Direkt zum Inhalt

Warenkorb

  • Lukas Feireiss (Ed.)

    The Radical Cut-Up Reader: No Single Narrative

  • Juliane Streich (Hg.)

    These Girls. Ein Streifzug durch die feministische…

  • Chris O'Leary

    Ashes to Ashes. The Songs of David Bowie, 1976-2016

  • Edit DeAk, Walter Robinson (eds.)

    Art-Rite

  • Alice Gorman

    Dr Space Junk vs The Universe. Archaeology and the Future

  • Ekaterina Degot, David Riff, Katalin…

    Volksfronten / Popular Fronts. Art and Populism in an Era…

  • Rene Boer, Marina Otero Verzier, Katia…

    Architecture of Appropriation. On Squatting as Spatial…

  • Susan Ferguson

    Women and Work. Feminism, Labour, and Social Reproduction

  • John Cage (Laura Kuhn, Ed.)

    Love, Icebox. Letters from John Cage to Merce Cunningham

  • Julia Eckhardt

    Eliane Radigue. Intermediary Spaces. Espaces Intermediaires

  • Adolph Stiller, Aneta Bulant-Kamenova (…

    Stefka Georgieva: Architektin der 1960er Jahre in Bulgarien

  • Carola Platzek (Hg.)

    Teachings of the Garden

  • raumlaborberlin (Hg.)

    Floating University Berlin 2018. An illustrated report

  • Christian Maurel / Peter Rehberg

    Für den Arsch / Energie ohne Macht. Christian Maurels…

  • Ursula Prokop

    Jacques and Jacqueline Groag, Architect and Designer: Two…

  • Christoph Liepach

    Gera Ostmodern

  • Agnès Gayraud

    Dialectic of Pop

  • Alina Popa

    Alina Popa. Square of Will in Square of Love. Texts, Notes…

  • Timothy Morton

    Ökologisch sein

  • Saskia Sassen, David Harvey, Arjun…

    Urbaner Protest. Revolte in der neoliberalen Stadt

  • Georges Bataille

    Der Fluch der Ökonomie

  • Alfia Nakipbekova (Ed.)

    Exploring Xenakis. Performance, Practice, Philosophy

  • Alexander Wilson

    Aesthesis and Perceptronium. On the Entanglement of…

  • Seraji, Devabhaktuni, Lu (Eds.)

    From Crisis to Crisis: Debates on Why Architecture Criticsm…

  • Momus

    Herr F

  • Robert Conrad

    Vergessene Orte in Berlin und Brandenburg

  • 2G / # 79

    Studio Muoto (Paris)

  • Ingeborg Bloem & Klaus Kempenaars

    Branded Protest. The Power of Branding and its Influence on…

  • Wiel Arets

    Un-Conscious-City

  • Achille Mbembe

    Necropolitics

  • K. Jacobson, A. Ray (eds)

    ...and Other Such Stories: 2019 Chicago Architecture…

  • Barsac, Cheruet, Perriand (eds.)

    Charlotte Perriand: Inventing A New World

  • Daniel López-Pérez

    R. Buckminster Fuller - Pattern-Thinking

  • Carlana, Mezzalira, Pentimalli (eds.)

    Quirino De Giorgio. An Architect's Legacy

  • Annette Weisser

    Mycelium

  • Hendrik Kempt, Megan Volpert (Ed.)

    RuPaul's Drag Race and Philosophy. Sissy That Thought

  • Warren Neidich

    The Glossary of Cognitive Activism (For a not so distant…

  • Crimson Historians & Urbanists

    City of Comings and Goings

  • Alan Quireyns, Nav Haq

    Sustainability is not enough. Non-Conventional…

  • Borasi, Ferré, Garutti, Kelley, Zardini…

    The Museum Is Not Enough

  • Mark van Wageningen

    Color and Type: Mehrfarbige Multi-Layer-Schriften entwerfen…

  • M. Kries, T. Cunz (Hg)

    Objekte der Begierde. Surrealismus und Design 1924 - Heute

  • Lukas Feireiss

    Radical Cut-Up: Nothing Is Original

  • Chanon Goodwin (Ed.)

    Permanent Recession: A Handbook on Art, Labour and…

  • David Toop

    Inflamed Invisible: Collected Writings on Art and Sound,…

  • Tom Bieling (Ed.)

    Design (&) Activism: Perspectives on Design as Activism…

  • Material Matters 04

    Paper: Creative interpretations of common materials

  • Kate Franklin, Caroline Till

    Radical Matter: Rethinking Materials for a Sustainable…

  • Bernd Scherer u.a. (Hg.)

    Wörterbuch der Gegenwart

  • Owen Hatherley, Christopher Herwig

    Soviet Metro Stations

  • Amt für Hochbauten der Stadt Zürich

    Pavillon Le Corbusier Zürich: Restaurierung eines…

  • Peter Adam

    Eileen Gray: Her Life and Work

  • Diedrich Diederichsen, Anselm Franke (…

    Liebe und Ethnologie: die koloniale Dialektik der…

  • Eyal Weizman

    Forensic Architecture: Violence at the Threshold of…

  • Jens Müller (Ed.)

