PhD RESEARCH PROJECTS 2017
PhD RESEARCH PROJECTS 2017
TUESDAY 21 FEBRUARY 2017 Conference: 9.30am–6.30pm The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL 22 Gordon Street / London
CONTENTS
5 6
Preface
20
Introduction
Skill Acquisition and Filmic Gestures: Toward a Phenomenology of
Presenters 8
ANNA ANDERSEN
Skateboarding in Seoul, South Korea 22
From Les Fenêtres to Genius Loci:
Mapping Bottom-up Adaptations
of Rilke’s Windows
MARCELA ARAGÜEZ
in Cité Ouvrière (1853–2000) 24
Regenerating North London:
RICHARD BECKETT
The Chorus of a Last Resort 26
Bioaugmented Design: Enhancing
RUTH BERNATEK
Between the Real and the Fictional 28
The Sound of Spectacle: Xenakis
SEVCAN ERCAN
for Detecting Urban Vitality 30
Multiple Spatialities and Temporalities
NADIA GOBOVA
The City-Factory: Creativity and Constraints
DANIEL JAMES WILKINSON After Michelangelo:
of Displacement: The Island of Imbros 18
PATRIZIA SULIS
Urban Mobility Data as a Proxy
at the Montreal World’s Fair 1967 16
PHOUNG-TRÂM NGUYEN
Anamorphic Images: An Encounter
the Indoor Microbiome 14
DIONY KYPRAIOU
Hearing Tower Voices:
Cedric Price’s Interaction Centre 12
FANI KOSTOUROU
(Re)Form of Working-Class Housing:
Christian Norberg-Schulz’s Adaption
10
SANDER HÖLSGENS
Plagiarizing from the Future 32 34
Biographies Credits
PREFACE
Dr Nina Vollenbröker
Co-ordinator, MPhil/PhD Programmes
Dr Penelope Haralambidou
Director, MPhil/PhD Architectural Design
Dr Barbara Penner
Director, MPhil/PhD Architectural History & Theory
P
hD Research Projects 2017 is the
or methodological links, and this year’s
exhibition related to doctoral research
doctoral research, design and expanded
eleventh annual conference and
at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. The event is open to the public and involves presentations by students undertaking the
exhibition considers relations between
notions of drawing, film and sound, making and representing.
Organised and curated by Dr Nina
MPhil/PhD Architectural Design and MPhil/
Vollenbröker, PhD Research Projects 2017
year we have invited contributions by MPhil/
University College London; Professor Sylvia
PhD Architectural History & Theory. This
PhD students at the Bartlett Space Syntax
Laboratory and at the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis.
Leading to a PhD in Architecture, the
two Bartlett School of Architecture doctoral programmes encourage originality and
creativity. Over 90 students are currently
has six invited critics: Professor Marco Cruz, Lavin, University of California, Los Angeles; Dr Tarsha Finney, University of Technology Sydney; Professor Frédéric Migayrou, University College London; Professor
François Penz, University of Cambridge; and
Dr Neil Wenman, Hauser & Wirth London. Presenting this year are: Anna Ulrikke
enrolled and the range of research subjects
Andersen; Marcela Aragüez Escobar;
PhD conference and exhibition focuses on
Ercan; Nadia Gobova; Sander Hölsgens;
undertaken is broad. However, each annual a smaller selection of presentations from students who are starting, developing or concluding their research. The purpose of the conference and exhibition is to
encourage productive discussions between presenters, exhibitors, staff, students,
critics and the audience. The conference
papers are organised in pairs of thematic
Richard Beckett; Ruth Bernatek; Sevcan Fani Koustourou; Diony Kypraiou; PhuongTrâm Nguyen; Patrizia Sulis; and Daniel James Wilkinson.
INTRODUCTION
An Architectural Gesture
Ruth Bernatek and Sander Hölsgens
T
his year, the 2017 PhD Research
we open the door impacts not only design
coincides with a return to our
form or otherwise, but also the disciplinary
Projects Conference and exhibition
original Bloomsbury campus. Building
upon the traces of Wates House, the new
building attunes itself to an all-too familiar
environment. No longer hidden, its entrance faces the main street, the threshold
expectant, allowing the outside world
to strike upon the relocated texture of The Bartlett.
The door, itself an orientation towards
the world, reveals, perforates, discloses, hides, protects. As a singular site of continuous interchange between the bounded and
unbounded, the door has provoked numerous interpretations and different conceptual
ways of thinking within architectural practice and theory.
Life, wrote Georg Simmel, ‘flows forth
out of the door from the limitation of isolated separate existence into the limitlessness
of all possible directions.’ Equally, to whom
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outcomes and capacities, expressed in built parameters of architectural discourse, research, education, and our scholarly
identity. By inviting a flexible attitude towards
notions of boundary, openness, and exclusion, the door of 22 Gordon Street welcomes a
generative pliancy through which to think
through and rethink the built environment.
