Monday 15 November 2010

Tuning

This weekend I ended up trailing a web of architecture blogs across the net, some of the well known (like pruned, bldgblog, sit down man, you're a bloody tradegy, archdaily) and lots of new (to me) ones (entschwindet und vergeht, some landscapes, strange harvest). There is a great mix of stuff, from the brilliant to the mediocre. For a moment I got quite overwhelmed in that special internet way - partly by the sheer quantity of what is being produced daily, and partly because a lot of blogs are almost like rolling news channels - daily even hourly links and images of the latest buildings and projects being produced across the world. And they all seem to cross reference one another, and have enough daily traffic to make it worth carrying ads. But the overwhelmed feeling in fact turned out to be a useful way of refocusing my thoughts.

I am not writing a world architecture update blog. I am writing a very personal series of observations and thoughts about places I have visited or know well. I cherish the everyday, the unknown, the un-new, the un-shiny, with a particular interest in architecture from the second half of the 20th century. I love to know about what's new and exciting but I think a building that has been in use for a couple of years is far more interesting than one that opened last week. I want to see how it is used, where it is getting worn, if the occupants have altered things. Sometimes I walk past something fifty times before I work out what it is I want to say about it. I feel as if I might go on to develop a manifesto for 'slow architecture'. Though there probably exists one already somewhere... In the accelerated world of architecture blogging and the incessant barrage of images that accompany it I defend to the end the slow and the small and the unnoticed!

3 comments:

Adam said...

I agree entirely! Thanks for leaving a message on my blog, and for helping me to discover yours - it's fascinating! I've added you to my favourites and my blogroll and will be back often!

Ruth Oldham said...

Hello! I enjoyed discovering Invisible Paris too, and I especially like the Bricks in Paris blog. Thanks for the link, I'll link you in too. Keep up the good work : )

Unknown said...

Hehe, I am getting into the web of web-logs today too.. Were you inspired by this article? http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2010/11/critical-condition.html It made me laugh- at least the criticism. Let me know when you write the manifesto.