True Films

How Buildings Learn

how-bldgs-lrn-sm.jpg

What happens after buildings are built? Why do some buildings get better over time and others get demolished? Stewart Brand says architecture is a prediction, and all predictions are wrong, so the more monumental the architecture, the more wrong the building is. The buildings that thrive are those that can adapt to how people actually use them. The worst buildings for inhabitants are usually statement architecture -- buildings that look like art. The best buildings are often non-descript, and pick up character as they evolve. In other words they grow into art.

Brand's classic book How Buildings Learn and this BBC video series provide example after example of how great spaces are ones that are adaptable. The BBC series is divided into six sections which feature six strategies for designing or redesigning buildings that serve people over time. They travel throughout Britian and the US seeking examples of buildings that learn and ones that don't. This true film will give you confidence and perspective in altering your own current space, and will transform your mind if you have the opportunity to design a new building, small or large.

-- KK

HowBuildings1.jpg

HowBuildings2.jpg

How Buildings Learn
Stewart Brand, James Runcie
1997, 180 min.
6-part BBC series

Six parts available for free on Google Video
Part 1 -- Flow
Part 2 -- The Low Road
Part 3 -- Built for Change
Part 4 -- Unreal Estate
Part 5 -- The Romance of Maintenance
Part 6 -- Shearing Layers

Posted on August 27, 2008 at 5:00 AM | Comments (0)



Comments


Post a Comment

Your Name:









Thanks for your comment. The words in the CAPTCHA box come from old book texts that are being scanned and stored by the Internet Archive. By entering the words in the box, you prove you are not a bot and also you help proofread the books. If the sample you see is too hard to read, simply click the recycle button to get another two. Don't forget to put a space between the words.