“Throughout my six decades of professional practice, I have been consistent in my belief that the key to a truly sustainable future is through our cities – both the improvement of existing ones and the creation of new ones” Norman Foster writes in the Domus 1087 editorial. Focusing on the future of urbanization, the issue opens with essays by Edward L. Glaeser, Professor of Economics and the Chairman of the Department of Economics at Harvard University, and Ian Goldin, Professor of Globalization and Development at the University of Oxford. Both Glaeser and Goldin profile the contemporary city, identifying key areas for improvement to make it thrive. The reconstruction plan of London after World War II by Patrick Abercrombie is the subject of a historical investigation. The County of London Plan and the Greater London Plan are permeated by a vision that is still relevant today and are based on the proximity of the residents of the capital to the high street and are still today an important lesson of urban design. The section on architecture features the work of MAD Architects, Turenscape, Osamu Morishita Architect & Associates, and Sybarite. These complex and extensive urban interventions are illustrated by local critics Xiangning Li, Kazi Khaleed Ashraf, Shunsuke Kurakata, and Guanghui Ding. They share landscape, ecosystemic, and climatic strategies that engage with different cultural and social contexts, indicating possible future directions for urban projects.
Domus 1087 is now available
The future of urbanization: this is the theme of the second Domus editorial curated by Norman Foster.
Text Norman Foster
Text Edward L. Glaeser
Text Ian Goldin
Text Norman Foster
Text Xiangning Li
Text Kazi Khaleed Ashraf
Text Shunsuke Kurakata
Text Guanghui Ding
Text David Jenkins
Text Marianna Guernieri
Text Norman Foster
Text Luca Galofaro
Text Norman Foster
Text Edward Burtynsky
Text Elena Sommariva
Text Silvana Annicchiarico
Text Paola Carimati
Text Giulia Ricci
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- La redazione di Domus
- 05 February 2024
In the Design section, Marianna Guernieri describes the portable solid-state battery designed by Fuseproject for Yoshino Technology. In addition to imbuing the object with almost a vintage radio-like feel, Yves Béhar’s firm has also fine-tuned the interface, brand identity, and packaging, defining a new standard for the home energy sector. On the other hand, architect, writer, and editor David Jenkins unveils the defining aspects of the Barbican Estate urban intervention. Powell and Bon recounts Chamberlin’s project transformation over the past 40 years, how the spaces have been lived in and altered, revealing both historical challenges as well as the successes that still make it interesting today. In Foster on Art, the British architect chose a 1939 painting. Nosedive on the City by Tullio Crali, which combines three themes that are dear to Foster: flight, speed, and the city. In Book reviews, Luca Galofaro reviews three books – by Jeff SpeckIan Goldin, Tom Lee-Devlin, and Ben Wilson – that talk about different ways to put together two apparently conflicting urban needs: density and biodiversity. In Postscript, Foster urges the readers to “think big” when it comes to adversities. If fact historically, cities have emerged stronger from destructive wars or even natural disasters. For his call, Foster is helped by Daniel Burnham’s words, who conceived Chicago's master plan (1909) together with Edward H. Bennett after the Great Chicago Fire in 1871.
Closing the issue is an interview with Tim Stonor on space syntax: a discipline for understanding human behavior in space and a tool for making functional and prosperous cities.
The Cover Story tells the story behind Edward Burtynsky's cover photo. This second Foster Direction cover story is a detail of the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Reservation, Scottsdale, Arizona, USA, 2011 shot that shows the sharp spatial division between a Native American reservation and a suburban area of the small town of Scottsdale – one of the driest areas in the world, where good water resource management is essential.
In the Diario, Javier Arpa talks about Johannesburg, South Africa, in Emerging territories, Silvana Annichiarico writes about Maximilian Marchesani’s design, and Paola Carimati focuses on Supermartini, a Milan-based project that aims to be an alternative to the prevailing model of the traditional cultural hub.
Among the featured projects, Elena Sommariva presents the skyscraper in Shenzhen, renovated by MVRDV with bold colors, while Giulia Ricci writes about the workspace expansion project by Juan Alberto Andrade in Guayaquil, Ecuador. In Points of view, Giulia Ricci engages in a conversation with Sophie Boone from the Belgian studio Rotor and Arno Brandlhuber, co-founder of bplus.xyz in Berlin, to discuss the rediscovery of maintenance and reuse practices as strategies to counter speculative demolition.
In the Domus 1087 editorial, the guest editor explains how the “compact city” is a convincing strategy for the urban planning of the future.
The success of city centres today increasingly depends on the ability to implement policies that attract global talent and make life more pleasant and stimulating
The struggles against inequality, social divisions, pandemics and climate change take place in cities. This is where our future will be played out
The radical reconstruction plan for the British capital after World War II is permeated by a vision that is still relevant for dealing with today’s environmental and wartime crises.
The Chinese studio has reinvented a type of social housing by creating a complex whose base levels act as an element of connection to the city through green spaces and services.
Kongjian Yu’s modulated water system offers an answer to the pressing challenges of climate change.
A flexible public structure, designed to accommodate the changing needs of people and nature. The roof reinterprets traditional Japanese wooden architecture without nostalgia.
Combining a transport hub, shopping mall and park, the project is a layering of spatial experiences designed to revitalise the urban area.
Although not a perfect model for the future city, the pioneering estate in the City of London is now very popular and still has something to teach.
Fashioned by Fuseproject’s work on the design, interface, brand identity and packaging, the solid-state batteries by the Californian company define a new standard in the domestic energy sector.
The Futurist masterpiece, with its vertigoinducing aerial perspective, celebrates three themes dear to Norman Foster: flight, speed and the city.
Over time, Western societies have privileged an economy of the new, forgetting practices such as maintenance and reuse. Today they are making a strong comeback. We discussed this with Sophie Boone of Rotor and Arno Brandlhuber of bplus.xyz.