Architecture X Architecture: A Dialectic
MAP (Metropolitan Architectural Practice)
9781964490205
272 pages
Oscar Riera Ojeda Publishers Llc
Overview
Architecture X Architecture: A Dialectic redefines the boundaries of architectural thought, introducing a bold reimagining of architecture's visual and conceptual lexicon through the transformative lenses of machine vision and generative AI. These projects from 2022-2024 attest to a formative period in the evolution of architectural visualization and practice by MAP (Metropolitan Architectural Practice). They explore concepts of “neo-ecologies”—an intricate, intersectional ecosystem where architecture exists as an evolving interface within a constantly shifting digital, spatial, and cultural matrix. Here, architecture is not solely built form but a dynamic entity, deeply enmeshed in a network of digital and cultural exchanges that expand the field's horizon of possibilities With meticulously crafted visual analyses, Architecture X Architecture maps the contours of digital influence, illuminating Generative AI's origins, its rapid escalation, and its complex entwinement within architectural practices. Addressed to architects, cultural theorists, digital innovators, and intellectually curious readers, this monograph provides a nuanced and penetrating exploration of AI's dual role—not as a sustaining force, but as a catalyst that redefines contemporary architectural paradigms. In doing so, it offers a transformative vision of architecture at the convergence of AI-driven imaging and experimental design methodologies, forging a neo-ecological framework that emphasizes perpetual growth, adaptation, and post-disciplinary fluidity.Author Bio
Katherine Lambert is a neoteric director, media artist and academic whose cross-displinary practice spans visual imagining, digital media, video and design. As a founding partner of Metropolitan Architectural Practice (MAP) and Director of its research division, MAP Studio, she has cultivated a body of work that redefines the boundaries of spatial, visual, and cultural production. Robbins’ work interrogates the intersections of material and digital realms, leveraging the transformative potential of emerging technologies to foster innovative solutions for sustainable and socially conscious directives. Her practice engages with the disruptive impact of emerging technologies on contemporary landscape, urbanism and interdisciplinary design practices, an ethos that resonates with her latest project, Thresholds of the Frontier. Created in response to advent of generative AI, the project explores the “speed of thought”, the discomforting duality of visual seduction and unexpected R/L challenges posed by artificial intelligence in its many guises: from machine vision to synthetic cognition and sensation, and from the macro-economics of machine learning to the intimate realities of everyday resourcing. Drawing on concepts akin to those of theorists Jean Baudrillard and Paul Virilio, her projects examine the unexpected incongruities posed by gen AI + machine vision. The accelerating impact of AI technologies reflects Virilio’s position that speed reconfigures time, space, and human experience. Robbins’ work is a visualization of such dromological effects, where the speed of AI generation disrupts conventions of architectural and design practices, inventing new ways of understanding spatiality and identity.
Christiane Robbins is a neoteric director, media artist and academic whose cross-displinary practice spans visual imagining, digital media, video and design. As a founding partner of Metropolitan Architectural Practice (MAP) and Director of its research division, MAP Studio, she has cultivated a body of work that redefines the boundaries of spatial, visual, and cultural production. Robbins’ work interrogates the intersections of material and digital realms, leveraging the transformative potential of emerging technologies to foster innovative solutions for sustainable and socially conscious directives. Her practice engages with the disruptive impact of emerging technologies on contemporary landscape, urbanism and interdisciplinary design practices, an ethos that resonates with her latest project, Thresholds of the Frontier. Created in response to advent of generative AI, the project explores the “speed of thought”, the discomforting duality of visual seduction and unexpected R/L challenges posed by artificial intelligence in its many guises: from machine vision to synthetic cognition and sensation, and from the macro-economics of machine learning to the intimate realities of everyday resourcing. Drawing on concepts akin to those of theorists Jean Baudrillard and Paul Virilio, her projects examine the unexpected incongruities posed by gen AI + machine vision. The accelerating impact of AI technologies reflects Virilio’s position that speed reconfigures time, space, and human experience. Robbins’ work is a visualization of such dromological effects, where the speed of AI generation disrupts conventions of architectural and design practices, inventing new ways of understanding spatiality and identity.