This conference—the first PhD Research
Projects to be presented at 22 Gordon
Street—seems to embrace and echo this changing measure. It brings together a
diverse cohort of doctoral researchers from Architectural Design and Architectural History & Theory at the Bartlett School
of Architecture, alongside researchers from the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis
(CASA) and the Space Syntax Laboratory. Collectively, our projects suggest how
architecture itself might be more permeable. Rather than taking a stand ‘in-between’
(disciplines, fields, modes, practices), this
Anna Ulrikke Andersen dwells in the life of
palpable tonality, a discourse that operates
Trâm Nguyen repositions her and our body in
event instead works towards an intimate and on a gestural, energetic, and rhythmical
scale. The research projects presented at this conference share, and are receptive
Christian Norberg-Schulz, whereas Phuongher exploration of the simultaneously fictive and real space of anamorphic images.
These deliberate excursions into the
to, a particular dynamism in movement,
non-architectural territory of film, music,
coherence that goes beyond conventional
amongst others, point at a readjustment of
cadence, and posture that reveal a unique
ideas of interdisciplinarity. From the intuitive decisiveness of the sculptor’s hand in Daniel
James Wilkinson’s models to Ruth Bernatek’s inquiry into the spectacular, explosive and
often changeable movements of light and
sound of Xenakis’s Polytopes, this conference embraces an architectural gesture. The
ephemerality and immediacy of the gesture announces the enduring temporality and
energy of Richard Beckett’s autonomously
poetics, biography, big-data, and biochemistry perspectives, allowing for a reconciliation
with architecture at large with a newfound
physical proximity. Whilst 22 Gordon Street chimes with fragile, sensuous, moving
approximations of architecture, this moment of transition also expresses a physical and
architectural reorientation towards openness and visibility that animates this year’s
Bartlett PhD Research Projects Conference.
growing ecosystems, informs Patrizia Sulis’s understanding of London’s infrastructure as an urban vitality. Through poetic and bodily exploration of fugitive train rides,
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ANNA ANDERSEN THE BARTLETT, UCL
From Les Fenêtres to Genius Loci: Christian Norberg-Schulz’s Adaption of Rilke’s Windows
T
and new translations of Genius Loci into
architecture (1980), and asks in what ways
I attempt to outline Rilke’s influence
his paper investigates the notion of the window in Christian NorbergSchulz’s phenomenological
approach to architecture, outlined in his book
Genius Loci: Towards a phenomenology of
this concept was inspired by the window in the poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke.
Norberg-Schulz’s private library
contains 100 items by or about Rilke, whose poems are frequently quoted in NorbergSchulz’s published works. Even today, 1
Norberg-Schulz’s friends celebrate his
birthday by reciting a poem by Rilke, and
toasting a glass of wine. However, despite substantial literature discussing Norberg-
Schulz’s reading of Martin Heidegger, and its importance for architecture, Rilke’s
influence is continually overlooked. Rilke
dedicates attention to architectural motifs, spatiality, place, and philosophy in his
writing, yet he receives scant attention
from architectural scholars.2 As such, the
importance Rilke had for Norberg-Schulz and postmodern architectural culture
more generally, remains to be explored.
8
Based on a close reading of original texts
English, alongside new archival research
and personally conducted interviews with the Italian architect Paolo Portoghesi,
on Norberg-Schulz, and his windows. In
particular, I argue this to be evident in the
way they understand the window to relate
to notions of spatial orientation and mobility. The paper is complemented by exhibited films, approaching these key terms in a different, more ambiguous way.
1. Norberg-Schulz, Christian. Genius Loci: Towards a Phenomenology of Architecture. London: Academy Editions, 1980; Norberg-Schulz, Christian. Nightlands: Nordic Builiding. Trans: Thomas McQuillan. Cambridge, Mass: MIT press, 1997. 2. Bollnow, Otto. Rilke. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 1951; Ebneter, Curdin. Ed. Rilke Les Jours d’Italie: die italienischen Tage. Sierre: Foundation Rainer Maria Rilke, 2009; Guardini, Romano. Rainer Maria Rilkes Deutung des Daseins. Berlin: Küpper, 1941; Kramer, Andreas. “Rilke and Modernism.” in The Cambridge Companion to Rilke, pp.113-31. Cambridge: Cambridge University press, 2010; Tang, Yi-Ming. Fenster-Geschichten: Fenster-Geschichten: die Bedeutung des Fensters bei Rilke und ausgewählten anderen Autoren. Kassel: University of Kassel Press, 2009.
