The Language of Urban Form, with Michael Dennis
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- Опубліковано 3 жов 2024
- Architect and MIT professor Michael Dennis presents an overview of urbanism and its formal elements.
This course is presented by the Institute of Classical Architecture & Art, a national nonprofit promoting the practice, understanding, and appreciation of classical design. To watch more online classes like this one, or to become a member and support our educational mission, visit www.classicist... .
About the Course:
For thousands of years, architecture was an integral element of the city. In the twentieth century that relationship was broken, however, and architecture became isolated--an anti-urban element. Suburbanization also contributed to the erosion of the traditional city. Today, unprecedented environmental issues demand a reexamination of the city, because, in terms of energy consumption and carbon production, it is the most efficient form of human habitation on a per capita basis. This lecture covers the background of the current urban predicament, the constituent formal elements of the city, the difference between architectural and urban design, and examples from the world’s best cities.
About the Instructor:
Michael Dennis is an architect, MIT Emeritus Professor, and the author of Court & Garden: From the French Hôtel to the City of Modern Architecture as well as Architecture and the City: Selected Essays.
2020 Summer Studio Retrospective:
This course was presented as part of the 2020 Summer Studio Retrospective, a four-week series of daily online content inspired by the ICAA's Summer Studio in Classical Architecture program and the many students who have been impacted through its unique course of study. You can find additional programs in this series, and discover more of the ICAA's educational offerings, by visiting www.classicist... .
This a very important lecture. We need to rejuvenate our cities across the globe along these principles.
Brilliant! Thanks, also for acknowledging the contribution of landscape architecture to urban experience. So many architects / commentators overlook it.
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Solid lecture.
I'm quite sold on the idea of making urban housing a lot denser and more harmonious in the USA. I've had the feeling for a while that with our modern technology, we ought to be able to create absolutely stunning towns and cities, marvels of unrivaled beauty to last generations. Instead we build glass façades, and other buildings that won't last.
The modern world leaves a void of beauty to be filled. Dictators have attempted to fill this void with grotesque monuments, and gain a great deal of their power by doing so. I think this speaks to the fact that there is a vacuum. A citizen satiated with his or her society would not support such a person if they had a sense of wonder, grandeur and progress in their daily lives.
New architecture and urban planning should try to hit on fixing the problem of life feeling mundane and the problems of climate change. It might also hit on the reality of disease. Dense, tight, compact places are problematic, however, it seems as though smaller townships with clear borders might be able to enforce their own quarantines in times of pandemics, allowing a small town or city with clear borders to return to some sense of normal life relatively quickly, aside from not being able to leave town.
When I see some of those ancient layouts with clear boundaries, it seems to me as though they'd be relatively resistant to things like disease as long as it's kept outside the walls; or, if it makes it in the walls, a quarantine could be enforced until the illness runs its course.
100% agreed. I fear however that the engrained car-culture will always make creating genuine urban environments, almost impossible in America. It's a very hard shift, because cars are too deeply associated with freedom and it's difficult to go back to not having a car if you have grown up with it all your life (especially when you have children). You can never achieve the density and proper city layout when you need multi lane roads and parking for every building. There is also the fact that city building codes in the US are just outright hostile to good architecture and good urbanism. I am hoping for someone to start building charter cities where some of the principles of new-urbanism can be explored.
Thanks for the recording!
An excellent informative lecture. I learned a lot thank you!
Perfectly structured and beautifully illustrated presentation. Thank you for uniquely balanced point of view.
If your cattle and want to be fenced in and controlled
it is relevant to clarify that cows in south central France do drink red wine; but do not take plunge baths
I really enjoyed this. My needs are not to design cities for the real world, but for my imaginary world of Asdar. I design 'old' cities, fictional cities that have been lived in for thousands of years. For this reason, they cannot be perfect, but have little islands of perfection in them.
brilliant lecture
You all like how it’s fenced in? This is about control folks!!!
hidden gem on utube
lol 'a junkyard for leftover androids from outer space'
10/10
❤
interesting!
Landbays fed by arterial roads with buffer strips don’t count ?
53:26 - and this is exact problem we have nowadays. people became too dumb!
Vive la France! If only king Louis XV managed to win the seven year's war, if only French world dominance arose out of the classicist 17th century, I am ready to wager that all would be much better. #Paris is the new Jerusalem!
Maybe people don’t want to shop there! People are NOT cattle!!! How about NO!
With all due respect Mr. Dennis, it's not fair to show an overview of "randomly" selected contemporary works of architecture and state simply that they are examples of narcissism and do not contribute to successful urbanism. Many examples of classical architecture are a result of self-indulgance on the part of monarchs and business interests too. Contemporary architecture is not necessarily the problem with bad urban space and I feel your presentation, although thoughtful, expresses too much of a stylistic bias.
not at all, he was making a technical point:
see the part about Mauperty.
Modern buildings can make great icons, but have not yet proven to be able to make good background buildings, which is the flesh of a city.