Discovery

Architecture in 2047

The American Institute of Architects challenged us to think about how the architect's practice will look in 30 years.  I was inspired to respond by thinking of recent advances in design technology as the infancy of the every tools of the future architect, and I was inspired a little bit by the upcoming release of Blade Runner 2049.

Architecture’s current trajectory will continue to release projects from the silo of the office desktop, and the silo of the architect's brain. Virtual and enhanced reality will pull meetings from board rooms and into infinite occupiable versions, the project constructed and deconstructed many times before breaking ground. Time between iterations will become faster and faster. Hive communication in the Cloud will allow a continuous exchange to more thoroughly describe ideas. Expertise will be shared more readily, as the design community follows the sharing economy down alternate open-model paths that have already started to reshape the way business is done. Lessons learned will more readily be accessible and applied, like a software patch to the design. The end product will be ever more precisely in line with human intention and expectation for the built environment; and the efficiencies afforded by this fine tuning will in turn reduce the burden on the planet. 

The architect’s role must evolve to harness the power of the growing current of data and computational solutions, to shape the project around central tenets and targets, and to communicate the implications of numerous decisions - to be a guiding force and a fixed point in a swarm of forces and numbers.  This role as a guiding force will make the architect of the future an indispensable figure for any size construction project.

Economic forces will attempt to drive projects to serve a narrow purpose, however, it will also be the architect’s responsibility to respond with technology and data to show the undeniability of maintaining sustainability, responsibility and urban connectivity for a tenable world that can continue to grow and thrive at the rates we expect. Undermining these forces will be a continuous battle, but one that the architect can be especially equipped to orchestrate a stand against.
 

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Punchlisting Disney

After 14 years in the field of architecture, punch listing projects and cataloging and visiting world-class masterpieces of design, we as architects are especially unforgiving to the places of our past. 

Opportunities to test the architecture of your memory are always interesting.  Particularly when viewed as an adult looking back to what a place impressed upon you when you were a kid, it's amazing how much doesn't hold up to the myth we build around significant places from our youth.  The elementary school that was bright and colorful, or looming and foreboding, is now just a dingy unimpressive, or even tiny, structure that you wouldn't look twice at had you not had this intense memory of the place to draw you back. 

Revisiting Walt Disney World is the ultimate test of putting childhood wonder under the microscope to see, now knowing all the tricks behind the magic, if the architecture of my 13-year old memory would hold; and by that I mean, the feeling of ultimate awe and wonderment at a place that people built, now being a person who builds. 

The answer is shockingly well.  It's similar to going back and watching old Saturday Night Live sketches I loved as a kid; the jokes that went right over my head actually land this time, and makes the whole thing fresh again.  Which is not to say that everything was as magical to me as it was in 1993, but a lot more of it was than I had expected. 

How fun would drawing this RCP be?

How fun would drawing this RCP be?

As with any project, the memory of the space is in the details.  The basics are important - that the building stands, doesn't leak and doesn't create new problems is prerequisite; but for that emotional connection, the details make it or break it.  Especially when you're waiting an hour and a half in a line for a 2 minute ride.

Moody alt-country album cover, or waiting for Br'er Fox and Br'er Bear to send us down Splash Mountain?

Moody alt-country album cover, or waiting for Br'er Fox and Br'er Bear to send us down Splash Mountain?

Wait, there's not really ghosts in this old hotel... are there?

Wait, there's not really ghosts in this old hotel... are there?

I appreciated the inclusion of what looks like actual classic building panels and equipment salvaged from who-knows-where.  They had this genuine old mining equipment on Thunder Mountain, that I could actually pay attention to now that I had the ability to keep my eyes open. 

Some moments disappointed, but you can't get it all right.  The control joints in the Campanile in EPCOT Italy annoyed me to no end.  Maybe the contractor blew through all the contingency on the Norway log flume ride.

The Venetians didn't have to comply with Florida Wind Codes, but that's no excuse...

The Venetians didn't have to comply with Florida Wind Codes, but that's no excuse...

I found EPCOT Morocco to be my favorite - all of the EPCOT(tm) Countries had hidden details that I appreciated, but Morocco felt the most subtle - without the glitz and glamour of French waiters and Chinese acrobats, Morocco was a nice oasis of rest in an exhausting circus of ornament.  And the food at the Marrakesh restaurant in the back, which you get to through a series of alleys and courtyards, was just as fantastic as the ambiance.  

I'm not sure what spec section this goes under...  Badassery?

I'm not sure what spec section this goes under...  Badassery?

#downspoutgoals

#downspoutgoals

Eventually I became overwhelmed by all the details... I found myself investigating all the back alleys to see where the details stopped, but they just kept on going.

Even their ceiling tile grids made it past my eye at first... I stood under this one for an hour before realizing it was just your standard lay-in grid, albeit well decorated.  So, safe to say, Disney gets a 100 on its punch list.

Never more important to center your smoke detectors and speakers!

Never more important to center your smoke detectors and speakers!

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