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MARCELA ARAGÜEZ THE BARTLETT, UCL
Regenerating North London: Cedric Price’s Interaction Centre
I
n 1979 Prince Charles paid a visit to the
Interaction Centre in North London, the UK’s first purpose-built community arts
centre, designed by British architect Cedric Price. The visit was tailored to demonstrate the Crown’s social commitment to the
regeneration of depressed neighborhoods. Although Prince Charles described the Interaction Centre as ‘another
prefabricated building’—anticipating his
famous statements against contemporary architecture—, he praised the role of the
initiative in transforming a derelict urban area by means of community and council
involvement. The Interaction Centre was part of an ongoing cultural project promoted by
the Inter-Action Trust, a charity organization founded by American-born activist Edward David Berman in 1968. Berman reclaimed
the use of an abandoned plot of land owned by the Camden Council. After years of
negotiations between the Council and
the Inter-Action Trust, and an important fundraising campaign, the land was
eventually leased in 1973 to start the project.
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A building rarely discussed before, the
Interaction Centre is reviewed in this paper
based on material from Cedric Price’s Archive and interviews with Berman. It examines
Price’s notion of ‘Calculated Uncertainty’
and its impact on the Interaction Centre by analysing the building’s design stages and
final outcome. Calculated Uncertainty—a
concept often quoted by Price with respect to the production of flexible architecture,
yet not clearly defined—is investigated from two perspectives: first, the real capacity of a building layout to be used for different purposes, and second, the potential of a
building to be physically modified over time.
Finally, a review of the life of the Centre during its more than 30 years of activity will provide an account of its social performance and
the extent to which the building operated as a catalyst for urban and community regeneration in the area.
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RICHARD BECKETT THE BARTLETT, UCL
Bioaugmented Design: Enhancing the Indoor Microbiome
T
he cultivation of beneficial
built environment as a positivist approach
environment is a novel field of
our buildings and structures proposes
microbes in our buildings and urban
research, emerging through collaborative
work between biologists and designers, and developing alongside current advances in
medicine and our improving understanding of the human microbiome and the role it
plays in our health and well-being. Despite a modern tendency towards sterility, it is
to urban solutions. Biologically augmenting bioaugmented design as a tool to consider biologically intelligent strategies towards some of our current problems associated with urban living including health,
sustainability, disaster control/mitigation and pollution.
This paper details some initial
now becoming clear that our buildings
experiments in the design and fabrication
microorganisms that are constantly
within buildings whereby dormant seed
are complex ecosystems comprising
interacting between themselves, their
environment and the people that occupy our
built environment. It is also becoming evident that architectural design, through material application, spatial design, occupancy
patterns and building ventilation amongst others can directly influence and modify
of microbially inoculated materials for use microbes, embedded within the material
volume, are able to proliferate under certain conditions. The physical and chemical
properties of these materials are designed to demonstrate bioreceptivity towards a
strain of Clostridia, a bacteria potentially
beneficial to the human gut. Importantly,
this built environment microbiome.
these materials also demonstrate anisotropic
between the microbes associated with
variation in pore size distribution and
As our understanding of the relationship
buildings and the human microbiome improves, there exists the possibility
to design for the cultivation of benign,
beneficial microbes in our buildings and
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properties, exhibiting designed material
achieved through the fabrication process, in order to control biodormant and biostimulated conditions.
13
RUTH BERNATEK THE BARTLETT, UCL
The Sound of Spectacle: Xenakis at the Montreal World’s Fair 1967
I
n the summer of 1966, the architect and composer Iannis Xenakis received an
invitation to create an original piece of
music for the French Pavilion at the 1967
Montreal world’s fair. Rather than comply
with the outlined brief, he instead responded with a daring proposal to install an immense audio-visual ‘spectacle of sound and light’ in the central void of the building.
Xenakis believed that his installation
would give the French Pavilion ‘an
exceptional and unique artistic appeal’, defining the era by using the ‘most
advanced technical and audio-visual means currently available.’(Xenakis:1966). Not only did this correspond with the goals
of the French exhibition and the ethos of
Expo, which took Terres des Hommes as its
theme, and located science at the centre
of human activity and productivity. It also
gave Xenakis an opportunity to realize his
initial ideas for a total electronic synthesis of light and sound, consolidating his artistic preoccupations in the years since the Philips Pavilion.
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Drawing upon recent archival and field
research conducted at the Canadian Centre for Architecture, this paper will argue that Xenakis’ unique conception of sound and space in the Polytope Montreal indicates a move toward a new typology of audio-
visual architecture that emerges after the war, and coincides with developments in
sound technology. Furthermore, I speculate whether Xenakis’ audio-visual architectures are only achievable under the aegis of high profile international exhibitions. Montreal
became the first in a series of five ‘polytopes’ by Xenakis, which collectively form the basis of my research. My doctoral thesis aims to
determine the wider relevance of Xenakis’ audio-visual works as a subject of study for architecture, and address pertinent questions about how the soundscapes
of spectacle may potentially contribute to architectural history.
