Chapter 5
Architecture Beyond Construction
Evren Aysev Deneç
Abstract The last decade of urban space-making practices in Turkey has been
dominated by a construction frenzy caused by the neoliberal alignment of capitalist
market forces and urban governments. Not unlike the current global architectural
scene, the effect of this situation toward professional architectural practice in
Turkey is twofold: On the one hand, architecture and design in general are
becoming booming professions as creative forces of the construction industry that
forms the core of the national economy. The job opportunities and commissions for
practicing architects are proliferating, and the clientele profile has been expanding
with national–international investors as well as the central and local governments
promoting large-scale urban development projects. On the other hand, the architectural practice is so immensely dominated by the neoliberal policies focused on
“building as a means for economic growth” that there is virtually no room for a
professional discourse encompassing disciplinary ethics charged with social
agenda, informed by spatial intelligence, formulated with public participation,
aiming for the greater good. This paper aims to discuss the current state of the
architectural profession and the practicing architect as a spatial intellectual in the
globalized world, focusing mainly on the İstanbul experience and reflecting on
the possibility of an architectural practice beyond the constraints of the construction
industry. In the course of the paper, firstly a brief account on the condition of
normative/conventional urban space-making practices at the age of neoliberal urban
politics is given through the example of İstanbul. Then, a reflection upon the
capabilities and capacities of the architectural profession in terms of producing
alternative spatial practices is delved upon. Lastly, concluding remarks underlining
the necessity for an architectural practice beyond construction are introduced.
Keywords Architectural profession Practicing architect
Neoliberal politics Urban space production
İstanbul
E. A. Deneç (&)
Department of Architecture, İstanbul Bilgi University Faculty
of Architecture, Santral İstanbul Campus Former Silahtarağa Electrical Plant,
Kazım Karabekir Ave. No: 2/13, 34060 Eyüp, Istanbul, Turkey
e-mail: evren.aysev@bilgi.edu.tr; eaysev@gmail.com
© Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature 2018
H. Sadri (ed.), Neo-liberalism and the Architecture of the Post Professional Era,
The Urban Book Series, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76267-8_5
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5.1
E. A. Deneç
Introduction
The modes of existence in today’s postindustrial, globalized, neoliberalized world
are subjected to a constant state of change. The ways in which we perceive the
world, communicate, produce, and consume are all transforming. Architecture,
being one of the many human practices that build up culture, is no exception to this
condition. As the modern, centralized, national state of the industrialized society is
superseded by the postmodern, decentralized, global state of the postindustrial
society, it could be argued that the discipline of architecture is shifting from professionalism to a post-professional condition.
As a profession based on the corporealization of power, architecture has been in
close relationship with dominating power structures throughout its history. Yet it
has never been focused on mere image production and creation of exchange value
to the extent it is, in today’s neoliberal political climate. On one hand, globalized
economy is celebrating the construction industry as a highly profitable means for
capital accumulation. In the last two decades, while some cities such as Dubai were
built from scratch, becoming new global business centers, some industrial cities on
the verge of recession such as Bilbao were reinvented as artistic and cultural hubs
by inserting iconic architectural pieces. In any case, architecture has become a tool
for marketing cities in the global scene, leading to a simultaneous popularization of
architecture and loss of disciplinary content.
This chapter focuses on the current state of the architectural profession and the
practicing architect as a spatial intellectual in the global, neoliberal city dominated
by the construction industry as an economic generator, reflecting on the possibility
of an architectural practice beyond the constraints of the construction industry. This
issue is handled through a threefold discussion. Firstly, an account on the condition
of conventional urban space-making mechanisms at the age of neoliberal urban
politics is given, through an in-depth analysis on the “construction” practices going
on in the last 15 years at the city of Istanbul. As the cultural and economic capital
of a developing country, namely Turkey, İstanbul has been going under a
tremendous amount of construction work that has irreversibly changed the cityscape, during the 2000s. This quantitative magnitude is the reason why Istanbul is
chosen as the case of this part of the discussion. Secondly, a reflection upon the
conventional architectural practices in the global city of the twenty-first century is
presented in order to understand the current condition, capabilities, and shortcomings of the profession facing the “construction frenzy,” as pointed out previously. Lastly, concluding remarks underlining the necessity for an architectural
practice beyond construction are given. Here, the possibility of generating an
architectural practice beyond the constraints of the construction industry, having the
potential to produce alternative spatial practices that could go beyond being utilitarian tools for creating exchange value for the real estate market, having the
potential to engage with urgent, real-life spatial issues, is addressed through looking
into a number of cases throughout the world.
