Diploma Unit 9 thrives on the looping consequences of architecture’s own stories about itself. This year the ‘ruin’ was posed as a straightforward point of entry for a brief that would explore the ruin as an artefact and the embodiment of a cultural and architectural stagnation. Like last year’s exchange of the room and the city, this year’s work on the ruin led to the making of narratives within narratives, which demanded a comprehension of time and space as utterly elastic.
As Georges cut a series of holes through the physical spaces of the AA he confronted not only the physical exhaustion of a Georgian building, but also the discontinuities of the architectural conceit that makes up the corridor (which he demonstrated as an entity that does anything but connect).
Antoine battled an identity crisis on two fronts: the future of the European city and the future of the architect (and himself) in this unknown terrain. Both Antoine and Georges destroyed in order to build; yet neither conceded a return to the tabula rasa, which reveals itself today as its own kind of architectural ruin.
Ariadna’s project explores so many sub-narratives that we never know which story is the real one set in the place that still might be Manhattan. The project is at once a film as well as a set occupied by both buildings and their architect – a new, unexpected kind of built world. Meanwhile Eleanor battles with the axonometric, an architect’s text, and an architect who becomes, like Luke’s Darth Vader, a father she must destroy to find her place in an architectural world far, far away.
Our work on the ruin was a wipeout where cities that were once whole now stand as devastated landscapes. Through the settling dust we learned this: whatever the ruin may be, its inverse is unknowable – and within that ambiguity lies the potential for an architectural project and the possibility to locate the architect within this new context. It enables us to make work that is committed to what we do best – architecture about architecture.
Staff
Natasha Sandmeier
Special thanks to our guests and critics and support
Charles Arsène-Henry for his seminars and inspiration
Amandine Kastler
Ana Araujo
Andrew Yau
Barbara-Ann Campbell-Lange
Belinda Flaherty
Brett Steele
Christopher Pierce
Dolores Ruiz Garrido
Doreen Bernath
Evan Greenberg
Fabrizio Ballabio
Francesca Hughes
Gabriela Garcia
de Cortazar G
Inigo Minns
Javier Castañón
Kenneth Fraser
Manolis Stavrakakis
Maria Fedorchenko
Marilyn Dyer
Marina Lathouri
Mark E Breeze
Mark Campbell
Mark Cousins
Martin Jameson
Matthew Butcher
Michael Weinstock
Nacho Marti
Ricardo de Ostos
Shin Egashira
Shumon Basar
Sylvie Taher
Takero Shimazaki
Tarek Shamma
Theodore Spyropoulos
Thomas Weaver
Tyen Masten
Merve Anil
We start by taking as a given consumption's long term affair with the city.
Consumption has been the catalyst behind the birth, growth and death of every city.
15th century Europe -
The Pioneer is fuelled forward in space and time by his need for progress and thirst for consumption, resulting in his accidental discovery of the Americas.
18th century America -
The figure of the Pioneer is renamed the Explorer who believes that progress is to be achieved through the consumption of the inconceivably vast virgin continent that lays at his feet.
21st century World -
The figure of the Pioneer is replaced by that of the Shopper. With no physical resources left to devour, the Shopper moves on to the final commodity: the City.
We find ourselves consuming the City as a found object.
This project is a call for the City to turn around and finally take advantage of consumption.