15
SEVCAN ERCAN THE BARTLETT, UCL
Multiple Spatialities and Temporalities of Displacement: The Island of Imbros
M
y doctoral research addresses age-long discussions on the
disappearance of ‘minorities’ under
the sovereignty of the Republic of Turkey,
and investigates the wider implications of spatial, temporal and political aspects of
displacement within the island of Imbros and its diasporic locales.
Located in the Aegean Archipelago,
Imbros has a Rum population (Anatolian
Greek) who have faced different means of
displacement; initiated by the compulsory exchange of populations in 1923 between Greece and Turkey, and intensifying with the policies targeting minorities during the 1960s and the 1970s. The period in
question resulted in a poignant erasure of original communities, their modes
of production, and the reconstruction
of Turkey’s overall pattern of urban and
rural settlements. However, Rums of two
islands, Imbros and Tenedos, and Istanbul, were excluded from the 1923 compulsory exchange and survived the ‘first wave’ of displacements.
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This paper will suggest a re-thinking
of displacement as a spatial, historical
and materially bound practice operating through complex relational processes. It explores multiple spatialities and
temporalities of displacement through
Imbros, expressed and examined through the different names given to the island Imroz (differs according to its use today and in the past), Imbros and Gokceada.
The act of naming and renaming reveals a unique set of conditions, that can be
identified with different interest groups
involved in Imbros’ transformation under
displacement practices. I argue that each name offers a distinct experience and
alternative understanding of the island, together with questions concerning
identity, territory and transnationalism.
In order to respond to the linguistic and
spatio-temporal dimensions of the study, I follow a site-specific methodology that is organized by, and operates through
different scales of inquiry, varying from regional scale to building scale.
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NADIA GOBOVA THE BARTLETT, UCL
The City-Factory: Creativity and Constraints
M
y research explores states of
study of Yekaterinburg so far has revealed
of architectural design and urban
employed in parallel with official trends,
creative thinking and practices
planning in Russia between 1920 and 2016. It elaborates upon the urban architectural
process in Yekaterinburg, a formerly closed industrial city, by tracing the design and construction histories of its industrial-
compensatory artistic practices and tactics both within and outside of professional and educational institutions, in order to retain theoretical and practical architectural knowledge.
This paper focuses on an early period of
residential districts. Built in various parts
Soviet modernism, and primarily addresses
districts chart changes in political, social and
settlement comprehensively designed and
of the city, at different points in time, these architectural discourse. Specifically, they
reveal how Soviet architectural processes
were shaped by restrictions imposed on the creative design sphere – including the early
prohibition of private architecture practices, and official (political) depreciation of the
architect’s authority within architecture and building practices since the late 1950s. My investigations are framed by
a sequence of changing paradigms in
Soviet architectural history; from early
modernist pursuits for the ideal Socialist city, the manifestation of neo-classical
reconstruction during the Stalinist period, to desire for optimization and standardization in design and construction. However, my
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Sotsgorod Uralmash, a unique industrial
built for 40,000 residents, including factory workers and their families. It also considers
Chekist’s town, a communal gated residential complex, and a series of architectural
competitions held in Yekaterinburg in the 1930s. The post-revolutionary years are
viewed as the most creative period in Soviet architectural history and theory, a crucial
moment that brought avant-garde ideas and innovative designs to the fore. However, it is
rarely discussed in light of the unprecedented constraints imposed upon the architectural sphere, which, amongst others, included
time limitations, deficiencies in technology and resources, and strict political and ideological doctrines.
SANDER HÖLSGENS THE BARTLETT, UCL
Skill Acquisition and Filmic Gestures: Toward a Phenomenology of Skateboarding in Seoul, South Korea
D
rawing upon phenomenology and
minutiae within skateparks condition
and embodiment in architecture
experience skills, and how this affects their
the theoretical turn towards affect
and anthropology, this paper offers a sensory ethnography of skateboarding in Seoul,
how skateboarders in Seoul develop and
felt relationship with the built environment. From a phenomenological perspective,
South Korea, an intimate and informal
I argue that notions of Weltlichkeit, skilful
skateboarders negotiate their presence in the
understanding of the skateboarding practice
network of everyday mobility. I explore how
built environment through spatial expertise, bodily gestures, and skilful learning.
My narrative takes the Korean turn
toward landscape architecture and the
realisation of the Dongdaemun Design
Park and Plaza in 2010 as its starting points, and opens up to three skateparks: Cult in
Dongdaemun, Ttueksom in Ttueksom Resort
coping, and everydayness contribute to our as a particular form of dwelling.