5 Architecture Beyond Construction
5.2
71
Construction: An Account on the Urban Space
Production Practices at the İstanbul of 2000s
Construction has become an exhaustive economic and political mechanism that
produces urban density and bigness, especially in the developing cities of the
globalized world. With a population over 15,000,000 and a rapidly growing construction industry, the city of İstanbul in the 2000s is a vivid example of this
condition. The last decade of urban space-making practices in Turkey, especially in
İstanbul, has been dominated by a construction frenzy caused by a neoliberal
alignment of capitalist market forces and urban governments. Within the last
15 years, not only has the city been growing toward the periphery but also the
existing building stock at the center has been renewed via mechanisms of urban
transformation. This vast construction activity resulted in rapid urban growth
despite the loss of collective urban memory, destruction of public spaces and
natural resources, transformation of the demography and property patterns of
neighborhoods, an intolerable increase in urban density, and expropriation of the
citizen’s right to the city.1
The content and title of the 270th issue of Birikim Magazine being
“Construction in the Name of the Prophet” give a valid summary for Turkey’s
current neoconservative, neoliberal urban space policies in the 2000s (2011). Due to
the neoliberal spatial policies of the urban governments of Istanbul in the last
15 years, capitalization of urban space has become not only the major resource for
economic growth but also a battleground where opposing political agendas manifest
themselves, clash and collide with each other. As the neoconservative, neoliberal
political urban agenda of the current ruling government, namely the Justice and
Development Party (JDP), was unfolded, Turkish society witnessed the manifestation of some of the most crucial political oppositions in its republican history
through urban space. This manifestation was twofold: First of all, neoliberal urban
governments that perceive urban land merely as a means for profit aimed to privatize, commodify, and capitalize public land, natural resources, and domains of
underprivileged social groups within the city. This approach was reflected in the:
• Privatization processes of large chunks of urban land (Zincirlikuyu Land of
Highway Offices becoming Zorlu Center, Mecidiyeköy Liquor Factory
becoming Quasar Istanbul, etc.),
• Infrastructural projects jeopardizing natural resources of the city (Third bridge,
third airport at northern Istanbul, etc.),
• Urban transformation projects that aimed profit gain through confiscation and
displacement of existing social groups in favor of a new, mid-high income
demography who can afford the land value (Sulukule, Tarlabaşı, Ayvansaray
UTP’s, etc.).
1
As theorized by Lefebvre (1996) and Harvey (1996, 2008).
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E. A. Deneç
Coming to the 2010s, a supplementary cultural agenda of creating an architectural imagery of the “New Turkey,” as uttered by the JDP elite, became visible, in
addition to the commodification of urban land. In line with the conservative values
promoted by the government of JDP, a number of urban projects carrying a
motivation of reflecting the “glorified Ottoman past,” “elevated Islamic culture,”
and “governing power” besides the maximization of rent value were issued at
especially politically charged, symbolic urban spaces of the republican era. Projects
such as Çamlıca Mosque at Çamlıca Hill, Beştepe Presidential Palace at Ankara
Atatürk Forest Farm, and the attempted remodeling of Military Barracks at Taksim
Gezi Park could exemplify this agenda. All of these spatial implementations discussed above created public opposition on a regional or national scale, reaching to a
peak at the Occupy Gezi revolts in the summer of 2013, triggered by the disclosure
of the Taksim Military Barracks Project.
Hence, it is safe to say that urban space has been the focal point of political
conflict and social confrontation in the Turkey of 2000s and Istanbul exhibits the
crescendo of this condition. Streets, squares, parks, and neighborhoods of the city
have become both battlegrounds and causes of the battles between:
• capital trying to occupy urban space versus citizens defending their rights to the
city,
• objectives of the neoconservative “New Turkey” versus secular ideals of the
republican era,
• suppressive implementations of the central government versus civil forces of
democracy.
The space production practices discussed above are charged with ethical, legal,
economic, and political issues to such an extent that there is virtually no room left
for architectural discussion. In other words, Turkey is going through a phase where
construction, being the core of the economy, is maximized while architectural
agenda is on the verge of extinction, bringing us to the question if it is possible to
have an architectural discussion in this political climate at all, as posed by Akpınar
(2014).
