Description
As recent technological advancement became more and more pervasive and sophisticated, its consequences became more dramatically evident. In this context, design takes on a new relevance, in organizing and managing spaces, individuals, relations and ultimately societies. But if this is clear, several questions have to be answered: Who is driving it, who are the participants, who are sitting around the table? Does spatial design currently have a say in this, and if not, how can it participate and intervene?
Volume 51: Augmented Technology includes ‘Deconstruction’, a 32-page insert produced with the Jacob Bakema Study Centre and designed by Loraine Furter. It investigates the deconstruction and reuse of modernist building components as researched by Rotor.
CONTENTS
- Editorial: Who’s Driving? Arjen Oosterman
- Informational Organisms in Autonomous Space, Sigrid Johannisse
- Trajectories of Place and Space; The City 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 …, Charles Landry
- Postcards from Google Earth, Clement Valla
- Digital Individual
- Now we see the cracks, how long until we fill them? Florence Okoye
- The Social Life of …, Tamar Shafrir
- Ego City, Felix Madrazo and Adrien Ravon interviewed by Arjen Oosterman
- Cities Making Platforms: For Better or Worse? Ben Schouten , Martijn de Waal and Adam van Heerden
- Circuitries (1992), Nick Land
- Risk and Resilience
- Major Tom, Planet Earth and Architecture, Fred F. J. Schoorl
- Doma, Maksym Rokmaniko, Melissa J. Frost, Enrico Zago, Francesco Sebregondi
- Insert: Deconstruction
- Captives in Futureland, Victor M. Sanz
- Sever [SVR], Arctic based Crypto Currency, Ildar Iakubov, Alexey Platonov, Inna Pokazanyeva, Francesco Sebregondi
- Skyrocketing Paranoia, Leonardo Dellanoce
- The Face of Reality
- Renderlands, Liam Young
- Google Urbanism: Working with the System, Nicolay Boyadjiev, Harshavardhan Bhat, Kirill Rostovsky, Andréa Savard-Beaudoin
- The New Normative, Benjamin Bratton interviewed by Arjen Oosterman and Leonardo Dellanoce
- Augmented Groceries, Keiichi Matsuda
- The Smart Cities Beta Testing / Post-mortem, Stephan Petermann, Sander Pleij
104 pages / 33 x 24 cm / English

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