I propose film as a medium to think
about and think through these aspects of the skateboarding practice, which I
announce not only as a bodily and performed phenomenon, but also as a poetic and
intimate form of culture. In my contemplative film, Reverberations (2017), I explore
Park, and Nanji in Nanji’s ecological Hangang
three skateparks—including their direct
takes root in local rituals, social practices, and
textures, and colours with spatial skills, bodily
Park. I propose that skateboarding at large cultural ways of perceiving urban space. Within the scope of this paper, I
examine the acquisition of performative and embodied skateboarding skills
within the Korean context. Specifically,
I rethink the ways in which architectural
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surroundings—in Seoul by blending rhythms, gestures, and social practices. As a sensory
ethnography, Reverberations gives room to
cinematic excess, including the materiality of objects, posture and gestures, the texture of surfaces, and repetitions.
21
FANI KOSTOUROU SPACE SYNTAX LABORATORY, UCL
(Re)Form of Working-Class Housing: Mapping Bottom-up Adaptations in Cité Ouvrière (1853–2000)
H
ousing and homeownership
have always been regarded as
mechanisms of social control.
During the nineteenth century, European
company towns were built not only to provide better living conditions to the workforce, but also to alleviate tensions between
political authorities, industrialists and the public. Homeownership was also part of
a ‘housing reform’ that aimed to moralise and bring social balance to the working
classes. A century later, Modernism offered yet another way of engineering society
through housing on a mass scale. Failing
to deliver on its promises, Modernism gave social housing a bad name. Today, global
economic crises, immigration and the mass displacement of refugees have once again
intensified the question of housing. However, whilst we endure a worldwide housing
shortage, existing large-scale projects are being demolished. Furthermore, the real
estate debt and new shared living habits
signal a further restructuring of society via housing, this time away from the ideals of homeownership.
22
My research adds to these debates
by analysing the evolution of a French nineteenth-century working-class
housing settlement. Cité Ouvrière, in
the city of Mulhouse, was the first mass factory-housing to give workers access
to homeownership. This paper discusses the political and economic intentions
behind Cité Ouvrière, its birth and the
role of architecture and urban design in social ‘reform’. It traces the incremental
transformation of initially uniform housing, into an ethnically diverse and spatially
sustainable Old City quarter, and addresses the bottom-up physical adaptations of
the houses from 1853 until 2000, through
processes of mapping, detailed archival work and qualitative study in situ. It considers
Cité Ouvrière as a spatial manifestation of
owners’ ‘active participation’ to housing and argues it may open up new opportunities
for our existing domestic building stock in view of the global housing crisis.
DIONY KYPRAIOU THE BARTLETT, UCL
Hearing Tower Voices: The Chorus of a Last Resort
M
y research explores representations
by its intriguing social history as a ‘Last
social imagination, public opinion
unemployment and fierce social division.
of tower buildings, as engraved by
and changing historical contexts. Specifically, I examine the dubious role of post-war
towers in low-rise urban neighborhoods as a response to contemporaneous housing
and high-rise demand within London. By
deploying tools deriving from psychoanalysis, art and history, I re-construct narratives
of the built and the lived, in an attempt to creatively re-imagine such towers for the concerned public.
Via this process, I am critically redefining
architecture as a more socially relevant
practice; for architecture may operate as a system to organize structures, arrange
space and relationships while generating
conceptual possibilities, but its complexity
and significance lie, mainly, within its power to script stories and the lives of others (Sheeren 2016).
This paper focuses upon Archway
Tower as a site of contradiction, haunted
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Resort’ for Britain during a period of vast
Conceived and designed around a landscape of first and third-person testimonies of the life of Archway Tower, my practice re-enacts tower ‘voices’ from archival
sources and interviews, as a means to
further investigate the tower’s interiority,
which is then experienced as an immersive audio installation. At the centre of my
investigation are questions such as ‘What does Archway Tower’s Last Resort mean to its actors (people that lived in it and
with it)?’ And, ‘How might real and fictive stories of those actors script the tower’s biography and social provision?’ I deploy
‘minor architectures’ to re-enact fragments
of the Tower’s life cycles in order to perform a wider critique on the impact of the high-
rise being heard, shared and re-constructed through the ‘Archway Tower Chorus’.
PHOUNG-TRÂM NGUYEN THE BARTLETT, UCL
Anamorphic Images: An Encounter Between the Real and the Fictional
M
y thesis examines the relation
in which the body is required to adjust
image and our comprehension
representation, and the space of the real.
between the perception of a visual
of space, by exploring the potential of
and engage with both the fictive space of This paper asks: what can we expect
anamorphic images to represent and
from our experience of the real and
In anamorphosis, the primary image is
our anticipation and memory, while
be experienced as architectural space. completely deformed by the displacement of the original point of view in space, and
the resolution of the image is only possible
by the physical adjustment of the viewer in
space. As a result, anamorphic images are a drawing projection method that requires a
re-enactment by the body for the meaning to emerge again.