    West-Berlin Grafik-Design. Gestaltung hinter dem Eisernen…

  • Dimitry Kochenov

    Citizenship (Essential Knowledge Series)

  • Jason Oddy

    Revolution Will Be Stopped Halfway: Oscar Niemeyer in…

  • Alessandro Zambelli

    Scandalous Space - Between architecture and archaeology

  • Holly Buck

    After Geoengineering: Climate Tragedy, Repair, and…

  • Junya Ishigami

    Serpentine Pavilion 2019

  • Jesús Vassallo

    Epics in the Everyday: Photography, Architecture, and the…

  • A. Gigon, M. Guyer (Hg.)

    Bürogebäude

  • Mckenzie Wark

    Capital Is Dead: Is This Something Worse?

  • Susanne Hefti & Damjan Kokalevski

    Skopje Walkie Talkie

  • K. Grimstad, S. Rennie (Hg)

    The New Woman's Survival Catalog: A Woman-Made Book

  • Fink, Graff, Rostek, Wagner (Hg.)

    Architects on Architects

  • Natasha Lennard

    Being Numerous. Essays on Non-Fascist Life

  • Graphic #44

    Berlin Issue

  • Peter Weibel (Hg.)

    Sound Art: Sound as a Medium of Art

  • Walter Scheiffele

    Ostmoderne-Westmoderne

  • Samuel Greengard

    Virtual Reality

  • Ion Grigorescu

    From static oblivion

  • Guy Standing

    Plunder of the Commons: A Manifesto for Sharing Public…

  • Sofia Bempeza

    Geschichte(n) des Kunststreiks

  • Vilém Flusser

    Vom Stand der Dinge. Eine kleine Philosophie des Design

  • Jane Hall

    Breaking Ground: Architecture by Women

  • Jason Bahbak Mohaghegh

    Omnicide: Mania, Fatality, and the Future-in-Delirium

  • Chantal Akerman

    My Mother Laughs

  • Stiftung Buchkunst

    Die Schönsten Deutschen Bücher 2019: The Best German Book…

  • Franco "Bifo" Berardi

    Die Seele bei der Arbeit: Von der Entfremdung zur Autonomie

  • Judith Butler

    Rücksichtslose Kritik. Körper, Rede, Aufstand

  • Alexandra Hopf, Regine Steenbock

    Vogue. M29 Special.09/2019 September

  • J. Dowling, C. Leterme

    From Latin America

  • Extinction Rebellion

    This Is Not A Drill: An Extinction Rebellion Handbook

  • Matthias Schmelzer, Andrea Vetter

    Degrowth / Postwachstum zur Einführung

  • M. Rothenberger, T. Weber (Hg)

    Nico – Wie kann die Luft so schwer sein an einem Tag an dem…

  • Marcel Hénaff

    Die Stadt im Werden

  • Francesco Garutti

    Our Happy Life. Architecture and Well-Being in the Age of…

  • Kenya Hara

    Designing Japan. A Future Built on Aesthetics

  • T. Rieniets, C. Kämmerer

    Architektur der 1950er bis 1970er Jahre im Ruhrgebiet: Als…

  • Janwillem Schrofer (Ed.)

    Plan and Play, Play and Plan: Defining Your Art Practice

  • Giorgio Agamben

    Creation and Anarchy: The Work of Art and the Religion of…

  • Danae Io, Callum Copley (Ed.)

    Schemas of Uncertainty

  • Lucy Cotter

    Reclaiming Artistic Research

  • Sabine Hansmann, Finn Geipel (Hg.)

    Raummaschine: Exploring the Manifold Spaces

  • Peter Donhauser

    Musikmaschinen: Die Geschichte der Elektromusik

  • Amanda Boetzkes

    Plastic Capitalism. Contemporary Art and the Drive to Waste

  • Stefanie Graefe

    Resilienz im Krisenkapitalismus: Wider das Lob der…

The Largest Art. A Measured Manifesto for a Plural Urbanism

Urban design in practice is incremental, but architects imagine it as scaled-up architecture—large, ready-to-build pop-up cities. This paradox of urban design is rarely addressed; indeed, urban design as a discipline lacks a theoretical foundation. In The Largest Art, Brent Ryan argues that urban design encompasses more than architecture, and he provides a foundational theory of urban design beyond the architectural scale. In a “declaration of independence” for urban design, Ryan describes urban design as the largest of the building arts, with qualities of its own.
Ryan distinguishes urban design from its sister arts by its pluralism: plural scale, ranging from an alleyway to a region; plural time, because it is deeply enmeshed in both history and the present; plural property, with many owners; plural agents, with many makers; and plural form, with a distributed quality that allows it to coexist with diverse elements of the city. Ryan looks at three well-known urban design projects through the lens of pluralism: a Brancusi sculptural ensemble in Romania, a Bronx housing project, and a formally and spatially diverse grouping of projects in Ljubljana, Slovenia. He revisits the thought of three plural urbanists working between 1960 and 1980: David Crane, Edmund Bacon, and Kevin Lynch. And he tells three design stories for the future, imaginary scenarios of plural urbanism in locations around the world.
Ryan concludes his manifesto with three signal considerations urban designers must acknowledge: eternal change, inevitable incompletion, and flexible fidelity. Cities are ceaselessly active, perpetually changing. It is the urban designer's task to make art with aesthetic qualities that can survive perpetual change.


Brent D. Ryan
The Largest Art. A Measured Manifesto for a Plural Urbanism
MIT Press, 2018, 978-0-262-03667-2
38,90 €