Automation and the City
From 1959 to 1974, Constant Anton Nieuwenhuys developed New Babylon, a speculative city for a future society in which automation would free human life to dedicate itself to creativity, collectivity and play. This essay examines Constant’s thinking about automation and the city. Departing from Const...
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2021-06-01
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doaj-94b96888b32c4083bd6c27c192e3f0132021-07-02T12:24:30ZengJap Sam BooksFootprint1875-15041875-14902021-06-0115110.7480/footprint.15.1.4948Automation and the CityIris Giannakopoulou Karamouzi0Yale School of Architecture From 1959 to 1974, Constant Anton Nieuwenhuys developed New Babylon, a speculative city for a future society in which automation would free human life to dedicate itself to creativity, collectivity and play. This essay examines Constant’s thinking about automation and the city. Departing from Constant’s own writings, it argues that automation was not only an economic premise but also, and more importantly, a creative condition of future urban environments. As such it required a re-conceptualisation of the collective habitat. Constant’s vision, a critique of functionalist modern urbanism, imagined the city as a ‘complete environment’, part of an extended and dynamic activity that involved its inhabitants. The speculative framework of this essay wishes to situate New Babylon within the broader discourses of automation and cybernetics that dominated the cultural and scientific arena of the post-war period in the United States and Europe, as well as within the diverse genealogies and theoretical entanglements of these terrains. https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/footprint/article/view/4948 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Iris Giannakopoulou Karamouzi |
spellingShingle |
Iris Giannakopoulou Karamouzi Automation and the City Footprint |
author_facet |
Iris Giannakopoulou Karamouzi |
author_sort |
Iris Giannakopoulou Karamouzi |
title |
Automation and the City |
title_short |
Automation and the City |
title_full |
Automation and the City |
title_fullStr |
Automation and the City |
title_full_unstemmed |
Automation and the City |
title_sort |
automation and the city |
publisher |
Jap Sam Books |
series |
Footprint |
issn |
1875-1504 1875-1490 |
publishDate |
2021-06-01 |
description |
From 1959 to 1974, Constant Anton Nieuwenhuys developed New Babylon, a speculative city for a future society in which automation would free human life to dedicate itself to creativity, collectivity and play. This essay examines Constant’s thinking about automation and the city. Departing from Constant’s own writings, it argues that automation was not only an economic premise but also, and more importantly, a creative condition of future urban environments. As such it required a re-conceptualisation of the collective habitat. Constant’s vision, a critique of functionalist modern urbanism, imagined the city as a ‘complete environment’, part of an extended and dynamic activity that involved its inhabitants. The speculative framework of this essay wishes to situate New Babylon within the broader discourses of automation and cybernetics that dominated the cultural and scientific arena of the post-war period in the United States and Europe, as well as within the diverse genealogies and theoretical entanglements of these terrains.
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https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/footprint/article/view/4948 |
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AT irisgiannakopouloukaramouzi automationandthecity |
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