Dublin Core
Titre
Learning from Brussels. An irreductive approach to architectural and urban problématiques ?
            Sujet
architecture
                    Brussels
                    choix de la complexité
                    irreduction
                    Isabelle Stengers
                    relational perspectives on space
                    architectuur
                    Brussel
                    choix de la complexité
                    irreductie
                    Isabelle Stengers
                    relationele perspectieven op de ruimte
            Description
Informed by object-oriented and relational perspectives on space, this article argues for more complex accounts of architectural and urban problématiques. Starting from Isabelle Stengers’ distinction between la ville complexe and la ville compliquée, it discusses the 2010 exhibition “Building for Brussels. Architecture and Urban Transformation in Europe” (BOZAR, Centre of Fine Arts Brussels) as a showcase of how architects struggle to adopt a “complex” and “irreductive” approach. This article, as such, uses the discussion of this exhibition as a device to explore the methodological consequences of a relational approach to the city, namely the simultaneous need for more complex accounts of objects (e.g. a city, a building) and an appropriate modus operandi for making such accounts. It argues that, instead of choosing for complexity, the “Building for Brussels” exhibition has made the choix de la complication, and this largely because of a strong disciplinary belief in the all-encompassing force of architecture to “solve” the city.  
            Créateur
Doucet, Isabelle
            Date
2011-06-30
            Langue
en
            Type
article
            Identifiant
http://belgeo.revues.org/7092
                    doi:10.4000/belgeo.7092
            