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Space and Anti-Space: The Fabric of Place, City and Architecture (Paperback)
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Space and Anti-Space: The Fabric of Place, City and Architecture (Paperback)
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This book challenges the conventional idea of what constitutes the
physical form of the contemporary city. Observing the absence of
extended urban fabrics - the missing urbanism - in the new global
cities developed today, it argues that these cities are merely
statistical accumulations of density that lack the positive
attributes of a genuine urban condition. Cities as urban places
cannot be made by individual buildings alone but rather depend on
the intertwined combination of an architecture that is bound to the
creation of public spaces and streets, and engaged in the structure
of urban blocks to form a complex field pattern of interactive
solids and voids. Broad in scope, the book explores the nature of
the fundamental relationship between architecture and urbanism as
one of spatial formation. As an independently designed entity, the
city forms the ordering framework in which architecture is
partially subordinated to the mutual sustainability of the overall
urban fabric. If a new urban architecture is to be an integral
constituent of public place making, it must be composed using a
radically different paradigm of positive, figurally constructed
'space' rather than the indefinite background of 'anti-space' as
exemplified in the chapter on Mies van der Rohe's architectural
quest for the ineffable modern void. These two different spatial
models are explored in depth in the eponymous article, 'Space and
Anti Space,' first published in the Harvard Architectural Review in
1980, which forms the core of the book and postulates that the
underlying attitudes toward spatial formation, at both domestic and
urban scales, determine our ability to shape place and human
experience. In a series of essays, articles and urban projects
extensively illustrated by plans, analytic diagrams, and dramatic
images, this book makes a visual and verbal argument for the steps
that need to be taken to re-urbanise the city in order to achieve
an urbanity consisting of multiple discrete places that depend on
the essential concept of contained geometrical space. These spatial
ideas are illustrated in this book in three proposals: for Rome, in
'Roma Interrotta,' 1979; Paris, the 'Consultation Internationale
pour L'Amenagement du Quartier des Halles,' 1980; and New York in
the 'World Trade Center Site Innovative Design Study,' 2002.
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