Issue 15
ISSUE
STORY TYPE
AUTHOR
14
BOOK REVIEW
February 3, 2025
After a 50-Year Pause, Archigram Keeps the Dream Alive
by Anthony Paletta
14
PEOPLE
January 21, 2025
In Praise of the Pedestrian
by Phillip Cox
13
PERSPECTIVE
December 16, 2024
Some Chests of Drawers I Have Known
by Roy McMakin
13
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
December 9, 2024
Why Are Scott Burton’s Benches Disappearing?
by Mark Byrnes
13
BOOK REVIEW
November 25, 2024
A Mind-Body Experience of Architecture, Delivered in a Photo
by Marianela D’Aprile
13
PERSPECTIVE
November 18, 2024
Seeing Chinatown as a Readymade
by Philip Poon
13
PEOPLE
November 11, 2024
The Place of the Handmade Artifact in a Tech-Obsessed Era
by Anne Quito
13
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
November 4, 2024
How a Storied Printmaker Advances the Practice of Architecture
by Diana Budds
12
PEOPLE
October 21, 2024
Sounding Out a Better Way to Build
by Jesse Dorris
12
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
October 7, 2024
What It Means—and What It’s Worth—to Be “Light”
by Julie Lasky
12
PERSPECTIVE
September 23, 2024
Redefining “Iconic” Architecture and Ideals
by Sophie Lovell
12
PERSPECTIVE
September 9, 2024
Surrendering to What Is
by Marianne Krogh
11
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
August 26, 2024
Sometimes, Democratic Design Doesn’t “Look” Like Anything
by Zach Mortice
11
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
August 19, 2024
What Does Your Home Say About You?
by Shane Reiner-Roth
11
BOOK REVIEW
August 12, 2024
Is Building Better Cities a Dream Within Reach?
by Michael Webb
11
PEOPLE
August 5, 2024
The Value of Unbuilt Buildings
by George Kafka
11
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
July 29, 2024
Future-Proofing a Home Where Water Is a Focus and a Thread
by Alexandra Lange
11
BOOK REVIEW
July 22, 2024
Modernist Town, U.S.A.
by Ian Volner
11
PEOPLE
July 15, 2024
Buildings That Grow from a Place
by Anthony Paletta
10
URBANISM
June 24, 2024
What We Lose When a Historic Building Is Demolished
by Owen Hatherley
10
PERSPECTIVE
June 17, 2024
We Need More Than Fewer, Better Things
by Deb Chachra
10
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
June 3, 2024
An Ode to Garages
by Charlie Weak
10
PERSPECTIVE
May 28, 2024
In Search of Domestic Kintsugi
by Edwin Heathcote
10
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
May 13, 2024
The Perils of the Landscapes We Make
by Karrie Jacobs
10
PERSPECTIVE
May 6, 2024
Using Simple Tools as a Radical Act of Independence
by Jarrett Fuller
9
PERSPECTIVE
April 29, 2024
Why Can’t I Just Go Home?
by Eva Hagberg
9
PEOPLE
April 22, 2024
Why Did Our Homes Stop Evolving?
by George Kafka
9
ROUNDTABLE
April 8, 2024
Spaces Where the Body Is a Vital Force
by Tiffany Jow
9
BOOK REVIEW
April 1, 2024
Tracing the Agency of Women as Users and Experts of Architecture
by Mimi Zeiger
9
PERSPECTIVE
March 25, 2024
Are You Sitting in a Non-Place?
by Mzwakhe Ndlovu
9
ROUNDTABLE
March 11, 2024
At Home, Connecting in Place
by Marianela D’Aprile
9
PEOPLE
March 4, 2024
VALIE EXPORT’s Tactical Urbanism
by Alissa Walker
8
PERSPECTIVE
February 26, 2024
What the “Whole Earth Catalog” Taught Me About Building Utopias
by Anjulie Rao
8
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
February 19, 2024
How a Run-Down District in London Became a Model for Neighborhood Revitalization
by Ellen Peirson
8
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
February 12, 2024
In Brooklyn, Housing That Defies the Status Quo
by Gideon Fink Shapiro
8
PERSPECTIVE
February 5, 2024
That “Net-Zero” Home Is Probably Living a Lie
by Fred A. Bernstein
8
PERSPECTIVE
January 22, 2024
The Virtue of Corporate Architecture Firms
by Kate Wagner
8
PERSPECTIVE
January 16, 2024
How Infrastructure Shapes Us
by Deb Chachra
8
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
January 8, 2024
The Defiance of Desire Lines
by Jim Stephenson
7
PEOPLE
December 18, 2023
This House Is Related to You and to Your Nonhuman Relatives
by Sebastián López Cardozo
7
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
December 11, 2023
What’s the Point of the Plus Pool?
