Frontiers of Architectural Research (Jun 2019)

Reducing architecture: Doing almost nothing as a city-making strategy in 21st century architecture

  • Marco Enia,
  • Flavio Martella

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
pp. 154 – 163

Abstract

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This paper discusses a contemporary design strategy to deal with urban spaces. In 21st century architecture it is possible to recognize the existence of several projects that consist in doing almost nothing, carrying out only minimal modifications to their sites of intervention. In present-day architecture, this approach is considered useful sometimes to respect the surroundings and sometimes to improve them through the smallest and tiniest actions. Doing almost nothing is a strategy that can unfold in many ways. It can mean opting for inaction and thus not modifying a place at all; or designing a temporary project intended to occupy it only for a limited period of time; or also carrying out a particularly small but permanent intervention. Depending on the circumstances, it is an approach that can help architecture protecting a place, reclaiming it or reactivating its latent qualities. This strategy can be implemented both through a single intervention on a specific place, or through a network of coordinated projects in different locations. The purpose of the paper is to present this approach in the context of 21st century urban architecture, through cases studied from the last two decades. Keywords: City-making, Almost nothing, Inaction, Smallness, Temporary interventions, Urban acupuncture