Rem Koolhaas Bigness or The Metaphor of PDF
Rem Koolhaas Bigness or The Metaphor of PDF
Rem Koolhaas Bigness or The Metaphor of PDF
Rem Koolhaas –
Bigness (or the Metaphor
of the Urban)
A seminar paper.
To the Point
Metaphor and antithesis in the works of Rem Koolhaas.
—p. 6
Plane
Rendering the explicit.
—p. 13
Conclusion
—p. 15
References
—p. 17
Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
Introduction
1 Cf. Peter Eisenman, Rem Koolhaas: Architecture Words 1: Supercritical. Peter Eisen-
man & Rem Koolhaas, in: Brett Steele (Ed.): Architecture Words (Vol. 1). AA Publications,
London 2010, pp. 11–12.
2 Cf. Eisenman/Koolhaas 2010, pp. 14–16, 29.
3 Cf. ibid., pp. 17–19.
4 Cf. Rem Koolhaas: The Reinvention of the City, in: New Perspectives Quarterly, Fall
2012 (Vol. 29, Issue 4, pp. 58–62). Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, New
York 2012, p. 60.
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Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
However, his relentless engagement in an entire cluster of fields related to ar-
chitectural theory, emerging from the universal curiosity of a journalist, as well
as the global scale his architectural interventions are being realised on both ben-
efit themselves from a, likewise, universal and eclectic use of the media when
it comes to communicating and publishing his body of work: Whereas visual
means of representation, such as the diagram, usually serve to transmit specific
existing or prospective architectural conditions to the audience,5 the task of de-
veloping complex discourse about his œuvre—unlike the «tenuous relation with
information about the world» he attests to contemporary architects collective-
ly6—almost exclusively falls to written text.
On multiple levels, this present paper aims at dealing with the correlation be-
tween the implicit and the explicit in the writings of Rem Koolhaas, primarily
focussing on his essay Bigness (or the Problem of Large)7.
Proceeding from To the Point, an introduction to the principal stylistic devic-
es—metaphor and antithesis—employed in his written works, their key role
in verbalising, and aligning with, the concept of Bigness will be examined in
the same-titled, subsequent chapter. Eventually, Plane will discuss in what way
these very figures of implicitness are brought together in a single discourse—a
metaphor for Bigness itself—in order to generate, to render, explicit meaning.
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Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
To the Point
By the wide range and the global impact of his publications, Rem Koolhaas
has consistently proven to have a—natural—affinity for language as a medium.
Apart from employing it, by its nature, as a means of communication, especially
his most recent œvre is studded with a variety of remarks on the essence of lan-
guage itself: From reproaching mankind with having «launched a new language
that straddles unbridgeable divides like a fragile designer's footbridge»—a «pro-
active wave of new oxymorons» such as «life/style», «reality/TV» or «health/
care»,8 through to criticising that language «stakes claims, assigns victimhood,
preempts debate, admits guilt, [and] fosters consensus» instead of being used
to «explore, define, express, or to confront»,9 he even considers possible that,
in terms of understanding urban spaces, «we developed a new illiteracy, a new
blindness»10.
In the fashion of the latter, language as such is also frequently used as a metaphor
for architectural expression: His essay Generic City further paraphrases urban
structures as «the writing of the city», stating that they «may be indecipherable,
flawed», which, however, «does not mean that there is no writing».11 The «tex-
ture of canned euphoria» in Junkspace is, according to Rem Koolhaas, «woven
through» by a «language of apology»,12 whereas «globalisation turns language
[itself] into Junkspace»—the «collective bastardization of English» being «our
most impressive achievement» given that «we can make it say anything we
want, like a speech dummy».13 By virtue of those acts of «retrofitting of lan-
guage, there are too few possible words left», so «our most creative hypothesis
8 Cf. Rem Koolhaas: Junkspace, in: October Magazine, Spring 2002 (No. 100, pp. 175–
190). The MIT Press, Cambridge 2002, p. 183.
9 Cf. Koolhaas 2002, p. 186.
10 Rem Koolhaas: Generic City, in: Rem Koolhaas/Bruce Mau/Jennifer Sigler (Ed.):
S,M,L,XL. The Monacelli Press, New York ²1997, p. 1254.
