Building a better world: can architecture shape ...

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Jan 7, 2014 - schools of architecture. Without the ... It took a long list of failures over the millennia beforepostmodern theorists took to critiquing architectural ...
  Cite  as:  Golembiewski,  JA.  (2014)  Building  a  Better  World:  Can  Architecture  Shape   Behaviour?  The  Conversation  21541,  7  January  2014,  6.30am  AEST.    

Building  a  better  world:  can   architecture  shape  behaviour?   Jan  Alexander  Golembiewski  BfA,  BArch  MArch  PhD   Associate  Director,  Medical  Architecture  (Australia)   Edited  by  Sunanda  Creagh     Abstract:  The  ability  to  imagine  and  project  the  psychological  effects  of  innovation   was  part  of  an  architect’s  toolkit  since  ancient  times,  but  an  aggressive  u-­‐turn  in  the   late  twentieth  century  left  ‘architectural  determinism’  as  an  expletive  –  especially  in   schools  of  architecture.  Without  the  right  to  project  a  fantasy,  the  potential  of   design  is  shackled.  Without  imagination  and  belief,  ideas  about  better  working,   healing,  living  and  learning  environments  cannot  be  properly  explored.  The  result  is   that  architecture  has  lost  its  mojo:  there’s  stagnation  in  academia  and  this  filters  into   the  profession.  What  is  an  architect  for,  when  they  can’t  stick  their  neck  out  for  good   ideas  that  may  just  work?      

     

    US  architect  Frank  Lloyd  Wright,  who  designed  Fallingwater,  believed  that   appropriate  architecture  would  save  the  US  from  corruption.  Via  Tsuji     In  1966,  a  British  planner  called  Maurice  Broady  came  up  with  a  new  term  for  the   architectural  lexicon:  architectural  determinism  (Broady,  1966).  

This  was  to  describe  the  practice  of  groundlessly  asserting  that  design  solutions  would   change  behaviour  in  a  predictable  and  positive  way.   It  was  a  new  phrase  but  the  belief  system  behind  it  –  that  buildings  shape  behaviour  –  had   allowed  the  heroes  of  architecture  to  make  all  kinds  of  outlandish  claims.   A  hopeful  history   Leon  Battista  Alberti,  an  Italian  Renaissance-­‐era  architect,  claimed  in  the  1400s  that   balanced  classical  forms  would  compel  aggressive  invaders  to  put  down  their  arms  and   become  civilians  (Alberti,  1443-­‐1452).   Frank  Lloyd  Wright,  the  US  architect  who  designed  one  of  the  most  famous  buildings  in   America,  Fallingwater,  similarly  believed  appropriate  architecture  would  save  the  US  from   corruption  and  turn  people  back  to  wholesome  endeavours.   British  author  and  thinker  Ebenezer  Howard  believed  companies  would  be  more  efficient  if   their  employees  lived  in  village-­‐like  garden  communities.   Swiss-­‐born  French  architect  Le  Corbusier  made  claims  about  how  his  Villa  Savoye  building  in   France  would  heal  the  sick  –  and  when  it  did  just  the  opposite,  he  only  avoided  court   because  of  the  commencement  of  the  second  world  war.  

It  took  a  long  list  of  failures  over  the  millennia  beforepostmodern  theorists  took  to  critiquing   architectural  fantasy  with  malevolent  vengeance.  The  high-­‐point  of  this  trend  was  the   delight  shared  over  the  demolition  of  the  famously  dangerous  and  dysfunctional  Pruitt-­‐ Igoe  urban  housing  complex  in  St  Louis  in  the  US.   It  was  designed  by  architects  George  Hellmuth,  Minoru  Yamasaki  and  Joseph  Leinweber  to   provide  “community  gathering  spaces  and  safe,  enclosed  play  yards.”(Hellmuth  Leinweber  &   Yamasaki,  1956-­‐1973  (demolished))    By  the  1960s,  however,  it  was  seen  as  a  hotspot  for   crime  and  poverty  and  demolished  in  the  1970s  (Bristol,  1991).  