The “Mega Projects of İstanbul” provide a valid frame of reference for the
discussion above. In the 2000s, more than 70 large-scale urban interventions having
major impacts on the natural habitat, cultural identity, life quality, and urban
memory of the city were issued in İstanbul by an urban consortium of central government, local governments, and large-scale capital. With an estimated
investment cost of more than 77.5 billion USD and a surface area of nearly 350
km2, the “Mega Projects” of Istanbul, as declared by the “Mega Projects of Istanbul
Research” initiated by the free Architects Association of İstanbul, exhibit
the immense scale of construction going on in İstanbul in the last 15 years
(www.megaprojeleristanbul.com).
In order to understand the agenda behind this construction frenzy, it is important
to take a closer look at the nature of the so-called Mega Projects of İstanbul.
5 Architecture Beyond Construction
73
Among these projects, five functional categories surpass the others by scale and
investment cost. These categories are namely:
•
•
•
•
•
“The New İstanbul” project,
Transportation projects,
Infrastructural mix use projects,
Residential mix use projects,
Urban transformation projects.
The largest of the Mega Projects with the most crucial impacts upon the future of
the city is probably the “New İstanbul Project,” consisting of the establishment of a
new city of 245 km2 on the northern European side of İstanbul. Although the
implementations for the “New Istanbul” city have not begun, it is evident that the
urban impacts of such a grand-scale project will be immense.
The second largest project group is the transportation projects with an estimated
cost of 29 billion USD, 76 km2 of land, and 550 km of transportation routes.
Among the transportation projects, the third airport, being supposedly the largest
airport in the world with 76 km2 of land, the third Bosphorus Bridge, and the
Trans-European Motorway connecting Asian and European banks of the city,
cutting through the northern forests of İstanbul, could be regarded as projects with
irreversible impacts upon the natural resources of the city. Marmaray, Avrasya
Tunnel, Bosphorus Tunnel, and Bosphorus Boat Parks could be named as other
major transportation projects.
The third largest mega project category consists of infrastructural projects
containing mix use functions, with an estimated investment cost around 16 billion
USD, 3.7 km2 surface area, and 42 km length. This category consists of Canal
İstanbul, being a secondary water channel along Bosphorus on the European side of
the city and inner city ports/marinas with mix use functions such as Ataköy Port,
Galataport, Haliçport, Haydarpaşa Port.
These three categories clearly imply the central government’s intention of
opening up vast lands containing natural resources to urban development. To a
great extent, the second and third categories could be seen as infrastructural
preparations for the urban expansion of İstanbul, as the rent values have been
rapidly changing around the project areas, following the issuing of these projects.
The majority of the transportation projects such as the third airport, third bridge
(Yavuz Sultan Selim Bridge), Northern Marmara Motorway, and Canal Istanbul are
in fact strategic infrastructural elements, issued directly by the central government
that bypassed the 1/100,000 Istanbul Environmental Plan, attracting and transferring additional density and population toward the northern Istanbul where majority
of natural resources, water supplies, forest, and agricultural land are located
(www.kuzeyormanlari.org, 2015). Thus, it could be argued that the main agenda
behind the transportation and infrastructural projects is to capitalize and commodify
the unpopulated urban land at the expense of the destruction of natural resources.
These projects raised intense public criticism and legal conflicts, yet the
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E. A. Deneç
implementation of the third airport is still in progress and the construction of the
third bridge is terminated, despite public and legal repercussions.
The fourth largest category is the mix use residential projects initiated mainly by
the Housing Development Administration of Turkey (HDAT), being an institution
directly connected to the central government. This category has an estimated
investment cost of around 33 billion USD and 6.75 million m2 of surface area.
These projects are located both at the inner city such as Mashattan (Maslak, by Taş
Yapı), Maslak 1453 (Maslak, by Ağaoğlu Corp.), or Akasya Acıbadem (Sinpaş and
Akkök Holdings) and at the outskirts of the city such as Bio İstanbul (Başakşehir,
by Bio Istanbul Development), Bosphorus City (Halkalı, by Sinpaş Holding), or
İstanbul Financial Center (Ataşehir, by Ağaoğlu Corp.). Either way, these projects
are initiated by the mechanism of integrating big chunks of public land to the
capitalist real estate market via privatization through the hands of HDAT.
The last major category is the urban transformation projects (UTP) with more
than 14 billion USD of investment cost and 12 million m2 of surface area. Some of
the UTPs consist of the urban transformation of historical residential areas within
the city center, such as Tarlabaşı, Sulukule, and Ayvansaray UTPs, while other
projects consist of the urban transformation of the slum areas at the periphery of the
city, such as Ayazma UTP (Başakşehir) and Sarıgöl UTP (Gaziosmanpaşa). Both of
the UTP mechanisms stated above have caused intense public oppositions, and
legal conflicts as the main agenda behind these mechanisms have been the displacement of underprivileged residents with middle-upper income groups, creating
a rent increase and land profit and therefore incorporating large chunks of urban
land to the capitalist real estate market.
