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Architecture Theory — course summary

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A sharp, exam-ready synthesis of the major architectural theories from the 1960s to today, clearly mapping concepts such as acceleration, ecology, commons, participation, critical regionalism, and transformation. The summary doesn’t just define terms: it situates them historically, connects key authors, and shows how theory emerges from crisis. Ideal if you want to understand the logic of the course, not just memorize names and quotes

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January 24, 2026
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ARCHITECTURE THEORY
ACCELERATION
1972 CLUB OF ROME
ECOLOGY, ACCELERATION, TECHNOLOGY, CRISIS




COMMONS
1961 JANE JACOBS
NON-LIEUX, COMMONS, BOTTEM-UP, CAPITALISM, URBAN DIVERSITY




PARTICIPATION
1969 GIANCARLO DE CARLO
PARTICIPATION, DIALOGUE, CO-CONCEPTION, THE USER



CRITICAL REGIONALISM
1983 KENNETH FRAMPTON
REGIONALISM, AUTHENTICITY, PLACE, TOPOGRAPHY, TECTONICS, TACTILITY, BEING MODERN
WITHOUT RETURNING TO THE PAST, SITUATED, ARCHITECTURE




TRANSFORMATION
1989 HERMAN CZECH
TRANFORMATION, MEMORY, URBANITY, CONTINUITY, LAYERED, ARCHITECTURE, REPAIR,
CARE




1

,LECTURE 1 — ACCELERATION

Key notions: ecology, acceleration, technology, crisis



1. ACCELERATION

Introduction

Acceleration is the key framework through which this lecture reads late-20th-century architectural theory. It
describes a historical condition in which the pace of change itself becomes the dominant force shaping society,
space, and architecture.

Definition (from the text)

In Thank You for Being Late, Thomas Friedman defines the contemporary era as an “age of acceleration”, caused by
the convergence of:

 globalization

 technological innovation

 climate change

Acceleration is not only speed, but the loss of time for adaptation (Acceleration PDF, p. 6–8).

Context

Historically, acceleration intensifies after WWII:

 industrialisation and mass production

 fossil-fuel–driven construction

 modernist faith in progress and growth

Architecture becomes part of an accelerated machinery of production, demolition, and rebuilding.

Problematization

Acceleration undermines:

 durability

 continuity

 human and ecological rhythms

It leads directly to crisis, because systems can no longer absorb change.

Why featured in the course

Acceleration is the diagnostic condition that explains why architects are forced to rethink:

 participation

 reuse and transformation

 ecological responsibility



2. ECOLOGY



2

,Introduction

Ecology enters architectural theory when the environment is no longer seen as an infinite backdrop, but as a finite,
interconnected system a ected by human action.

Definition (from the text)

In The Limits to Growth, ecology is defined as a system of interdependent variables—population, resources,
pollution, food, industry—that must remain in balance to avoid collapse (Meadows et al., 1972, p. 96–102).

“The earth is finite. Exponential growth cannot continue indefinitely.”
(Limits to Growth, p. 23)

Context

Ecological awareness emerges strongly in the late 1960s–1970s:

 Rachel Carson (Silent Spring, 1962)

 the oil crisis (1973)

 the founding of the Club of Rome

This marks a break with modernist optimism.

Problematization

Ecology challenges architecture’s historical role as:

 extractor of materials

 producer of CO₂

 instrument of growth

It introduces limits where modernity assumed expansion.

Why featured in the course

Ecology grounds the course’s shift from building more to building di erently, preparing later themes such as
commons, transformation, and resilience.



3. TECHNOLOGY

Introduction

Technology is a central but ambivalent concept in the age of acceleration: both cause of crisis and proposed
solution.

Definition (from the text)

In The Limits to Growth, technology is described as incapable of solving systemic problems on its own, because it
often accelerates consumption rather than reducing it (Meadows et al., 1972, p. 126–130).

“Technological solutions may postpone limits, but they do not remove them.”
(Limits to Growth, p. 127)

Context

Modern architecture relied heavily on:

 industrial materials

 standardisation



3

,  technical optimization

Technology became synonymous with progress.

Problematization

The lecture questions techno-optimism:

 e iciency ≠ sustainability

 innovation ≠ responsibility

Architecture must move from technological expansion to technological restraint.

Why featured in the course

Technology is reintroduced later not as spectacle, but as:

 reuse

 low-tech intelligence

 maintenance and care



4. CRISIS

Introduction

Crisis is not an exception, but the structural outcome of acceleration.

Definition (from the text)

In The Limits to Growth, crisis is defined as the moment when growth overshoots planetary limits, causing sudden
collapse in population and production (Meadows et al., 1972, p. 133–140).

Context

By the 1970s, crises converge:

 ecological (pollution, climate)

 economic (oil crisis)

 social (inequality, housing shortages)

Architecture can no longer operate as if neutral.

Problematization

Crisis exposes the failure of:

 modernist universal solutions

 growth-driven planning

 demolition-based renewal

It demands new architectural ethics.

Why featured in the course

Crisis legitimizes the course’s return to:

 participation



4
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