N°20 | Questioning Technology in a Time of Global Upheaval

Call for papers: 
Les Cahiers de la recherche architecturale, urbaine et paysagère
https://journals.openedition.org/craup/
N°20 | Questioning Technology in a Time of Global Upheaval
Thematic dossier coordinated by Roberta Morelli AND Jean Souviron
Deadline for sending papers: 2 October 2023


The place and role of technology in the organisation of industrialised societies raise controversies that have continuously questioned the impact of human activities over the last two centuries. The criticism of industrialization–underpinned by the thinking of William Morris (1834–1896) and Lewis Mumford (1895–1990), among others–emerged with the advent of the “age of machinery” and led to a reconsideration of the history of technology at the crossroads of human societies and cultures. Nowadays, in a context marked by the acceleration of global disruption, this criticism challenges the very notions of progress and innovation, and questions the relationships between our societies and their technical objects through the “imperative of responsibility” and the notion of ethics. Controversies have arisen between advocates of technological solutionism, for whom technical progress can provide effective responses to the challenges facing modern societies, and the technocritics, who have various ways of arguing against the sacralisation of technology and the resulting alienation of individuals. While this opposition needs to be qualified in light of the plurality of policies that question the role of science and technology in society, it nevertheless reflects the issues and controversies that run through contemporary discourses and practices, and which this thematic dossier aims to explore.

Ecological upheavals, increasing social vulnerability and the promises of the digital revolution, all raise questions about how infrastructural choices and architectural, urban and territorial practices impact the environment and our societies. The growing scarcity of material and energy resources and the urgent need to retrofit and renovate existing buildings are transforming the very notion of technology in these fields. As a result, new issues have arisen concerning, on the one hand, the environmental, health and social impact of building systems; and, on the other hand, the division of labour between the design and construction phases. Examples include controversies raised by construction models addressing energy performance based on thermal insulation and the mechanical ventilation of buildings; the limits of industrialisation and “low carbon” labelling of timber construction; the challenges of waste management in response to the call for a “circular economy”; and the impact of urban planning models based on smart grids and mass electrification.

Almost thirty years after Les Cahiers: Journal for the Study of Architecture, Urbanism and Landscape published its last issues devoted to the material dimension of living space, the coordinators of this dossier wish to revive scientific debates on technology. The latter is understood here in a broad sense to include material and energy resources; tools, knowledge and know-how; production and design processes; as well as construction work and the maintenance of structures. The objective of this thematic dossier is to contribute to a critical analysis of the changes in the material conditions of our built environment. In particular, it aims to explore the interdependent relationships between the political, conceptual and constructive dimensions that characterise contemporary professional practices. It also aims to understand the resulting changes and controversies by analysing social practices, their economic circumstances and their environmental impacts.

The field of the history of construction and technology has long been aware of the value of legacies, and has more recently opened up new research perspectives by embracing social studies. However, contributions on the current state of technology are less common, despite contemporary professional practices being potential sources for rich critical analyses. For example, some authors have highlighted the fragmentation of stakeholders and their responsibilities in the act of building, pointing to the loss of technological unity achieved in old architecture; which spared nature, built cities and erected houses according to the same principles. While technology has always ordered human capacities regarding their ability to build solid structures, the injunctions formulated in so-called “ecological” discourses and policies exacerbate the fragmentation of contemporary regulatory, economic and operational logics. As a result, a series of controversies and paradoxes have arisen: with the growing heterogeneity of technical entities, comes an increasing standardisation of products and construction methods; with the diversification of stakeholders involved in building design, comes a loss of know-how; with the increase in the level of industrialisation, comes a gradual rise in construction prices; and with the acceleration of digitalisation, comes an inequality in the socio-economic conditions of production and maintenance of the built environment. All these controversies and paradoxes raise questions about the specific ways in which those involved in architectural, urban and territorial production think about and implement their technological choices. They also call for an analysis of the impact of these choices on the spatial and socio-economic context in which they are made.

