Another Form: From the ‘Informational’ to the ‘Infrastructural’ City

The city is at once material and medium, substantial and enduring on the one hand but mobile, changeable and different things to different people on the other. So to speak of its form has never been straightforward. In the last fifty years the city has become enmeshed in momentous processes transfo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stephen Read
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Jap Sam Books 2009-06-01
Series:Footprint
Online Access:https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/707
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spelling doaj-dfc349a6ba2a4f658998a3395b31e0932021-02-08T12:07:44ZengJap Sam BooksFootprint1875-15041875-14902009-06-013210.7480/footprint.3.2.707733Another Form: From the ‘Informational’ to the ‘Infrastructural’ CityStephen Read The city is at once material and medium, substantial and enduring on the one hand but mobile, changeable and different things to different people on the other. So to speak of its form has never been straightforward. In the last fifty years the city has become enmeshed in momentous processes transforming our societies and our senses of our place in the world. We have seen urban places become drawn into ever more integrated circuits with other places across the boundaries of nations and continents. This leaves us with question marks about the places we inhabit today and has generated problems of place and coherence in the contemporary city. Without offering solutions to problems of sprawl and fragmentation, I propose here a way of understanding the city and its growth as ordered. To do this I extend Castells’s idea of the ‘technological paradigm’ to spaces of places as well as those of flows and outline an urban form comprising limited technical systems, both high and low tech, establishing coherent and bounded infrastructures of objects, subjects and practices. These infrastructures are internally ordered as total technical systems or paradigms while they are also externally related to other infrastructures in backward and forward articulations that are capable of being generative and place-forming. I argue that we need to understand complex processes of boundary and centre formation in these articulations and use this knowledge to deliver a ‘dappled world’ of varying niches or inhabitable places from the very large to the very small. We need to find alternatives to the macrophysics and smooth pervasive power of the space of flows by maintaining, inventing and reinventing microphysical architectures of enabling places offering us multiple ways of being and living in our contemporary city. https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/707
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen Read
spellingShingle Stephen Read
Another Form: From the ‘Informational’ to the ‘Infrastructural’ City
Footprint
author_facet Stephen Read
author_sort Stephen Read
title Another Form: From the ‘Informational’ to the ‘Infrastructural’ City
title_short Another Form: From the ‘Informational’ to the ‘Infrastructural’ City
title_full Another Form: From the ‘Informational’ to the ‘Infrastructural’ City
title_fullStr Another Form: From the ‘Informational’ to the ‘Infrastructural’ City
title_full_unstemmed Another Form: From the ‘Informational’ to the ‘Infrastructural’ City
title_sort another form: from the ‘informational’ to the ‘infrastructural’ city
publisher Jap Sam Books
series Footprint
issn 1875-1504
1875-1490
publishDate 2009-06-01
description The city is at once material and medium, substantial and enduring on the one hand but mobile, changeable and different things to different people on the other. So to speak of its form has never been straightforward. In the last fifty years the city has become enmeshed in momentous processes transforming our societies and our senses of our place in the world. We have seen urban places become drawn into ever more integrated circuits with other places across the boundaries of nations and continents. This leaves us with question marks about the places we inhabit today and has generated problems of place and coherence in the contemporary city. Without offering solutions to problems of sprawl and fragmentation, I propose here a way of understanding the city and its growth as ordered. To do this I extend Castells’s idea of the ‘technological paradigm’ to spaces of places as well as those of flows and outline an urban form comprising limited technical systems, both high and low tech, establishing coherent and bounded infrastructures of objects, subjects and practices. These infrastructures are internally ordered as total technical systems or paradigms while they are also externally related to other infrastructures in backward and forward articulations that are capable of being generative and place-forming. I argue that we need to understand complex processes of boundary and centre formation in these articulations and use this knowledge to deliver a ‘dappled world’ of varying niches or inhabitable places from the very large to the very small. We need to find alternatives to the macrophysics and smooth pervasive power of the space of flows by maintaining, inventing and reinventing microphysical architectures of enabling places offering us multiple ways of being and living in our contemporary city.
url https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/707
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