les presses du réel

Stream #02 – After-Office

excerpt
Editorial
Philippe Chiambaretta
(p. 10)


The Stream review juxtaposes distinct visions of our contemporary world in an attempt to sketch out and understand the complex mutations that define our era and which conjure notions of fluid modernity, hypertextual reality, and knowledge economy. Architecture forms a prism through which to observe the world in transition and a laboratory to test out resolutions for the numerous conflicts between the reality of an economic globalization and the imperative for a sustainable development to ensure the future of the planet.

The first edition of Stream was dedicated to the concept of Exploration. Exploration (scientific, artistic, economic) has become the backbone for knowledge capitalism. Contemporary creation in a large sense becomes one of the major actors, a catalyst and value-producer of the economy. This trend of an economy of creation questions the place of art in contemporary society. The general exploitation of the image of art in a society seeking to appropriate its virtues of invention, audacity, and creative genius drives a domestication imperiling its true political and critical function. What is the nature of reform which must inhabit the project of architecture at the risk of becoming at best a building, at worst a spectacle?

Within the context of this reflection, Stream 02 raises questions about the evolution of working conditions, which have been profoundly altered. Economic globalization, the permanence of the communication and information technology revolution, the now quasiuniversal environmental fears, and finally, the financial crisis shaking up the world economy are all factors which can serve to enlighten our discourse on work and the conception of the spaces which it consecrates. Western businesses reconsider their management style to face the growing impossibility of foresight and planning. Constant upheaval becomes the ordinary as the apparition of a knowledge-based capitalism put into question former organizational models. The dematerialization of work thanks to information and communication technologies and an increasing value on the autonomy and independence of agents on one part, the global carbon footprint standing prohibitive of business centers on another, compel us to question the continued relevancy of the traditional office building and the form of the modern city so oriented around it. But a profit-driven real estate industry, concerned solely on questions of finance, impels a global chain of actors to continue to produce standardized office buildings. Are these millions of square meters, the product of Taylorism and an economy of scale, actually suited for the work needs of tomorrow? Could the office building participate in a vision of a more sustainable city?

Will the office towers and business districts, which continue to proliferate in the American context and define skylines of cities throughout the world, continue to be the model for urbanism and architecture in the 21st century? Will the shift to a knowledge-based economy transform the business district into a tertiary wasteland among the brownfields, shuttered factories, and pollution that marked the passing of the Industrial era for the Capitalist regime?

Will there come to be an After-Office world?


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