2014 | Volume 2
Issue 1 | pp–pp
ISSN 2305-6991
BCSSS
(To be published in Architectural Ecologies: Code, Culture and Technology at
the Convergence, as special issue of SYSTEMA: Connecting Matter, Life, Culture and Technology)
Deciding Architecture:
a Framework for the Definition of a
Temporary Autonomous
Architecture
Lila PanahiKazemi
1
Temporary Autonomous Architecture, Frankfurt, Germany, lilapanahi@gmail.com
Andrea Rossi
2
Temporary Autonomous Architecture, Vienna, Austria, a.rossi.andrea@gmail.com
Abstract: This paper attempts to propose a new perspective on the role of computational tools in
architecture, and through this, to outline a model of architectural knowledge which is not closed into
itself, but rather open to the contingencies of real world. By displaying the problematics generated by
the adoption of concepts such as self-organization and emergence, which have posed the designer as
an outsider of the design process itself (Sanchez, 2013), and focusing instead on the idea of
architecture as decision-making process (Shaviro, 2009), it proposes to reconsider the possibilities for
the autonomy of the discipline within its socio-political context (Zizek, 2014) (Bey, 1985). This would
requires a shift in the ways of adoption of computational tools in architecture, shifting them from the
generation of self-referential complexity to the definition of ecologies of interaction where the intricate
relationship which architecture is called to build can be clarified, tested and understood. This could also
suggest the possibility to use programming, understood as craft (Michalatos, Kaijma 2008), as basis to
create novel ways of communication both within architecture profession as well as between the
profession and its outside, following the idea of the architect as “incompetent master”, and allowing the
introduction of new perspectives and new actors within the design process itself.
Keywords: Computational Design, Decision, Autonomy, Temporary Autonomous Architecture, Design
Process.
This article is available from http://www.systema-journal.org
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Bertalanffy Center for the Study of Systems Science http://www.bcsss.org
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