Rather than focus on the deformation
of the image itself, this research instead
directly addresses anamorphic construction as a way to access a world beyond the
visible. Though a purely visual medium,
anamorphic images possess the capacity
to evoke an active way of perceiving; their experience opens up a place for dialogue,
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what are the temporal relations, toward experiencing the space unfurled by
anamorphic images. In order to unpack
this complex question, I shall present the second cycle of my research project,
‘The Optical Table’, which is conceived
and acts as a physical stage for perception. The stage allows for the deployment of
physical elements, and aims to study their
transformation in time and space using film, both to record and project. Expanding on the idea of disjunction, between the real and the represented, The Optical Table offers an opportunity to speculate and
analyze how the body bridges the space between the physical environment and the imagined realm of projection.
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PATRIZIA SULIS CENTRE FOR ADVANCED SPATIAL ANALYSIS, UCL
Urban Mobility Data as a Proxy for Detecting Urban Vitality
T
he recent explosion of available
according to three complementary dynamic
sources represent an unprecedented
variability and consistency. Each attribute
spatial datasets from different
opportunity to unveil and understand urban
phenomena more conventionally researched via empirical methods from a quantitative
attributes that compose diversity: intensity, represents different temporal values, that
are able to reflect how diversity (and vitality) temporally changes over the course of
perspective. In particular, mobility data,
the day or week in the same urban place.
proven to be a reliable source for exploring
validated against other urban datasets,
from a spatial perspective, mobility data also
different times of the day and the week. The
like those acquired by public transport, has human mobility within the city. However, provides interesting insights into human
uses of urban space, inferring quantitative
information about environmental qualities such as vitality and attractiveness.
In this paper, I propose an innovative
application of Jane Jacob’s concept of ‘urban vitality’ using mobility data, specifically
Oyster card transaction records, as a proxy
for measuring diversity and vitality in the city of London. Unlike previous studies, I define diversity as it is represented by spatial and
temporal differences in mobility patterns
within urban places. My study is conducted
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The results, when compared and
show the liveliest places of London during fine temporal granularity of the data used
in my analysis reveals meaningful variations in terms of flows and mobility diversity
across London. This significantly improves our understanding, in a more detailed and
quantitative way, about how spaces across the city are distinctly used by people over
set time-frames. This paper also suggests
how spatial big data analysis can be applied to effectively support spatial planning
research and practice with quantitative descriptions of urban qualities.
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DANIEL JAMES WILKINSON THE BARTLETT, UCL
After Michelangelo: Plagiarizing from the Future
T
he history of architecture is founded
was a tool to test the drawing, whereas
The discipline of architecture as
techniques positioned clay architectural
upon a long history of drawing.
we know it today only emerged during the
15th century. This emergence is inseparable from the work of Leon Battista Alberti, an
architect, poet, cryptographer and suspected
gymnast, and coincides with the rise of paper as a common drawing material. Alberti’s
Michelangelo’s transposition of sculptural sketch models as a generator for the drawing, and while Alberti’s engagements with the
body resulted from the clarity of a Vitruvian abstraction, Michelangelo’s are dominated by an intensity of looking.
This paper considers how the
seminal work, De Re Aedificatoria (1452)
working practices of Michelangelo, and
architecture through a prescription of
architectural design, can be used to intuit
successfully codified the discipline of
drawing standards and the role that these
were to play in a divorce from construction. Disrupting Alberti’s formative idea of
the architect was Michelangelo, who, with
prior training and experience as a sculptor,
advocated an alternative method of disegno,
which both challenged and complicated
the standards set by Alberti. Two specific
factors underpin the differences between
Michelangelo and Alberti’s approach; the role of the model, and their engagement with the figure. For Alberti the architectural model
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their relationship to wider standards of the contents of his lost architectural
treatise, last seen in Borromini’s 17th century workshop. Michelangelo’s drawing practice
is presented as a rehearsal for his buildings,
and therefore challenges the Albertian traits
of tectonic legibility and planar composition. Importantly, these traits are still prevalent in the 21st century. As such, I attempt to
rethink the development of style through a rethinking of the both historical and
contemporary definitions of architecture.
BIOGRAPHIES
Anna Ulrikke Andersen is a PhD student in Architectural Design at The Bartlett. She holds a BA in Art History from the University of Oslo, and an MA in Architectural History from The Bartlett. Her current doctoral research focuses on the window in the life and theory of Christian Norberg-Schulz, where she is adopting a practice led research methodology of filmmaking. Anna is the founder and former coordinator of the Bartlett Film+Place+Architecture Doctoral Network, and currently the Competition Director of Architecture Film Festival London 2017. Marcela Aragüez is an architect, researcher and editor of LOBBY Magazine who has practised architecture in Spain and Switzerland. She holds a MArch from the University of Granada, and an MSc in Spatial Design from The Bartlett. Since January 2015, Marcela is a PhD candidate in Architectural History & Theory at The Bartlett, researching the production of indeterminate spaces in post-war buildings in Britain and Japan. She is a teaching assistant at The Bartlett, and tutor for UCL’s History of Art Department. Her research is supported by Sasakawa Foundation, the Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain, and the Canon Foundation. Richard Beckett is a lecturer and Director of BiotA Lab at The Bartlett. He has a multidisciplinary background and specialized in biochemistry before going on to study and teach architecture at UCL. His investigations into architecture have remained cross-disciplinary, focusing on the contemporary discussion of digital architecture and novel fabrication alongside the impact of biotechnology on architecture. Specifically, investigations into the use of living or semi-living materials in our built environment. Richard’s current project, Computational Seeding of Bioreceptive Materials, is funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.
