Tuesday 20 February 2018

Repetition or variation?

Repetition or variation?

One of the primary features of Dutch building design has been uniformity. Organized development, democratic sentiments, planning regulations and related factors resulted into repetitive patterns, characterized mostly by translational symmetry, with mirror symmetries sometimes thrown in. Repetition is a powerful device that transforms picturesque scales and morphologies into something more urban and modern, even from rather early in Dutch architecture, as on the Groot Heiligland in Haarlem. 


Repetition has dominated Dutch urban development, especially in the suburbs that have filled the country since the 1930s. Local authorities enforced it rigorously, imposing uniformity even in small modifications like loft conversions, especially on the street side: the morphology of a neighbourhood had to be preserved, and buildings of the same row had to remain identical, sometimes even in the colours they used. 

More recently, however, planners have had a change of heart. Uniformity was deemed not just oppressive, resulting into anonymity (people had been joking that the only way they could find their own place was by counting houses or from the curtains) but also aesthetically and historically wrong. They pointed out that the most interesting urban places were characterized by variety, with buildings of various shapes, sizes and materials coming together into a harmonious whole, as in these pictures of Bergen-op-Zoom. 






One could point out that these buildings were designed and constructed in different eras, under different conditions (including planning regulations) and that buildings may come together in clumsy ways but the idea of variation seems to have caught on. More and more new developments take place under regulations that stipulate that adjacent buildings should have different floor levels, fenestration patterns, roofs and textures or colours. 




Some of the results are not uninteresting but in others variation is forced and superficial, making me long for uniformity. From a research point of view, it's an open invitation to study the perception of buildings and the effects of formal devices like translational symmetry on aesthetics. There used to be quite a few psychologists who were keen on the foundations of such perception. I'll keep on collecting examples, good and bad, and perhaps some time I'll try to make the connection with aesthetics and perception. It's a development worth following. 

Sunday 11 February 2018

Teylers Museum: a time machine

Teylers Museum: a time machine

At the Teylers Museum in Haarlem, reputedly the first and oldest museum in the Netherlands: interesting building, eclectic collection, typical of earlier times. I have the feeling of going back in time, not just because of the old, rather worn building with its sloping wooden floors and the old-fashioned cabinets that remind me of my school back in the middle of the 20th century.





What really takes me back are the yellowing, type-written or calligraphically handwritten cards and labels next to the exhibits in the cabinets - true remnants of a bygone era. It used to be like that, people made everything themselves, using what they had: scraps of paper, pens, typing machines - and we all thought the results were great.





Nowadays even the most incompetent computer user can produce results that would have been of the highest professional level back then, using fonts and clip art, colour and all kinds of effects. Our possibilities have grown explosively but I wonder if the same applies to our capacities. Nowadays there are too many machines between us and what we make, layers of mediation that attenuate feedback and make procedures even more prescriptive. If they ever replace the old labels and cards at Teylers Museum, I don't think I'll come back for another visit.

Critical or constructive?

Critical or constructive?

Having been involved in computerisation from the early days of its popularisation in the 20th century, I'm often involved in ambitious projects that aspire to develop Company 2.0 or Society 3.0 - that kind of visionary, disruptive and innovative stuff that has become so popular. My involvement is thankfully limited: brainstorms in the early, conceptual stages or evaluations at the end. I sit in conference rooms, like I did last week, and listen to big words with little understanding of the technologies involved and their possible consequences. People are drunk with the potential of their world - not specific technologies but the abstract, vague spirit of the age: AI, blockchains, BIM, social media, big data are magic wands that can transform their reality into something else, something new that will help primarily their career.

It's difficult to remain constructive under such circumstances, lacking in structure and clarity of approach. What I hear reminds me of people excitedly buying more and more stuff for their homes, gadgets and furnishings with questionable utility, without any intention of replacing old stuff, without any thought as to combine the new with the old, just overloading and cluttering their lives. Yes, one can be eclectic and promote heterogeneity into a virtue but coherence has its advantages, especially if it helps reduce cost and effort. Computerisation remains too expensive and demanding to take it as a mere collage of an ever-growing collection tools and micro-environments. It's not enough to claim that one's making a new version of the world; one has to specify this version in a coherent and comprehensive manner.

But even if I would be inclined to neglect the overall picture, it's hard not to be critical of such individual tools and micro-environments. People just buy any old thing from so-called developers and advisors (most of them are just resellers of products with added unnecessary services: servitisation is for the benefit of the seller, not of the buyer), impressed by modernity and peer acceptance. They buy things that might overlap with what they already have, things that might not do what they expect, things that might perform worse than alternatives digital or analogue. Even worse, they often seem unable to take a step back and look at the mess they're buying.

So, what am I supposed to do? The easy option is to just sit there and nod gravely, letting them do the interpretation of my silence. Yet I cannot resist attempts to make them think for themselves, to offer them some starting point for structuring and explaining their own thoughts. It seldom works; one cannot talk rationally to junkies, it appears. Let the world dissolve into tiny pieces, each governed by salespeople and PR. We're rich enough to support them all, it transpires.