With contributions across a range of disciplines, this thematic dossier puts forward the hypothesis that technology today represents a space of differentiation and a place for negotiating plural and conflicting interests, with a direct impact on material production, the organisation of work and labour, and the definition of space. Why and how is technology defined in contemporary architectural, urban and territorial production? What political and social projects does technology embody? What are the issues and controversies involved? To further explore this hypothesis and to help answer these questions, this call for papers aims to build an open debate on an international scale, to shed light on current controversies and to question the place and role of technology in a time of global upheaval. Papers may focus on one or more of the following topics.

1. Technologies and processes in the production of construction materials

The act of building usually begins in the quarries, mines or forests scattered across the territory. Countless machines are used to extract material resources, which are then transported and transformed through a series of industrial or artisanal processes. Building materials gradually take shape according to precise specifications defined to fulfil the performance requirements of architectural, urban and territorial production. Throughout these stages, a multitude of stakeholders are involved, all of them embodying a thought about technology that materialises in the products that are then sold on the construction market. We are looking for contributions that explore the evolution of the place and role of technology in the production of construction materials, examining industrial processes, questioning the productivist imaginary and the promises of technological solutions in the face of contemporary ecological upheavals. We also welcome critical contributions that explore the renewed interest of architects and designers in the manufacturing stage of construction materials.

2. The construction site or the challenge of materialising a thought about technology

In a context characterised by an increase in technological regulations, and the intensification of competition dynamics and productivity imperatives in the construction sector, the conditions under which construction works are carried out are marked by several phenomena. These include: the division of labour, with massive use of subcontracting; the increasing dissociation of the tasks performed by project managers, who delegate the execution and coordination of technical studies to multidisciplinary consulting, engineering and management firms; and the standardisation of construction methods, which leads to a loss of know-how. Faced with these trends, which vary according to the complexity of the design, the project manager has gradually delegated a number of tasks, thereby limiting the scope of their technical thinking, along with the challenge of its materialisation. The expected contributions should develop a critical analysis of the causes and effects of these phenomena.

3. The role of technology in adaptation, maintenance and repair practices

Once construction is complete, those involved in the design process withdraw to make way for those who will be responsible for maintaining, repairing and adapting the building or urban space. These are, of course, the inhabitants who make these places their own, taking care of and often repurposing the technical systems that have been installed to fulfil a series of functions (heating, air conditioning, ventilation, shading, electrification, etc.). These also include craftspeople, industry representatives and do-it-yourselfers, who occasionally work on construction elements and networks of pipes and ducts to keep buildings running smoothly, to improve their performance and to comply with changing standards and regulations. The life of a building, an urban space and an infrastructure is thus intertwined with that of the technical objects that compose them, and with that of the people who use them and draw on their know-how to maintain them. The papers expected here should focus on the failures and limitations of technical systems, their maintenance, repair and appropriation. They may be based on field studies and analyse the perceptions, knowledge and practices that shape the relationship between the users of a space and its technical objects.

4. Technologies and practices for waste management

The construction sector is also a dismantling industry. Either during demolition or renovation work, many stakeholders seek to get rid of materials that have become cumbersome. Machines and workers then handle these materials to move, sort, clean, recycle, crush, incinerate, store and bury them. Each of these stages requires specific skills, tools and forms of organisation. More broadly, the trajectories of construction waste reveal a relationship with technical objects that is rooted in a culture and economy situated in a specific time and place. The papers expected here should be based on case studies of waste management processes and their socio-ecological impacts. Contributions should also develop a critical analysis of the issues and controversies surrounding the implementation of a “circular economy.”

The coordinators of this thematic dossier also invite authors who wish to propose texts approaching these four topics transversally to submit them. For example, these articles could deal with the life cycle of a building, the trajectory of a material or product, or the history of a territory and its infrastructure.

Procedure for the Transmission of Draft Articles: See https://journals.openedition.org/craup/365

 

Driehaus_SH_Horizontal_RGB_275_100

SAH thanks The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation
for its operating support.
Society of Architectural Historians
1365 N. Astor Street
Chicago, Illinois 60610
312.573.1365