Architectural Ecology (HS 23)

Seminar History, Criticism and Theory in Architecture, Prof. Dr. Laurent Stalder, Prof. Momoyo Kaijima, Kozo Kadowaki, Conrad Kersting

Enlarged view: Luke Jones Carbon Tectonics, in Non-Extractive Architecture Vol. 1, Steinberg Press, 2021
Luke Jones Carbon Tectonics, in Non-Extractive Architecture Vol. 1, Steinberg Press, 2021

Climate change confronts architecture with a series of new and complex challenges that are reflected in a specific vocabulary. Terms like sufficiency, circularity or cohabitation are shaping the debates around this crisis or are standing for possible ways out of it. At the same time, the immediate nature of the situation forces us to critically question or revise common standards in the built practice - without having established new reliabilities in advance. Instead, a wide variety of isolated, sometimes contradictory strategies are being pursued simultaneously: Replacing fossil building materials with ecological ones, striving for „less“ or a „different“ way of building, low-tech and high-tech approaches, simple or multi-layered constructions. Theoretical and practical perspectives seem to be little connected so far.

In this seminar we will, on the one hand, deal with the central concepts and strategies of the current debates and get to know and question them by reading key theoretical texts. On the other hand, we will analyze relevant case studies from Europe and Japan on this basis and thus examine both the theoretical strategies and the concrete projects for their potentials.

By combining theoretical foundations and practice-based approaches, we thus aim to develop a deeper understanding of an academically informed, ecological architecture, while at the same time capturing and questioning the methods of our current practice from a variety of perspectives.

Kontakt

Conrad Kersting
  • HIL F 64.2

Professur für Architekturtheorie
Stefano-Franscini-Platz 5
8093 Zürich
Switzerland

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