11 Koolhaas 1997, ibid.
12 Cf. Koolhaas 2002, p. 179.
13 Cf. ibid., p. 186.
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Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
will never be formulated, discoveries will remain unmade, concepts unlaunched,
philosophies muffled, nuances miscarried».14 The term «masterpiece», as an ad-
ditional example, is referred to as a «semantic space that saves the objects from
criticism, leaves its qualities unproven, its performance untested, its motives
unquestioned»15.
In The Reinvention of the City, Koolhaas describes formerly distinct regional
architectural tendencies as «languages [that] have disappeared and [that] are
subsumed in a larger and seemingly universal style», comparing the process to
the «disappearance of a spoken language»16 and stating that each of the cultures
concerned «is not trying to resurrect old language, but is interested in defining
and asserting its uniqueness again».17
Eventually, the characterisation of Manhattan as «the 20th century's Rosetta
Stone»18 in his manifesto Delirious New York ranks among the most cited meta-
phors in the works of Rem Koolhaas.
Beyond the semantic field of language, the use of metaphors deriving from other
domains runs through his publications like a common thread that predominantly
serves to outline abstract or concrete architectural concepts.
While in Toward the Contemporary City—a collection of excerpts from an in-
terview first published in L'Architecture d'Aujourd'hui—, contemporary cities
are claimed to be in the need of being transformed into «a premature homage
to a form of modernity»,19 in his essay The Terrifying Beauty of the Twentieth
Century he remains sceptical towards the pursuit of that need in the case of Rot-
terdam, accusing local urbanists of «overestimation of the extant» and criticis-
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Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
ing that «the faintest hint of an idea is tracked with the obstinacy of a detective
on a juicy case of adultery».20 When speaking on the future role of European
countries in the field of architecture during a seminar at Rice University School
of Architecture, Koolhaas described Holland as «nothing but a burned-out skel-
eton of a culture that was once ambitious, critical, and devoted to a kind of
modernism»21—an argument that later recurred in both more radical and more
comprehensive terms in Junkspace, where the act of «reading a footnote under
a microscope hoping it would turn into a novel» is presented as a cause for the
«disappearance» of architecture in the twentieth century.22 Recently emerging
super-urban clusters in China, on the contrary, are defined as «Scape» in How
China Will Inhabit its Future, an interview published in New Perspectives Quar-
terly—they are believed to embody «pervasive, generic conditions punctuated
by an event here or there, possibly architecture».23
Architectural practice has always been inextricably linked with the visual.
In written language, enhanced visuality—explicit vividness—may be generat-
ed by imagination: In the same way as linguistic signs underlie the dichoto-
my of signifiant and signifié—signifier and signified, term and individual men-
tal image—as introduced by Ferdinand de Saussure in Cours de linguistique
générale,24 straight information, on a greater scale, can be vividly paraphrased
by the metaphor, each appearance revealing distinct individual notions that con-
tribute to sharpening the overall understanding—the total picture.
20 Cf. Rem Koolhaas: The Terrifying Beauty of the Twentieth Century, in: Jacques Lucan
(Ed.): OMA. Rem Koolhaas (pp. 154–155). Princeton Architectural Press, New York 1990,
p. 155.
21 Cf. Rem Koolhaas: Rem Koolhaas: Conversations with Students, in: Sanford Kwinter
(Ed.): Architecture at Rice (Vol. 30). Princeton Architectural Press, New York ²1996, p. 50.
22 Cf. Koolhaas 2002, p. 175.
23 Cf. Rem Koolhaas: How China Will Inhabit its Future, in: New Perspectives Quarterly,
Spring 2014 (Vol. 31, Issue 2, pp. 100–102). Center for the Study of Democratic Institu-
tions, New York 2014, p. 101.
24 Cf. Ferdinand de Saussure: Cours de linguistique générale, in: Tullio de Mauro (Ed.):
Ferdinand de Saussure. Course de linguistique générale. Grande Bibliothèque Payot, Paris
1972, pp. 97–103.
