Upload
phungkien
View
217
Download
3
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
The Architecture of Decay
October 31, 2016
Rachel Jones
Drexel University Thesis
Villa Savoye Before Restoration.
Victor Gubbins.
Imagined Villa Savoye with Graffiti.
Xavier Delory.
Villa Savoye after Restoration.
Montse Zamorano.
“Those memorial layers, often thick and difficult to decode, reward the
explorer with an opportunity for a visceral reading— a bodily
interpretation of the material and immaterial histories of places— where
‘decay implies not just evanescence but the accretion of experience’
(Lowenthal 1985, 179)” (Orange, 72).
Decay
The decay of buildings is an occurrence that is uncertain. A series of cause and effects that occur over time as nature works against the built
environment. This submission to the reign of natural law provides a sense of architecture in time.
Tides. Andy Goldsworthy. 1996
"The very thing that brought it [his art] to life, will bring about its death.“- Andy Goldsworthy
Shearing Layers of Change.
Stewart Brand. 1994.
Layers of Change
According to Stewart Brand the decay of a building occurs at different rates which means a building is always tearing itself apart.
Age Value
Art historian and philosopher Alois Reigl developed the concept of age-value to describe the value that a building accrues over time which is made
visible by patina among other things. This concept is based on an understanding of the contribution of decay.
Diagram of Reigl’s Values.
ERA Architects. 2011.
Imaginary View of the Grand Gallery of the Louvre in Ruins.Hubert Robert. 1796.
Challenging Modern Preservation
By forecasting the process of decay through the influences of weathering, human interaction, and the progression of the context surrounding it this
thesis seeks to challenge the way architecture is preserved.
Role of the Architecture in Preservation
Through the idea of preservation architecture can play many different roles.
Architecture as
Preserver
Architecture as Memory
Found Object/Ruin
Found Object/Ruin
Site Specific Remediation
New vrs Old
3 Potential Sites
Birdseye of Carrie Furnaces.
whereandwhen.com
Petrified Forest State Park.
wikipedia.com
Found Object Deliberate Debris Growth from Decline
Navajo Code Talkers Museum Competition Proposal
In 2011 the National Navajo Code Talkers Museum and Veterans Center, which is currently located in Tuba City, Arizona had a Nationwide competition
for a Museum and Veterans’ Center to be located on Navajo Code Talker land a few miles east of Window Rock, Arizona.
Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park.
Kenji Kawano. 2005.
Time : Place
The Navajo Indians are a tribe that have centered their culture around their connection with nature. To them the Earth itself is a relic that contains not
only the present but also all the past and potential future.
“In the traditional Navajo view, life is a constant cycle of growth, death and new life, that flows in a circular motion - all things must begin and end at
the same point” (Bitsuie).
Antelope Canyon Navajo Park.
Moyan Brenn. 2011.
Methods of Inquiry
Digital and physical model studies of material relationships. Study/experiment with traditional building methods, natural resources, and the effects of
weathering over time.
OP CITY: Figuring the Urban Future and Its Audiences.
CityLAB. 2013.
Methods of Inquiry
Timeline studies of different scales of time. Highlight different scales in regards to program elements, users, the site, and the history of the Navajo
Code Talkers. Use the method of collage to knit different scales of time.
Site Analysis Collage.
Archinect.com.
A Temporary (but not Instant) City for 2 Million
Anthony Acciavatti. 2006.
Conclusion
Through the study of the Navajo Indian Code Talkers and their cultural heritage this thesis seeks to develop a museum that challenges the concepts of
modern preservation. This study of preservation is rooted in forecasting the inevitable changes of decay. It suggests that by forecasting these
inevitable changes a greater sense of memory, time, and place can be created and an even greater appreciation of the past existing as part of the
present.
Ray O. Hawthorne. Lupton, Arizona.
Kenji Kawano. 2003.
Bibliography and Selected Sources
+Bitsuie, Roman. “Holy Wind and Natural Law.” Indians.org. Glenn Welker, 21 Apr. 1995. Web. 23 Oct. 2016.
+Cairns, Stephen, and Jane Jacobs M. Buildings Must Die: A Perverse View of Architecture. Cambridge: MIT, MA. Print.
+"Alois Riegl and the Modern Cult of the Monument." ERA Architects. ERA Architects, 9 Jan. 2011. Web. 30 Oct. 2016.
<http://www.eraarch.ca/2011/alois-riegl-and-the-modern-cult-of-the-monument/>.
+Goldsworthy, Andy. Passage. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 2004. Print.
+Mostafavi, Mohsen, and David Leatherbarrow. On Weathering: The Life of Buildings in Time. Cambridge, MA: MIT, 1993. Print.
+Orange, Hilary, Editor. Reanimating Industrial Spaces: Conducting Memory Work in Post-industrial Societies. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast, 2015.
+Robert, Hubert. Imaginary View of the Grand Gallery of the Louvre in Ruins. 1796. Oil on canvas. Louvre Museum, Paris, France. Wikipedia.org. 24
Aug. 2007. Web. <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Louvre-peinture-francaise-p1020324.jpg>.
+Shaw, Matt. "Behold a Vandalized Villa Savoye Plastered in Graffiti." Architizer. N.p., 18 Sept. 2014. Web. 29 Oct. 2016.
<http://architizer.com/blog/see-the-villa-savoye-covered-in-graffiti/>.
+Tuan, Yi-fu. Topophilia: A Study of Environmental Perception, Attitudes, and Values. New York: Columbia UP, 1990. Print.