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Ruth Bernatek is a PhD student in Architectural History & Theory at The Bartlett. Her research addresses the complex relationships between music and architecture in the ‘Polytope Projects’, a series of large scale multimedia installations conceived by the composer and architect Iannis Xenakis, between 1967 and 1978. Taking an interdisciplinary approach to research, she draws upon her academic background in Art History, and training as a classical musician. Ruth is a tutor for the History of Art Department at UCL, and co-founder of the doctoral initiative Sound Making Space, at The Bartlett. Her PhD is funded by London Arts and Humanities Partnership. Sevcan Ercan is an architect and researcher with a particular interest in sites of displacement and islands. In 2013 she pursued an MA at the Bartlett School of Architecture, where she is currently undertaking a PhD in Architectural History & Theory, supervised by Iain Borden and Jane Rendell. Her PhD research is funded by the Ministry of National Education of Turkey. Nadia Gobova is a qualified architect and researcher. She holds an MA in Architectural History & Theory from Ural State Academy of Architecture and Arts in Yekaterinburg, and an MA from the Academy of Art University San Francisco, where she studied as a Fulbright Scholar. Nadia previously worked for architecture design practices in Russia, US, and the UK, before embarking upon her PhD in Architectural History & Theory at The Bartlett. Her current research is focused on states of architectural creative design thinking and practices of urban planning in Yekaterinburg, Russia. Sander Hölsgens is a trained photographer and filmmaker. He is a tutor at UCL’s Writing Lab and the MA in Film Studies, and is currently undertaking a PhD in Architectural Design at
Bartlett School of Architecture. Sander has a background in fine art, cultural studies, and visual anthropology, and since 2011 he has been involved in a variety of film productions in South Korea. His latest film, Whose Kimchi?, was screened at the British Museum during the London Korean Film Festival 2016; his essay film Blue will premiere during the Birkbeck Essay Film Festival 2017. Fani Kostourou is an architect and urban designer who has previously studied at the National Technical University of Athens, ETH Zürich and UCL London. Her work has featured in ETHZ group exhibitions at MoMA New York, Museu de Arte do Rio, X São Paulo and 15th Venice Architecture Biennales. Fani is currently a doctoral student at The Bartlett, an Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (UK) and postgraduate teaching assistant at the Bartlett School of Architecture, and Development Planning Unit, UCL. Her PhD research is funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. Diony Kypraiou is a doctoral candidate in Architectural Design at The Bartlett. She holds an MArch in Architectural Design from The Bartlett (GAD, 2011), and previously trained in Architectural Design at the School of Architecture of Patras, Greece. Diony is a visiting lecturer and design tutor for Interior Architecture (BA) at Westminster University, and a tutor at UCL’s Writing Lab. She has practiced, lectured and exhibited work on architecture and art internationally. Her doctoral research explores representations of tower buildings and their social biographies, as scripted by imagination and changing historical contexts. Phuong-Trâm Nguyen is a trained architect in Canada, and holds an MA in Architectural History & Theory from McGill University, Montreal. She is currently pursuing a PhD
in Architectural Design at The Bartlett, funded by the Government of Québec, Canada (FRQSC). Her research addresses questions of perception, beyond the visual realm, through the study of anamorphic construction in film and reenactment. She is the coordinator of Bartlett Film+Place+Architecture Doctoral Network, a multi-disciplinary research forum founded by PhD students who employ filmmaking as a tool and method of research, engaging in a dynamic dialogue between practice work and research. Patrizi Sulis is a PhD candidate at the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, UCL. She holds a MSc in Urbanism from Delft University of Technology, and a MEng in Civil Engineering and Architecture from the University of Cagliari. She has previously worked as a research assistant for the development of the Bartlett London Research Tool, as curatorial assistant for two editions of FESTARCH International Festival of Architecture, and served on the steering committees of various other events. Patrizia’s doctoral research investigates medium and small scale urban phenomena through an analysis of spatial big data and urban dynamics. Daniel James Wilkinson is a PhD candidate in Architectural Design at The Bartlett, and lecturer at London South Bank University. He completed his MArch at The Bartlett in 2014, as a member of Unit 12, before joining the Faculty of Architecture at The University of Hong Kong as a tutor and research assistant. His doctoral research focuses on Michelangelo’s lost architectural treatise and its role in countering the predominance of a traditional Albertian mode of architecture. Specifically, a wider conception of disegno, which integrates the dimensional complexity afforded by sketching in clay, over the limitations of orthographic projection.