A third group of UTPs, such as Küçükçekmece and Kartal projects aimed to
produce new urban subcenters, connected by Marmaray, therefore attracting urban
density toward the southern İstanbul. Although this is a viable urban agenda, it is
overwritten to a great extent by top-down infrastructural decisions that focused on
the northern Istanbul, as discussed in (Table 5.1).
The Mega Projects of İstanbul are clear indicators of the overwhelming construction intensity taking place in the Istanbul of 2000s. As a city tired of construction, deprived of architectural discussion, urban space of Istanbul has become a
commodity left with only one kind of value, being the exchange value. The
semantic, cultural, natural and existential values of urban space are increasingly
being disregarded. Even the use value of architecture is no longer valid as large
scale, multiuse projects tend to be produced based on the design criteria of mediocre
market practices, mass produced for an anonymous user, mainly for investment
purposes. In this mechanism where the architectural client is almost never the actual
user, the architect mainly produces tools for investment, not spaces where urban life
can inhabit. As the urban density and congestion increase, public open spaces and
natural resources diminish, resulting in a vicious cycle that produces unhealthy,
antidemocratic, mediocre environments, and unhappy citizens. In such an economic
environment based on property transfer from the community to a privileged few,
“thinking outside the box” becomes imperative for a meaningful architectural
Project type
1. New İstanbul ?
2. Transportation 29 billion USD
3. Infrastructure + mix use 16 billion USD
4. Mix use residential + 34,08 billion USD
5. URB. transformation 14.26 billion USD
7. Tourism 760 million USD
8. Sports 345 million USD
9. Public facilities and recreation 74 million USD
10.
11.
12.
13.
Commercial ++40 million USD
Religious
Health
Culture
Commercial residential
recreation culture education
Transportation
Transportation commercial tourism
Transportation commercial tourism
residential
Commercial residential
Commercial residential recreation
Commercial residential culture
Residential
UTP
Tourism
Commercial tourism
Sports
Public square
Public square transportation
Public square recreation
Recreation
Commercial
Religious
Health
Culture
Total
Number
Area (m2)
1
244,750,000
12
8
1
76,626,771
3,740,000
10
2
2
3
10
3
1
2
3
1
3
3
3
3
1
1
74
4,528,853
2,100,000
118,500
229,500
12,824,972
108,000
4305
51,038
873,850
45,500
1,444,000
714,000
180,000
65,000
789,000
22,000
349,215,289,349 km2
Length
(km)
Cost (USD)
?
550
42
15
607
29 billion
10.5 billion
5.5 billion
9.98 billion
3.15 billion
2.75 billion
1.1 billion
14.26 billion
670 million
90 million
345 million
28 million
5 Architecture Beyond Construction
Table 5.1 Mega Projects of İstanbul: initiation years 2000–2015
71 million
3 million
++40 million
38 million
??
6.5 million
77.53 billion
Data source www.megaprojeleristanbul.com
75
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E. A. Deneç
practice (Çetin 2015). In order to discuss the possibilities of such a practice, it is
important to take a closer look at the conventional architectural practice of the
globalized, neoliberalized city of the 2000s.
5.3
Practicing Architect in the Globalized City:
Possibilities, Capabilities, and Shortcomings
In the mid-1990s, Rem Koolhaas was celebrating the new, global urban scale as a
generator of urban potential beyond the limits of architecture, in his
well-recognized book S,M,L,XL. As stated in his words: “Bigness no longer needs
the city; it competes with the city; it represents the city; it preempts the city; or
better still, it is the city. If urbanism generates potential and architecture exploits it,
bigness enlists the generosity of urbanism against the meanness of architecture”
(Koolhaas and Mau 1995). Coming to the mid-2010s, it is no longer that easy to
share Koolhaas’s enthusiasm about the potential of urban bigness, turning into a
mechanism facilitating capitalist space production–consumption cycles. Antonio
Negri criticizes the urbanism of bigness as he positions the architect in today’s
global city with these words: “Bland, anonymous, repetitive, empty, dispersive,
vacuous, risible, ‘post-existential’, and so on. We are here in a Rabelaisian situation, often full of sarcasm and intense irony, but with no smile. The metropolis we
inhabit is a huge grotesque theatre with no exit routes, and effectively hopeless. The
architect is tired. The same urbanism that was meant to defeat architecture and
demystify the architect only survives as the non-planning of an indefinite and
perverse metropolitan landscape. The architect, demystified, continues to exist as a
worldly and bitter witness, a disenchanted accuser” (Negri 2009).
