CJ Lim and Ed Liu. Routledge, 2011 (240 pp., $35.95)
With the shockwaves of economic instability still rippling across the globe, architecture seems the least likely safe-haven for inspiring new futures in urbanism. While new and innovative buildings are certainly being proposed, their sociological relevance appears trapped in the conjecture of formal or material speculation, and holds almost no relevance to the societies from which they emerge. The space of globalized capital has rendered the operative functions of the city into a collection of networked environments in which the built environment is increasingly marginalized by technology. However, despite the dematerialization of shared cultural meaning in physical space, the residue of social narrative still clings to the architecture, both new and old, that make up the contemporary city. Bearing this in mind, Short Stories: London in Two-and-a-half Dimensions by CJ Lim and Ed Liu demonstrates nine possible strategies for the contemporary designer to use to fight the vacuum of today's purportedly soulless city, by employing fictional narrative and a delectable array of analytical drawing techniques as its sword.
The recent riots in London are a particularly relevant example of the prevalent challenges facing the architect’s work in the contemporary city.
John Southern is the principal of Urban Operations and is a Professor of Practice at Woodbury University in Los Angeles, Calif.
