scootie
New member
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2009
- Messages
- 71
- Reaction score
- 0
Sorry, didn?t mean to be dismissive. The passage is witless and ponderously written; and that puts obstacles in the reader's path.
Thanks for the thoughtful comments. I enjoy reading your well crafted and cogent posts.
I think the text I posted, bombast notwithstanding, is only Koolhaas? critique of the conceptual limitations of contextualism [which I take as the regulation and preservation of a historic district for example] and rationalism [which I take to be akin to the methodology of Krier or the New Urbanists].
Unlike Le Corbusier [your earlier comparison], who would propose manifesto-like that the architecture of the past was hopelessly outdated and should be destroyed and replaced with his modernism [Plan Voisin pour Paris for example], Koolhaas is not commenting on the architecture of the past at all, only on contextualism or rationalism as effective ways of creating [new] architecture.
He is saying that these two operations are not possible as posited since both rely on processes that contradict and even restrict the processes that created the [favorite] historic artifact in the first place. Therefore they betray their initial premise; that they are the continuity of the historic tradition. That is not to say that the results are bad, only that they are not what they claim to be.
I suppose ultimately he is arguing for his own work to be possible; and also that ?new types that are demonstrably responses to authentic programmatic demands and inspirations? are part of a true continuity of the historic tradition. And that is what I am arguing as well.