8
Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
Not unlike dot after dot is meticulously engraved on a copper plate in order
to render an image, Rem Koolhaas resorts to isolated, precisely and carefully
worded—yet, by definition, still implicit—statements in his written works; a
phenomenon Bart Verschaffel, Professor of Theory of Architecture and Archi-
tectural Criticism at the University of Gent, once described as the «pointillistic
writing of Koolhaas»25.
Where the metaphor is the incising tool of pointillistic rendering, the antithesis
provides the surface.
Sometimes coupled with metaphorical expression, sometimes apart, anthitheses
in the œvre of Koolhaas each illustrate a full range of possibility in their respec-
tive contexts: In Imagining the Nothingness, Koolhaas states that «where there
is nothing, everything is possible», whereas «where there is architecture, nothing
(else) is possible».26 The urban reconstruction of Berlin is equated with the futil-
ity of «keeping brain-dead patients alive with medical apparati».27 Junkspace, in
the same-titled essay, is defined as «the residue mankind leaves on the planet»,
as opposed to space junk that «litters the universe».28 In an interview published
in Perspecta, Rem Koolhaas speaks on the «strange prejudice that says you can-
not both think and do architecture at the same time».29 «Scape»—in How China
Will Inhabit its Future—is described as «neither city nor rural landscape, but a
post-urban condition»,30 and the Chinese countryside is said to be «becoming
less and less the counterpart and more and more and more the complement of
the city».31
25 Bart Verschaffel: Reading Rem Koolhaas, in: Architectural Histories (No. 1, pp. 1–3).
Ubiquity Press, London 2013, p. 2.
26 Cf. Rem Koolhaas: Imagining the Nothingness, in: Jacques Lucan (Ed.): OMA. Rem
Koolhaas (pp. 156–157). Princeton Architectural Press, New York 1990, p. 156.
27 Cf. Koolhaas 1990, p. 156.
28 Cf. Koolhaas 2002, p. 175.
29 Rem Koolhaas: Rem Koolhaas, in: Perspecta. Famous (Vol. 37, pp. 98–105). The MIT
Press, Cambridge 2005, p. 100.
30 Cf. Koolhaas 2014, p. 101.
31 Cf. ibid., p. 102.
9
Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
Aligning with Bigness
On the contrary, the idea of a particular condition implying a binary urban land-
scape—an «archipelago of architectural islands»32, where infrastructure and for-
mer public space are turned into «highly charged nothingness»33, «conceptual
Nevadas»34 and «residue, organizational device»35 in contrast to the «urban»36—
had first been unveiled in 1976 in the context of a suppositious project for the
reconstruction of the city of Berlin:37 In order to maintain urban «density [...]
without recourse to substance» and «intensity without the encumbrance of ar-
chitecture», A Green Archipelago envisaged the «reinforcement of those parts
of the city that warranted it», while «those parts that did not», as a matter of
principle, would have been destroyed.38 In that theoretical Berlin, a methodology
composed of two «diametrically opposite actions»39 would thus have generated
an urban tissue characterised by a binary set of elements—a «model of urban
solid and metropolitan void»40—; an idea that, almost twenty years later, was
elaborately re-introduced in the theoretical approach to Bigness.
Despite these striking parallels, one fundamental distinction voids the analo-
gy between the scenario outlined in A Green Archipelago and the Problem of
Large: Whereas, in Berlin, «architectural islands floating in a post-architectural
landscape of erasure»41 would have been deliberately created out of an explicit
spatial conception, Bigness already—implicitly—«exists»42.
32 Rem Koolhaas: Imagining the Nothingness, in: Jacques Lucan (Ed.): OMA. Rem Kool-
haas (pp. 156–157). Princeton Architectural Press, New York 1990, p. 157.