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CREDITS
MPhil/PhD supervisors: Alisa Andrasek, Dr Jan Birksted, Professor Peter Bishop, Dr Camillo Boano, Professor Iain Borden, Dr Victor Buchli, Professor Mario Carpo, Dr Ben Campkin, Professor Nat Chard, Dr Marjan Colletti, Professor Sir Peter Cook, Dr Marcos Cruz, Dr Edward Denison, Professor Adrian Forty, Professor Colin Fournier, Professor Murray Fraser, Professor Stephen Gage, Dr Francois Guesnet, Dr Sean Hanna, Dr Penelope Haralambidou, Professor Christine Hawley, Professor Jonathan Hill, Dr Jan Kattein, Dr Chris Leung, Professor CJ Lim, Dr Yeoryia Manolopoulou, Professor Timothy Mathews, Professor Mark Miodownik, Professor Sebastian Ourselin, Jayne Parker, Dr Barbara Penner, Dr Sophia Psarra, Dr Peg Rawes, Professor Jane Rendell, Dr Stephanie Schwartz, Dr Tania Sengupta, Professor Bob Sheil, Mark Smout, Professor Philip Steadman, Dr Hugo Spiers, Professor Neil Spiller, Professor Michael Stewart, Professor Philip Tabor, Dr Claire Thomson. MPhil/PhD Architectural Design students: Yota Adilenidou, Bihter Almac, Luisa Silva Alpalhão, Nicola Antaki, Nerea Elorduy Amoros, Anna Andersen, Paul Bavister, Richard Beckett, Katy Beinart, Giulio Brugnaro, Matthew Butcher, Armando Caroca Fernandez, Niccolo Casas, Ines Dantas Ribeiro Bernardes, Bernadette Devilat, Killian Doherty, Daniyal Farhani, Judit Ferencz, Pavlos Fereos, Susan Fitzgerald, Ruairi Glynn, Isabel Gutierrez Sanchez, Colin Herperger, Bill Hodgson, Sander Holsgens, Christiana Ioannou, Nahed Jawad, Tae Young Kim, Paul King,
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Dionysia Kypraiou, Hina Lad, Felipe Lanuza, Ifigeneia Liangi, Tea Lim, Rebecca Loewen , Thandiwe Loewenson, Shneel Malik, Samar Maqusi, Matthew Mc Donald, Matteo Melioli, Phuong-Trâm Nguyen, Ollie Palmer, Christos Papastergiou, Annarita Papeschi, Thomas Pearce, Luke Pearson, Mariana Pestana, Arthur Prior, Felix Robbins, Natalia Romik, Merijn Royaards, Sayan Sakandarajah, Wiltrud Simbuerger, Eva Sopeoglou, Camila Sotomayor, Ro Spankie, Dimitrie Stefanescu, Quynh Vantu, Cindy Walters, Daniel Wilkinson, Henrietta Williams, Seda Zirek, Fiona Zisch. MPhil/PhD Architectural History & Theory students: Wesley Aelbrecht, Tilo Amhoff, Sabina Andron, Vasileios Aronidis, Gregorio Astengo, Tal Bar, Ruth Bernatek, Rakan Budeiri, Thomas Callan, ChinWei Chang, Mollie Claypool, Miranda Critchley, Sally Cummings, Sevcan Ercan, Marcela Araguez Escobar, Pol Esteve, Nadia Gobova, Irene Kelly, Jeong Hye Kim, Claudio Leoni, Kieran Mahon, Carlo Menon, Megan O’Shea, Soledad Perez Martinez, Matthew Poulter, Sophie Read, Sarah Riviere, Ryan Ross, Ozayr Saloojee, Amy Smith, Lina Sun, Huda Tayob, Claire Tunnacliffe, Freya Wigzell. Submitted and/or completed doctorates 2016–2017: Pinar Aykac, Jaime Bartolome Yllera, Stylianos Giamarelos, Popi Iacovou, Torsten Lange, Dragan Pavlovic, Regner Ramos, David Roberts, Theo Spyropoulos.
This catalogue has been produced in an edition of 300 to accompany PhD Research Projects 2017, the eleventh annual conference and exhibition devoted to doctoral research at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, Tuesday, 21 February 2017. Edited by Nina VollenbrÜker and Ruth Bernatek. Designed by Avni Patel | www.avnipatel.com Printed in England by Aldgate Press Limited. Published by the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. 22 Gordon Street, London WC1H 0QB Copyright Š 2017 the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system without permission in writing from the publisher. www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk PhD Research Projects 2017 is supported by the Bartlett School of Architecture and the Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment.
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PhD Research Projects 2016. Photography by Richard Stonehouse.
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On the cover: Daniel James Wilkinson; Disegno Study 14; 2016