars Lerup said that the problems against gated community is a European problem and architects need to invent grammar of life. Building has to be intelligent and it is architects’ job to re-fabricate the whole old idea of gated community, make it nice and livable and remodel gated community, make it richer and deeper. He pointed out that the problem of gated community stays a problem of practice. Research and books can put issues on the table but practice holds the key to better alternatives. I agree with this. But how can gated community be remodeled if the organizational diagram defines planning strategy and performance?

Saying ‘remodeling gated community into a nice and livable environment’ is as if gated community is not fundamentally problematic and discriminating. Stéphane Degoutin talked about gated community as part of the globalization and inter-infection process. I find gated community extremely problematic when places like China copies from the U.S. as a sort of lifestyle aspiration without further ‘re-fabrication’, editing or customizing to the Chinese context. The copy of a copy of a dumb American gated community does not produce something new and will never produce anything good. It is too easy to say that the problem against gated community is a European problem and all we need to do is to make good gated communities.

Shanghai, China

As a conclusion, Lars Lerup went on about how rhetoric is important; architects need to sharpen up our representation, provocation. Peter Trummer made it sound like the whole big answer lies in the technique. Rients Dijkstra simply concluded that architects should not take on all the issues, time management is very important. This to me is just a total surrender to the difficulty facing our profession and environment.

In comparison, the debate on 13 march had a much more polemic edge. Kees Christiaanse made a statement that out of gated community is down and out. In the future, people will look back on the modern history and say that was a brief moment in history without gated community. I wonder if gated community is maybe the true manifestation of humanity. And I just won’t believe that it is.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Becoming less

Is becoming-less in the process to become the 3rd other-an active outsider who passionately participates in all the events?
Becoming-less is not an escape but to leave the existing position and acquire a different point of view (reference: the top of walls in SW’s masters thesis project) and explore this point of view.
One becomes less of a citizen of this country in order to become a citizen of another country. In a broader perspective, this person is more active and engaging in the world than ever before.

This is then a process of becoming more of a ‘world citizen’.

Neutrality and Isolation

The notion of a neutral, isolated place (fault line) (in the middle) can be linked to the 3rd position. As the author/writer is the carrier of neutrality and isolation. I.e. 3rd position offers neutrality, isolation, in which the divide can be put into debate/discussion and be pronounced.
Reference: Icelandic parliament is called Althing. Congressmen are called thingmen. Meeting in the middle of fault line that marks the meeting place of the Atlantic and European tectonic plates. Here the middle line is a literal one. But architecture is pretty literal, isn’t it?

The 3rd other / 在兩個世界的外部

因爲個人閲歷
跳出來看
站在中國
也站在西方的角度來看

Saturday, May 19, 2007

臺北日記

The last day in Taipei I was very sad. Sitting in the metro I could cry.
Taiwan is the way it is, not because people want things better.
If people have wanted better, they have not wanted it badly enough.
It is like it is because people leave it like it is.
I am even more sad because before I turned an adult, I decided to leave Taiwan.
I have no right to criticize. I am just sad.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

評圖日記

這次在淡江大學評圖的是5年級的畢業設計
第二個來評圖的同學,在我問了兩個簡單的問題後竟然哭了
我很同情,但是我也嚇了一大跳,我也受到很大的打擊啊
從來未曾有學生在我評圖的時候哭的
通常學生都說我的意見‘很有用’

年輕人們很脆弱很急躁很憂鬱啊
前三個同學們關心的課題是回憶,消失,不見
才20嵗出頭的年輕人
應該是關心如何建立和創造的年紀啊

是我太直接了嗎?
在臺灣,對學生講話要能幽默、拐彎抹角、又說出重點才是藝術
我可能是荷蘭化了,直接了當,一點不留情,但是本意絕對是好的

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

SW in Tamkang University Taipei

SW reviewed 5th year students in TamKang University, Damshui, Taipei on 7 May 2007 Monday. She gave a lecture titled 'SuperDutch is over; let's get on with reality'.