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The New Mix: Culturally Dynamic Architecture

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ISBN: 978-0-470-01467-7

November 2005

128 pages

Description
We are at a new moment in architecture, when many cultures are contributing to the unfolding of Modernism. This enriching influence is broadening the mix, extending the range available to architecture, of materials and colours, evocative forms, cultural references and social thinking. In an era of boredom with monocultures and orthodoxies, there is the almost universal expectation that the metroculture, whether in London or Beijing, will provide broadened cultural experiences in food, performance, dress and sound. The new ethnically diverse city is a place of zesty daily encounters/collisions/cohabitation between cultures, a place of mixed signals, contradictions, delightful confusions: Franco-Japanese cuisine, elite schoolchildren wearing doo-rags, jazz performed on gamelans - whatever one’s mother culture, we’re all getting addicted to varied rhythms, different emotional emphases, ‘other’ ideas of beauty. This change is visible in schools of architecture, at least in the range of students, typically from many ethnicities, none of them constituting a majority. No wonder, then that there is increased interest in ways that architecture can incorporate a larger compass of riches. A rising group of practitioners is meeting the challenge of this broadening cultural landscape in pursuing strategies of quick switching, layering, reframing that ultimately might help create a more robust Modernism, helping to rescue it from a ‘potato blight’ of too much sameness.

Through its diverse global contents, this title presents an insightful dynamic cultural mix: Teddy Cruz in Tijuana; Steven Holl in Beijing; Iain Low in South Africa; Jayne Merkel in Queens, New York; Anooradha lyer Siddiqi in Bangalore; and Leon van Schaik in Australia.

About the Author
Sara Caples and Everardo Jefferson are Principals at Caples Jefferson Architects. The New York-based practice, which has for over 15 years been dedicated to working on social schemes within the diverse ethnic communities of the city. In 2003, their work was recognised by the American architectural establishment when they received an AIA Honor Award for Architecture.