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RE-USE AESTHETICS AND THE ARCHITECTURAL ROOTS OF ECOLOGICAL CRISIS

Ben Sweeting

Contribution to The Pedagogies of Re-Use, edited by Duncan Baker-Brown and Graeme Brooker, a volume that documents an online summer school in 2021 in which over 100 participants considered architectural propositions responding to the ongoing climate and ecological emergency. 

 

Abstract 

A circular economy could be implemented in the building industry without making a difference to how buildings look and feel. Yet, for many of the projects presented in this volume, it matters not just that material is re-used but that this re-use is experienceable. In what ways do the aesthetic qualities of re-use relate to the environmental agenda that they reflect? Is this “just” an aesthetic, or something more? In this essay, I outline an expanded reading of the ecological relevance of architecture, where the aesthetic qualities of buildings are understood to make a difference in their own terms, for good or ill. I draw on the work of anthropologist and cybernetician Gregory Bateson (1904–1980), who identified one of the root causes of ecological crisis as Western culture’s hubristic tendency to see humans as separate from, above, and in competition with their environments and each other. I argue that this hubris is implicitly reinforced through the conventional built environment, such as where buildings imply sharp distinctions between human and ecological worlds. I suggest that the aesthetic qualities of re-use in architecture may play a role in countering hubris by cultivating sensitivity towards ecological patterns and one’s situatedness within them. 

Originally published at Routledge

Sweeting, Ben. „Re-Use Aesthetics and the Architectural Roots of Ecological Crisis.“ In The Pedagogies of Re-Use: The International School of Re-Construction, edited by Duncan Baker-Brown and Graeme Brooker. London: Routledge, 2024. 10.4324/9781032665559-6