33 Ibid.
34 Ibid.
35 Cf. Koolhaas 1997, p. 514.
36 Ibid., p. 515.
37 Cf. Koolhaas 1990, p. 157.
38 Cf. ibid.
39 Ibid.
40 Ibid.
41 Ibid.
42 Cf. Koolhaas 1997, p. 502.
10
Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
Emerging from a domain «beyond good or bad»43, Bigness may therefore no
longer be binarily verbalised by a singular property or a series of qualities it
does, or does not, acquire. As of now, implicit characterizations of Bigness oscil-
late within a cluster of varied semantic fields—a pool of miscellaneous concepts:
Bigness, through impersonations, is defined as «impersonal».44 It is featured
in architecture of a certain scale45, it is a «hyper-architecture»46—yet «it repre-
sents the city»47 itself; «it is itself urban»48. In contemporary Europe, Bigness is
claimed to be commonly reacted to by both «dismantlement and disappearance»
of the urban tissue.49 It may serve as a property of built architecture,50 while,
at the same time, embodying «a condition almost without thinkers, a revolu-
tion without program»51. It is assigned to «quantity rather than quality»52, while
featuring a series of qualities itself: Although it aspires «perpetual intensity»,
Bigness «also offers degrees of serenity and even blandness»,53 transforming
the city «from a summation of certainties into an accumulation of mysteries».54
Bigness «destroys», but its disruptive power does not hinder it from equally rep-
resenting «a new beginning».55
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Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
In spite of its explicitly quantitative nature56, Bigness can neither be measured
nor assigned to a scale. It is apparent solely within the relative, it occurs beyond
the measurable; still, it is itself the scalarity of urban expansion—the ruler for
the transformation of architecture as a discipline:
The semantic space between two opposing notions is to antithetic phrasing as the
measuring scale is to the definition of Bigness: Inherent in its very concept, yet
not at all a reference for the comprehension of its nature.
The antithesis is a metaphor for Bigness.
12
Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
Plane
13
Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
Bigness relies upon the quantitative.
Within the scope of its abstract concept, meaning is rendered explicit by an ev-
er-accumulating multitude of implicit statements on the imaginary plane of the
Whole an the Real: The higher the quantity of punctual—«pointillistic»67—con-
tent, the higher the quality of the graph, the image, the definition of its essence.
Its physical manifestation is composed of isolated architectural particles con-
glomerating in urban «hyper-architecture»68—as opposed to the void—on the
metropolitan plane: The denser the cluster of fragments of uniqueness «commit-
ted to the whole»69, the more urban the architectural space itself.
Finally, its creators are not immune from being subject to the need for quantity
either: Like «mountain climbers tied together by life-saving ropes»70, architects
ally in order to cope with the newfound condition of Bigness in the field—that
is, the entire discipline—of architecture. The bigger the team of its makers, the
more architecture is rendered «impersonal»71.
14
Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
Conclusion
In his writings, Rem Koolhaas not only frequently refers to the nature of lan-
guage itself, but also extensively resorts to metaphors and antitheses in order to
impart abstract ideas, each implicit paraphrase orbiting its original concept of
reference. Initially fragile, the thereby created total image undergoes a process
of perpetual enrichment—a «pointillistic»73 way of mental visualisation.
Referring to an explicitly implicit concept, his essay Bigness (or the Problem of
Large) contains an entire cloud of implicit characterisations: Metaphorical ex-
pression links a wide range of concepts to a single common reference. Yet, Big-
ness is itself the range—it is, manifest as a plane, the antithesis to the metaphor.
At the same time, the semantic space between two opposing—antithetic—ideas
represents a scale similar to that of size used to implicitly define Bigness. Still,
in spite of being inherent in its very concept, measurement does not at all lead to
the comprehension of Bigness. The antithesis is a metaphor for Bigness.
73 Verschaffel
2013, p. 2.
74 Koolhaas 1997, p. 501.
15
Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
tends to shift from isolation to urbanity, the resulting point cloud of implicit
definitions of the Problem of Large thus perpetually converges to what would be
the graph of the very essence of Bigness: Implicit by its nature, it contributes to
rendering the explicit.
Rem Koolhaas translates into action what Brett Steele, director of the Architec-
tural Association School of Architecture, refers to as the «gravitational capacity
to form, shape, and bend architectural minds» inherent in «architecture words»:75
Employing written language—despite his versatility in dealing with visual me-
dia—as a primary means of communication in his œvre, while also making use
of its potential to implicitly transmit ideas through eloquent choice of vocabulary
and elaborate use of structure, he has not only formed, shaped and bent architec-
tural minds, but transformed the discipline of architecture as a whole.
He has overcome the shift from image to imagination.
16
Rem Koolhaas – Bigness (or the Metaphor of the Urban)
References
17
Vienna, July 2017—Thomas Helmlinger