ALLEN (intro)
“It is precisely when practice and experimentation turn up inconsistencies in the “normal science” that new theories are produced.” (XII)
“Constantly mixing media in this way, material practices produce new concepts out of the materials and procedures of work itself.” (XIII)
We have spoken this semester of risk and surprise. Craft is risk, the evolutionary algorithm must produce surprising results to be worth our time, prototyping depends on risk and unknown to discover new systems—otherwise it would be a model not a prototype. Innovation in architecture happens in the gaps between what we know, in the processes of building and designing and creating in which we do not know the end result. Allen reintroduces this notion, speaking to how “theory” and “practice” are actually the same: practice produces theory, and in doing so makes theory another sort of practice. It’s architecture; our end results almost always take up space in the real world, and for that reason we are quite tethered to our realities which means our theories must constantly be acted upon, adapted to the world. They must constantly evolve, learn, grow.
“Tethered to a fast-moving reality, material practices need to be agile and responsive, which often requires that they leave behind some of the weighty baggage of received ideas” (XV). There is a constant back and forth between concept and making. Architecture has a responsibility to keep up with the latest technological innovations, the newest climates and cultures, and for that reason we do things like learn of building systems in our architecture class not in the details of plumbing and air conditioning, but in understanding geometry, tools, concepts of workflow that will keep us steady through a fast moving reality. It is our responsibility to refuse to think of architecture and architectural ideas as monolithic; they have to change rapidly, constantly.
“Architecture is of necessity a discipline of circumstance and situation.” (XI). We respond to clients and client needs. We respond to the world, the world responds to architecture in a recursive loop in which true innovation must result in the risk, the surprise, the unknown of this in-between. It’s been an interesting semester of learning methods and concepts that could be scaled up, scaled up, stretched and pulled in order to derive inspiration for architectural works. They’re tools, now, we adapt them.