So what does this new, global urban scale of bigness do to the discipline of
architecture? Not unlike the current global architectural scene, the effect of this
situation toward professional architectural practice in Istanbul is twofold: On one
hand, architecture and design in general are becoming booming professions as
creative forces of a construction industry that forms the core of the national
economy. Job opportunities and commissions for practicing architects are proliferating, and the clientele profile has been expanding with national–international
investors as well as the central and local governments promoting large-scale urban
development projects. It is possible to detect this sectorial growth by looking into
the increase in the number of practicing architects in the last 15 years. 1323 registered architectural offices were operational in Istanbul in the year 2000 while this
number increased to 3853 in the year 2015, indicating that the number of architectural offices in İstanbul almost tripled in the last 15 years. Consecutively, 9764
registered architects were operating in the year 2000 in İstanbul while this number
became 18,249 in the year 2015, indicating that the number of architects in Istanbul
almost doubled in the last 15 years (Istanbul Chamber of Architects 2015)
(Table 5.2).
5 Architecture Beyond Construction
77
Table 5.2 Sectorial growth between the years 2000 and 2015
Year
No. of architects in Istanbul
No. of architectural offices in Istanbul
2000
9764
1323
2015
18,249
3853
Data Source Istanbul Chamber of Architects (2015)
These numbers clearly demonstrate the immense sectorial growth of the business
of architecture in Istanbul in 2000s. When it is considered that 47,209 registered
architects operate in Turkey in 2015, it is possible to get a clearer idea about the
scale of architecture sector in Istanbul, forming almost 40% of the national sector.
On the other hand, architectural practice is so immensely dominated by the
neoliberal policies focused on “building as a means for economic growth” that there
is virtually no room for a professional discourse encompassing disciplinary ethics
charged with social agenda, informed by spatial intelligence, formulated with public
participation, aiming for the greater good. The national meeting held by İstanbul
Bilgi University and The Building Information Centre (Yapı Endüstri Merkezi)
focused mainly on this issue, posing the question if it is possible to “Discuss
Architecture in Today’s Turkey?” in its heading (Günümüz Türkiye’sinde Mimarlık
Tartışmak?, İBU & YEM, October 2015). The invitation text of the meeting, which
brought together over twenty-five acclaimed practicing architects and academicians
from Turkey, problematized this condition by underlining the difficulty of discussing architecture in Turkey due to the overwhelming suppression of the dominating political agenda. The introductory speech of the meeting, underlining that the
urban space production, transformation, and consumption mechanisms in Turkey
have become major axis for both politics and economy, posed the question of what
kinds of architectural production and professional discussion grounds could emerge
from this quantitative intensity and construction-based political agenda (Aysev
Deneç 2015). A number of noteworthy approaches could be mentioned within the
framework of the meeting. Some of the practicing architects responded to the
question through reflecting on their own architectural and urban design approaches.
Piker underlined the possibilities of publicizing architecture through rethinking the
issue of housing (Piker 2015). Yazgan pointed out the intricate and multi-actored
nature of building and the role of the architect within the mechanism, through the
design and construction process of Ankara Arena Sports Center (Yazgan 2015).
Çalışlar mentioned the challenges of operating creatively under the existing
conditions of the building sector and the existing building codes that pressure for
high density (Çalışlar 2015). Erginoğlu took the discussion to a further point
by exemplifying the impact of building codes on the production of urban and
architectural space through the example of Ortaköy (Erginoğlu 2015). Pekin
underlined the need to understand the change between the professional and the
post-professional era, in order to be able to operate as not only architects but also
intellectual individuals living in the twenty-first century (Pekin 2015). Dündaralp
exemplified a transgressing professional position of the practicing architect as a
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E. A. Deneç
mediating agent between community and policy makers, while Gürdoğan displayed
how architectural practice could be redefined at the edge of art, communication,
technology, and proactivity through their work (Dündaralp 2015; Gürdoğan 2015).
