Sustainable Development, Architecture and Modernism: Aspects of an Ongoing Controversy

In some discourses on sustainability, modernism in architecture is blamed for its technocratic beliefs that supposedly generated a lot of the social and environmental problems the world is facing today. At the same time, many architectural critics seem to be convinced that the present call for susta...

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Main Authors: Han Vandevyvere, Hilde Heynen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-10-01
Series:Arts
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/3/4/350
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spelling doaj-b77531de45974e068f392ec07213e35c2020-11-24T23:11:57ZengMDPI AGArts2076-07522014-10-013435036610.3390/arts3040350arts3040350Sustainable Development, Architecture and Modernism: Aspects of an Ongoing ControversyHan Vandevyvere0Hilde Heynen1Unit Transition Energy and Environment, VITO NV, Boeretang 200, B-2400 Mol, BelgiumDepartement of Architecture, KU Leuven, Kasteelpark Arenberg 1–bus 2431, B-3001 Leuven, BelgiumIn some discourses on sustainability, modernism in architecture is blamed for its technocratic beliefs that supposedly generated a lot of the social and environmental problems the world is facing today. At the same time, many architectural critics seem to be convinced that the present call for sustainability with its “green buildings”, is but another screen behind which well-known old power structures hide. In this paper, we react to these viewpoints in different ways. First we clarify the issues that are haunting current architectural discourses by unraveling the logics behind the viewpoints of the critics of the “environmental doctrine” on the one hand and the technical environmentalists on the other hand. We will offer, secondly, a new framing to these debates by relying upon the modal sphere theory of the Dutch philosopher Herman Dooyeweerd. This new framing will allow us to reconnect, thirdly, with the discourse of modernism, which, we will argue, is all too often conflated with a technocratic paradigm—a partial, incomplete and even misleading representation. In conclusion, we present a different framing of modernism, which allows understanding of it as a multilayered and multifaceted response to the challenges of modernity, a response that formulated a series of ideals that are not so far removed from the ideals formulated today by many advocates of sustainability. We are, thus, suggesting that the sustainability discourse should be conceived as a more mature and revised version of the paradigm of modernism, rather than its absolute counterpoint.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/3/4/350modernismmodernitysustainabilityDooyeweerd
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Han Vandevyvere
Hilde Heynen
spellingShingle Han Vandevyvere
Hilde Heynen
Sustainable Development, Architecture and Modernism: Aspects of an Ongoing Controversy
Arts
modernism
modernity
sustainability
Dooyeweerd
author_facet Han Vandevyvere
Hilde Heynen
author_sort Han Vandevyvere
title Sustainable Development, Architecture and Modernism: Aspects of an Ongoing Controversy
title_short Sustainable Development, Architecture and Modernism: Aspects of an Ongoing Controversy
title_full Sustainable Development, Architecture and Modernism: Aspects of an Ongoing Controversy
title_fullStr Sustainable Development, Architecture and Modernism: Aspects of an Ongoing Controversy
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable Development, Architecture and Modernism: Aspects of an Ongoing Controversy
title_sort sustainable development, architecture and modernism: aspects of an ongoing controversy
publisher MDPI AG
series Arts
issn 2076-0752
publishDate 2014-10-01
description In some discourses on sustainability, modernism in architecture is blamed for its technocratic beliefs that supposedly generated a lot of the social and environmental problems the world is facing today. At the same time, many architectural critics seem to be convinced that the present call for sustainability with its “green buildings”, is but another screen behind which well-known old power structures hide. In this paper, we react to these viewpoints in different ways. First we clarify the issues that are haunting current architectural discourses by unraveling the logics behind the viewpoints of the critics of the “environmental doctrine” on the one hand and the technical environmentalists on the other hand. We will offer, secondly, a new framing to these debates by relying upon the modal sphere theory of the Dutch philosopher Herman Dooyeweerd. This new framing will allow us to reconnect, thirdly, with the discourse of modernism, which, we will argue, is all too often conflated with a technocratic paradigm—a partial, incomplete and even misleading representation. In conclusion, we present a different framing of modernism, which allows understanding of it as a multilayered and multifaceted response to the challenges of modernity, a response that formulated a series of ideals that are not so far removed from the ideals formulated today by many advocates of sustainability. We are, thus, suggesting that the sustainability discourse should be conceived as a more mature and revised version of the paradigm of modernism, rather than its absolute counterpoint.
topic modernism
modernity
sustainability
Dooyeweerd
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/3/4/350
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