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Open Source Architecture, by Carlo Ratti with Matthew Claudel

This manifesto calls for a radical rethink of the relationship between producer and consumer of the built environment, writes Flora Samuel

Published on
June 11, 2015
Last updated
June 11, 2015
锘緽ook review: Open Source Architecture, by Carlo Ratti and Matthew Claudel

This very readable, if slightly uncritical, manifesto for open-source architecture (鈥渢he vernacular with an internet connection鈥) has emerged out of a basement 鈥淔ab Lab鈥 comprising 3D printers, laser cutters and other expensive kit at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Carlo Ratti and Matthew Claudel, part of a team of editors and 鈥渁djunct editors鈥, receive credit for this book because, apparently, publishers don鈥檛 write contracts with 鈥渃ollective authors鈥.

The writing of Open Source Architecture was, we learn, an attempt to replicate the open-source process, in which design is made freely available and can be adapted by anyone who wishes to get involved. This text apparently emerged from the creation of a Wikipedia page; yet, as always, there is the need for an 鈥渙rchestrator鈥 to curate the product and take the long view.

Ratti and Claudel are right to make a point about the difficulties that are involved in attributing writings to groups, which is something that seems to be resisted in the humanities, despite being common in the sciences. Certainly, architecture practice is collective and should always be acknowledged as such.

Latent in their book is a very positive message about the importance of rethinking the relationship between producer and consumer, and of the need to find a way to involve people in the making of their environments. This involves a radical reappraisal of what it means to be a 21st-century architecture professional.

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Nevertheless I regret that the authors don鈥檛 spend more time considering how to bring their 鈥渙pen-source鈥 idyll into being, or go into greater detail on the under-theorised, but vitally important, interface between digital process and participatory architecture.

Instead, the early part of the book deals largely with historical context; in this case, the well-trodden tale of the architecture profession鈥檚 preoccupation with individual authorship. I think all this could have been cut (not least for its overuse of the word 鈥渄eadly鈥). I did, however, enjoy the account of grand, heroic gestures of a different form 鈥 namely the Generation Y geek in his bathrobe, changing the world at his computer screen through the development of Linux and other shared sources.

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In this book鈥檚 worldview, common access to kit is a given. The sharing of intellectual property is a must. Finance, where mentioned, is crowdsourced. How this is to be achieved without a private income I do not know. That said, universities do have an important role to play in kickstarting open-source innovation by opening up their digital fabrication workshops to small businesses, including the fading architecture micropractices that make up such a large part of the profession across Europe.

鈥淲hy not hack your house?鈥 the book asks. The aim is to enable us to download instructions for components that can then be zipped into production in a global network of Fab Labs. Here, it is good to see the British architecture research practice Zero Zero leading the field, with their WikiHouse 鈥 for all that it is, unfortunately, still very far from becoming reality.

In the meantime in China, with its far greater levels of research investment, they are printing out the first concrete houses, bringing ever closer the futuristic vision of building sites inhabited by robots. This is happening at the same time that housing, certainly in the UK, is becoming less and less 鈥渁ffordable鈥, more because of policy issues and land availability than because of building costs.

As the authors put it: 鈥淥ver to you, then: go ahead, design!鈥

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Flora Samuel is professor of architecture, University of Sheffield.


Open Source Architecture
By Carlo Ratti with Matthew Claudel
Thames & Hudson, 144pp, 拢14.95
ISBN 9780500343067
Published 28 April 2015

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