While professionals seek to find answers within their practices, a number of
academicians took a more critical approach toward the conventional urban
space-making processes, demanding the discipline of architecture to take a more
socially engaged stance. Güzer pointed out the irrelevance of the mainstream
contemporary architectural agenda in Turkey with regards to the profound political,
economic, and humanitarian issues the country is facing, underlining the need to
redefine architecture as a point of resistance and rupture (Güzer 2015). Ertaş followed a similar track as she claimed that the architectural milieu in today’s Turkey
is playing a game of “as if”, disregarding the social and political context and being
stuck in the mere formal aspects of the discipline (Ertaş 2015). Baydar and
Korkmaz separately underlined the fundamentality of taking a positively critical
stance, in order for productive architectural thinking to emerge (Baydar 2015;
Korkmaz 2015). Sargın called into question the possibility of a revolutionary spatial
praxis, while Cengizkan underlined the essentiality of communal knowledge
(Sargın 2015; Cengizkan 2015).
Some of the major points brought to attention at the meeting which manifested
the crisis of the architectural discipline in Turkey in the post-professional era were:
• The platforms of architectural discussion in Turkey today are quite barren, as
pointed out separately by Tanyeli (2015) and Arolat (2015).
• The architectural production in the Turkey of 2000s is hegemonized by the
market-oriented rules of the construction industry and restrained by current
building codes.
• The conventional architectural agenda is ignorant to some of the crucial social,
economic, and political issues the country is facing, such as social displacement,
immigrant accumulation, gentrification, and poverty, stuck to the formal aspects
of architectural design.
• There is a call for a more socially engaged architectural practice.
As underlined by Rem Koolhaas, to be an architect who builds in today’s
economy means to a large extent accepting the status quo (Goldhagen 2006). Yet, is
it possible to transcend the status quo and become more than “architects who
build,” adopting a professional understanding that focuses on a “useful practice,” as
theorized by Perkes (2009). In order to open up a viable discussion on the possibility of an architecture beyond construction, it is essential to reflect on the
dynamics of the conventional architectural practice in the global era. What do
architects do? How do they operate? Which roles do they play in the complex
network of neoliberal space production of today’s globalized city? Those are
intriguing questions, especially in an age of spectacle where the “built object”
becomes the main attraction. Of course there is no single story of “the architectural
practice” but multiple realities within the profession, and the fact is far more
complicated than the stereotypical answer of “designing beautiful buildings and
5 Architecture Beyond Construction
79
making the world a better place,” as discussed by Awan et al. (2011). In fact, the
nature of the architectural practice is charged with a multitude of professional
positions often contradictory and dilemmatic. It is essential to understand the
ambivalent nature of the profession in order to put into perspective the role of the
discipline within the compelling political–economic context it operates within.
Probably the most dominating yet the least reflected upon aspect of the conventional architectural practice is the fact that it needs a client to exist, who is bound
to impose his/her agenda to architectural production. Architectural design is in fact
a dance of reconciliation between the design objectives of the architect, the
demands of the client, and the realities and regulations of the real estate market.
This is one of the major reasons why there cannot be an essentially autonomous
architectural practice. Probably one of the most time conceiving tasks in an
architectural practice is following up on potential clients. Only after securing the
potential client, the actual, billable architectural design work could begin.
Coming to the architectural design stage, the first question comes to mind
is about the nature of the prominent production of an architectural office.
Contradictory to the common conception of the practicing architect being a master
builder, the majority of the work produced in an architectural office are representations of an imaginary spatial existence, such as spatial analyses, sketches,
graphics, diagrams, drawings, physical and 3D models and texts. Most of the
architectural firms produce drawings in order to pitch their ideas and get a commission. In a highly competitive industry, this means that most of the creative work
produced will not be transferred into reality. Architectural competition is another
milieu where offices produce the majority of their intellectual work before being
commissioned. Even after being commissioned for a certain project, a great deal of
documents produced in an office involves revisions and alterations. Hence, the
answers to the question what architects indeed produce are numerous representations of alternative realities. Only a minor percentage of these alternative visions are
transferred into actual built space. It is safe to say that the main production of an
architectural office is creative, visionary discourse, not buildings. The major task of
an architectural designer is not only to design but also to convince different interest
groups that their design proposal is the most rational, economic, proper, inspiring
solution to a specific problem via an extensive representational palette. Hence, the
architect is in fact more a storyteller than a master builder, as pointed out by Wigley
(2002).
This operational model might suggest an inefficiency in terms of the business of
architecture. As the conventional practice is billed by the size of the commissioned
project, it is safe to claim that most of the work produced in an average architectural
office is actually done for free, based on the nature of the architectural product
revealed above. Even if the experimental nature of design methodology based on
successive counts of trial and error is disregarded, this unintentional “pro bono”
character of the practice might seem somehow inefficient, if not bad business. Yet,
it is exactly this experimental, creative, and visionary focus of the practice that
might propose a way to transgress the oppression of the neoliberal space production
mechanisms.
