Martin Wilhelm Design Inquiry Thesis Pre Prep March 17, 1995

Idea for term paper, first draft

(John Rajchman about Rem Koolhaas): Koolhas thinks that architects do not only have a role of social responsibility or as administrators of the collective memory, but the task to uncover the "unnoticed future events" (John Rajchman).

"Virtual Reality" is the sum of the unnoticed future events, virtual comes from the Latin virtus=force; virtual reality is the reality of the forces, which are not yet noticed and not yet visible as rules and recognizeable patterns (Rajchman).

Koolhaas uses "blueprint" in D.N.Y., I guess (in a Deleuzian sense) as to express that every future is already embedded either in built structures or in peoples' minds as "virtual reality".

The architect's role would then be find and formulate these embedded futures and to interpret them into design. Tools therefore would be to first to catch what is in the air (?), and second to analyze existing structures and peoples' minds (programming?) under a certain set of aspects (to be formulated).

The paper compiles statements in the literature to paint a picture of the virtual forces, formulates "virtual design" as a skill, and analyzes and evaluates the contributions of Koolhaas' Euralille as one output of this skill.


Literature

Calvino, Italo, Die unsichtbaren Staedte (Invisible Cities), Muenchen, 61992(1985, 1972), dtv 55 city-portraits (of Venice) as a vision of a possible world.

Castaneda, Carlos, Books of Don Juan Famous descriptions of halluzinative travels into the mind; "prove" that everyone knows already everything, also about the future, but unawakened and covered

Deleuze, Gilles, Difference and Repetition, New York, 1994, Columbia University Press

Giedion, Sigfried, Raum, Zeit, Architektur, Die Entstehung einer neuen Tradition (Space, Time, Architecutre, The Evolution of a New Tradition), 51992(1976, 1941), Zuerich, Muenchen, London, Artemis Verlag Chronicle of the Modern Movement, in search of the Òsecret synthesisÓ announcing the evolution of a new tradition in building.

Ibn Khaldun, The Muquaddimah, An Introduction to History, Princeton N.J., 91989(1967, 1958), Bollingen Series Princeton University Press Ò...treating in almost encyclopedic detail the general problems of the philosophy of history and sociology.Ó On the general nature of human civilization, forms of sedentary civilization, various aspects of making a living, manÕs ability to think. Deals especially with the Koran and its influence on all espects from daily life until architecture - blueprint for the future?

Koolhaas, Rem, Delirious New York,

Morus, Thomas, Utopia, 1981(1947), diogenes Philosophy of public life, materialized in an island like the paradise. A political pamphlet covered in the story of the island to avoid prosecution by the authorities. Example for a different reason why "blueprint" of the future cannot be expressed.

Norberg-Schulz, Christian, Intentions in Architecture, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 91992(1965), MIT Press Setting up of a comprehensive theory of architecture as basis for defining the architectural task. "We do not...think of the technical difficulties which have to be surmounted in connection with any building task, but we rather have in mind the problem of defining the task, and of deciding whether a planned or completed solution is satisfactory." "While our practical problems have to a certain degree been analyzed, architecture also comprises important "environmental" problems which so far have by no means been adequately investigated."

Pirsig, Robert M., Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintainance, An Inquiry into Values, New York, Toronto, London, Sydney, Auckland, 1981(1975, 1974), Bamtam Search for an underlying construction of values and truth for life and acting.

Schirmacher, Ernst, Stadtvorstellungen, Die Gestalt der mittelatlerlichen Staedte, Erhaltung und planendes Handeln (Internal Representations of Cities, The Shape of the Medieval Cities, Preservation and Planned Action), Zuerich und Muenchen, 1988, Artemis Verlag Analysis of the medieval citiy in terms of their underlying principles: order and meaning - tradition, geometry, perception, rhythm - the holy, power, exclusion and inclusion, nature of the place

Venturi, Robert, Learning from Las Vegas, the truth exists already, built and in peoples' mind.