The  demolition  of  Pruitt-­‐Igoe  in  1972  fuelled  resistance  to  deterministic   thinking.  Wikimedia     The  loss  of  faith  in  architecture’s  power  has  been  regrettable.  Architects’  well-­‐meant   fantasies  once  routinely  provided  clients  with  hope  and  sometimes  even  with  results.   Without  this  promise,  the  profession  was  left  inept  before  the  better  structural  knowledge   of  engineers,  the  cumulative  restrictions  imposed  by  generations  of  planners,  the   calculations  of  project-­‐managers  and  the  expediency  of  a  draughtsman’s  CAD  (computer-­‐ aided  design)  skills  in  turning  a  client’s  every  whim  into  reality.   Without  fiction,  architecture  has  become  a  soulless  thing.  But  was  determinism  dismissed   too  soon?  Is  there  a  role  for  imagined  futures  without  rationalist  restrictions?   Restoring  the  faith  

Just  think  of  some  of  the  ways  architecture  can  manipulate  your  own  experience.  In  his   book,  Happy  City:  Transforming  Our  Lives  Through  Urban  Design,  US  author  Charles   Montgomery  points  out  that  some  environments  predictably  affect  our  moods.   The  fact  is  that  environments  do  affect  us,  regardless  of  whether  by  design  or  by  accident.  In   2008,  researchers  in  the  UK  found  that  a  ten-­‐minute  walk  down  a  South  London  main  street   increased  psychotic  symptoms  significantly.   In  my  own  research,  I  find  that  the  healthier  a  person  is,  the  more  a  good  environment  will   affect  them  positively  and  the  less  a  bad  one  will  affect  them  negatively.  Mentally  ill  patients   show  about  65  times  more  negative  reactivity  to  bad  environments  than  controls  and  all   these  reactions  translate  directly  into  symptoms  (Golembiewski,  2013a,  2013b,  2013c).   The  same  patients  have  about  half  the  positive  responsiveness.  That’s  fewer  smiles,  less   laughter  and  a  reported  drop  in  feeling  the  “fun  of  life”.   But  that’s  not  all.  The  potential  for  architecture  is  richer  still.  The  ease  with  which   architecture  can  embrace  sublime  aesthetics  makes  it  great  for  generating  awe.   Psychiatrists  have  found  that  awe  reduces  the  prevalence  and  severity  of  mood  disorders.   Could  sublime  architecture  even  potentially  save  lives?   The  psychological  effects  of  architecture  are  difficult  to  prove,  but  difficulty  doesn’t  dilute   the  value  of  a  building  that  hits  the  right  notes  and  creates  a  sense  of  awe.  Each  building   type  has  different  functions,  and  for  each  there’s  an  imperative  to  use  the  building  to  help   create  an  optimal  mood,  desire  or  sense  of  coherence,  security  or  meaning.  

 

Awe  reduces  mood  disorders:  Gaudi’s  Sacrada  Familia  church  in   Spain.  Wikimedia       Fortunately,  there’s  a  resurgence  of  belief  that  buildings  can  change  behaviour,  led  by  a  few   architectural  journals:  World  Health  Design,Environment  Behavior  andHERD.   Most  of  these  focus  on  health  care  design,  because  that’s  where  behavioural  changes  have   life  and  death  consequences.   But  nobody  dares  make  any  promises.  As  such,  research  rarely  opens  the  black  box  of   environmental  psychology,  leaving  findings  unexplained  and  prone  to  failure.   To  give  architecture  back  its  mojo,  a  new  interest  in  how  architecture  changes  us  must  be   fostered.  Clients  have  to  learn  to  trust  architects  again  and  research  funding  bodies  have  to   re-­‐gear  to  encourage  research  into  how  buildings  affect  our  mood,  health  and  behaviours.   Finally,  architecture  schools  have  to  teach  students  how  they  might  predict  psychological,   emotional,  healing  and  functional  effects.   All  innovation,  ultimately,  is  led  by  the  imagination  –  even  if  that  means  taking  risks  and   sometimes  getting  it  wrong.    

 

Alberti,  L.  B.  (1443-­‐1452).  De  re  aedificatoria.  Florence.   Bristol,  K.  G.  (1991).  The  pruitt-­‐igoe  myth.  Journal  of  Architectural  Education,  44(3),   163-­‐171.     Broady,  M.  (1966).  Social  theory  in  architectural  design.  Arena,  81(898),  149-­‐154.     Golembiewski,  J.  (2013a).  Are  diverse  factors  proxies  for  architectural  influences?  A   case  for  architecture  in  the  aetiology  of  schizophrenia.  Curēus,  5(3),  e106.   doi:  10.7759/cureus.106   Golembiewski,  J.  (2013b).  Determinism  and  desire:  Some  neurological  processes  in   perceiving  the  design  object.  International  Journal  of  Design  in  Society,  6(3),   23-­‐36.     Golembiewski,  J.  (2013c).  Lost  in  space:  The  role  of  the  environment  in  the  aetiology   of  schizophrenia.  Facilities,  31(9/10),  427-­‐448.       (Please  note     -­‐  there  was  no  bibliography  in  the  original  published  version.)