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Table 5.3 Myths and realities about the practicing architect
Myth
Reality
A creative and artistic individual
who produces visionary futures
An entrepreneur/business person who is responsible to
run the office, meet the costs and deadlines, provide
wages, face clients, get commissions, prepare
contracts
A team member/leader mediating between a wide
range of spatial actors from clients to laymen,
engineers, governmental structures, and public at large
A relatively ineffective actor of urban space
production mechanisms dominated by the capitalist
real estate market
A powerless actor dependent on the exterior forces of
the neoliberal space production mechanisms
A marginalized actor of the construction sector,
providing service only for the privileged 1% of the
society
Operating with archaic and inefficient business models
Subject of the architectural myth of
the “creative genius/auteur”
Advocate of the public realm due to
intrinsic disciplinary ethics
A professional of an autonomous
discipline
Claiming to possess a social agenda
for the greater good
Creative, visionary intellectual
qualities
High communicative skills
Possess professional authority in
terms of urban space creation
Revolutionary, innovative,
avant-garde
Detached from public
Detached from the decision-making processes within
the urban space production mechanisms
Entire existence depending on the client
The dynamics of the conventional architectural office, as discussed above,
address to a number of dilemmatic, contradictory features. There is a set of almost
mythological values attributed to the designing architect, through the social perception of the discipline. Then there are the realities of the conventional profession,
created by the conditions of the real estate market. The architectural professional
often finds himself/herself pendulating between the mythological and the reality,
occupying different positions in every design process. In an overly generalized
manner, some of the dilemmatic disciplinary positions the architectural professional
finds himself/herself are stated in (Table 5.3).
5.4
Conclusion: Architecture Beyond Construction
Tschumi defines three probable positions for the discipline of architecture. The first
is the conservative position advocating the status quo, serving to the political and
economic priorities of the hegemonic power structures. The second is the critical
position, continuing with the praxis that exposes the contradictions of the social
structures. The third is the revolutionary position that utilizes the urban and spatial
capabilities in order to produce new social, communal, and urban structures and
5 Architecture Beyond Construction
81
strategies (1996). An architectural practice that has the capacity to transgress the
post-professional condition and reach out beyond the norms and limitations of the
construction industry is likely to fall into the third category. Such a practice is
bound to revisit and redefine a number of roles and issues that are taken for granted
within the norms of the conventional practice. A number of these issues are discussed below.
First of all, the architectural client should be redefined. As pointed out by Parvin,
only 1% of the world population is wealthy enough to receive architectural service
by being architectural clients (2013). This means that the 99% of the world population is bound to put up with the architecture created for the 1%, having no say at
the production processes of the built environment they live in. Parallel to this fact,
only 2% of the buildings on the face of the earth are designed by architects. These
data clearly indicate that the problem definition of the conventional architectural
practice is restrained within the limits of the urban agenda of the financially
privileged few, hence becoming utilitarian tools for the physicalization of the
capitalist urban agenda. The unaffordability and exclusivity of architectural service
pose not only an ethical and democratic problem but also an inefficient business
model. Redefining a new, public/communal client could be a viable strategy to break
this vicious circle and transfer the spatial intelligence and know-how of the profession
to the service of larger groups and communities. In other words, discipline of
architecture should aim to provide service for the 100%, not the privileged 1%.
This opens up the issue of the redefinition of the practice itself as a proactive
disciplinary existence. This stance requires a constant state of problematization and
positive action, instead of searching for a paid commission with a predefined
program. Beyond designing skills, the mediation role of the architect acting within a
network of urban coalitions becomes imperative for such a professional stance.
Through the redefinition of the practice comes the redefinition of the position of
the architectural professional. In such a transgressive practice, architects would
reposition themselves as catalysts who transfer spatial knowledge in order to enable
social and physical improvement, instead of master builders and designers. This
would inevitably challenge the office culture of the practice, requiring a great deal
of work to be done outside the office, working closely with the community in order
to understand and meet their imminent needs.
This brings up the redefinition of the autonomy of architecture. Obviously, a
discipline repositioning itself with the task as a mediating agent would project an
engaged sense of disciplinary autonomy, being in a constant state of interaction,
instead of an exclusive, confined sense of autonomy.
Another issue to be addressed is the restructuring of the modes of production.
For one thing, the culture of change should be an integral part of the architectural
production. New technologies that enable to share resources and information should
be embraced. The archaic design production model based on copyright should be
transformed into a more collaborative, open-source design understanding that puts
weight on the design of processes, not objects. The practices should restructure
themselves so as to be able to operate within global information networks. In
connection to this, information management in the offices should be restructured in
82
E. A. Deneç
order for the tacit knowledge produced in the traditional design culture to be
transformed into explicit knowledge that could be preserved, transferred, and
shared.
In a nutshell; an architecture beyond construction should embody:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
redefinition of the client,
redefinition of the practice,
redefinition of the position of the architectural professional,
redefinition of the office culture,
redefinition of the disciplinary autonomy,
redefinition of the modes of production,
restructuring of the information management.
In order to reach beyond the limitations of the post-professional condition, the
conventional design practice needs to evolve into the redesign of the practice itself,
channeling the spatial intelligence of the architectural profession toward the production of applicable, realistic solutions for real, existential problems of communities, constituting the truly avant-garde visions of the discipline of architecture. Most
importantly, it is imperative to understand the potential of “little victories” through
the coming together of diverse coalitions, as pointed out by Pugalis and Giddings
(2011). There are a number of architectural professionals emerging on different parts
of the world trying to push the limits of their practice beyond construction.
The guerilla tactics are valid examples of such a stance as proactive, socially and
politically as well as spatially engaged movements. Guerilla tactics aim to produce
socially responsible, sustainable, cheap, and user-friendly solutions to urgent
communal problems with speed and creativity that existing building regulations
cannot meet. They tend to challenge the hierarchy of existing architectural and
constructional production mechanisms with unconventional spatial interventions
which are standing at the verge of legality, such as occupation. The works of
Santiago Cirugeda (Urban Recipes) from Spain, Ricardo de Oliveira from Brasil,
Kunle Adeyami from Nigeria, and Yasmeen Lari from Pakistan provide a number
of interesting examples for this approach.
Another significant practice reaching beyond the limits of construction is the
initiative, namely Architecture for Humanity (A4H), founded by Sinclair and Stohr
(2006). Founded in 1999, A4H performed as an interface that aims to bring together
the design professionals with the public client, meaning the communities in need, in
order to answer urgent dwelling crisis emerged due to natural disasters, wars,
epidemics with functional, easily applied solutions using local materials and
manpower. Although the main branch was shut down in January 2015, the A4H
network consisting of 59 branches aided 2.8 million people in 45 countries. The
organization adapted the open-source model in 2005 and founded Open
Architecture Network in 2007, being one of the first open-source databases where
design ideas, documents, and resources were shared.
WikiHouse, being another open-source architectural database that contains the
construction documents of single dwelling units that could be 3D printed and easily
5 Architecture Beyond Construction
83
assembled on-site, provides an interesting example of the democratization of
building production and accessibility of architectural service (Parvin, 2013).
These examples provide a small percentage of the architectural design practices
in the post-professional era that deliberately engage with the urgent dwelling crisis
around the world. In fact, there are numerous emerging practices that aim to reach
out for the 100%, in search of a useful practice, transgressing the limits of the
neoliberal urban space mechanisms of the construction. After all, architecture is not
solely about building things, as pointed out by Betsky (2008). Buildings are just
objects, yet architecture has more to do with creating visionary spatial approaches
that has the potential to make the face of the earth, our home.
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Author Biography
Evren Aysev Deneç Received her bachelor’s degree in 1996 from the Middle East Technical
University Department of Architecture, Ankara. Earned her M.Arch degree from Columbia
University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Advanced Architectural
Design Program at New York in 1998. Earned her PhD from Istanbul Technical University in 2013
with her thesis namely “The Role Of The Architect In The Production Of Urban Space: Istanbul
Example.”
Between 1998 and 2000, Aysev Deneç has worked as a project Architect in New York City.
Between 2000 and 2015, she has continued her professional work in Istanbul as a practicing
architect. As the founding partner of Açıkofis Architects (2006–2015), she has designed and built
numerous architectural, urban design, and interior design projects and won prices at architectural
competitions.
Since 2015, Aysev Deneç is a full-time academic member of İstanbul Bilgi University,
Department of Architecture. She is the Director of the Graduate Architectural Design Program of
the same institution. She also teaches second year architectural studio and architectural design
communication courses. She has published a number of academic articles and participated in
conferences nationally and internationally. Her research areas consist of urban space production,
architectural praxis theory interference, and architectural design.