by Ian Volner
7
BOOK REVIEW
December 4, 2023
The Extraordinary Link Between Aerobics and Architecture
by Jarrett Fuller
7
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
November 27, 2023
Architecture That Promotes Healing and Fortifies Us for Action
by Kathryn O’Rourke
7
PEOPLE
November 6, 2023
How to Design for Experience
by Diana Budds
7
PEOPLE
October 30, 2023
The Meaty Objects at Marta
by Jonathan Griffin
6
OBJECTS
October 23, 2023
How Oliver Grabes Led Braun Back to Its Roots
by Marianela D’Aprile
6
URBANISM
October 16, 2023
Can Adaptive Reuse Fuel Equitable Revitalization?
by Clayton Page Aldern
6
PERSPECTIVE
October 9, 2023
What’s the Point of a Tiny Home?
by Mimi Zeiger
6
OBJECTS
October 2, 2023
A Book Where Torn-Paper Blobs Convey Big Ideas
by Julie Lasky
6
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
September 24, 2023
The Architecture of Doing Nothing
by Edwin Heathcote
6
BOOK REVIEW
September 18, 2023
What the “Liebes Look” Says About Dorothy Liebes
by Debika Ray
6
PEOPLE
September 11, 2023
Roy McMakin’s Overpowering Simplicity
by Eva Hagberg
6
OBJECTS
September 5, 2023
Minimalism’s Specific Objecthood, Interpreted by Designers of Today
by Glenn Adamson
5
ROUNDTABLE
August 28, 2023
How Joan Jonas and Eiko Otake Navigate Transition
by Siobhan Burke
5
OBJECTS
August 21, 2023
The Future-Proofing Work of Design-Brand Archivists
by Adrian Madlener
5
URBANISM
August 14, 2023
Can a Church Solve Canada’s Housing Crisis?
by Alex Bozikovic
5
PEOPLE
August 7, 2023
In Search of Healing, Helen Cammock Confronts the Past
by Jesse Dorris
5
URBANISM
July 31, 2023
What Dead Malls, Office Parks, and Big-Box Stores Can Do for Housing
by Ian Volner
5
PERSPECTIVE
July 24, 2023
A Righteous Way to Solve “Wicked” Problems
by Susan Yelavich
5
OBJECTS
July 17, 2023
Making a Mess, with a Higher Purpose
by Andrew Russeth
5
ROUNDTABLE
July 10, 2023
How to Emerge from a Starchitect’s Shadow
by Cynthia Rosenfeld
4
PEOPLE
June 26, 2023
There Is No One-Size-Fits-All in Architecture
by Marianela D’Aprile
4
PEOPLE
June 19, 2023
How Time Shapes Amin Taha’s Unconventionally Handsome Buildings
by George Kafka
4
PEOPLE
June 12, 2023
Seeing and Being Seen in JEB’s Radical Archive of Lesbian Photography
by Svetlana Kitto
4
PERSPECTIVE
June 5, 2023
In Built Environments, Planting Where It Matters Most
by Karrie Jacobs
3
PERSPECTIVE
May 30, 2023
On the Home Front, a Latine Aesthetic’s Ordinary Exuberance
by Anjulie Rao
3
PERSPECTIVE
May 21, 2023
For a Selfie (and Enlightenment), Make a Pilgrimage to Bridge No. 3
by Alexandra Lange
3
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
May 8, 2023
The Building Materials of the Future Might Be Growing in Your Backyard
by Marianna Janowicz
3
BOOK REVIEW
May 1, 2023
Moving Beyond the “Fetishisation of the Forest”
by Edwin Heathcote
2
ROUNDTABLE
April 24, 2023
Is Craft Still Synonymous with the Hand?
by Tiffany Jow
2
PEOPLE
April 17, 2023
A Historian Debunks Myths About Lacemaking, On LaceTok and IRL
by Julie Lasky
2
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
April 10, 2023
How AI Helps Architects Design, and Refine, Their Buildings
by Ian Volner
2
PEOPLE
April 3, 2023
Merging Computer and Loom, a Septuagenarian Artist Weaves Her View of the World
by Francesca Perry
1
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
March 27, 2023
Words That Impede Architecture, According to Reinier de Graaf
by Osman Can Yerebakan
1
PEOPLE
March 20, 2023
Painting With Plaster, Monica Curiel Finds a Release
by Andrew Russeth
1
PERSPECTIVE
March 13, 2023
Rules and Roles in Life, Love, and Architecture
by Eva Hagberg
1
Roundtable
March 6, 2023
A Design Movement That Pushes Beyond Architecture’s Limitations
by Tiffany Jow
0
THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
February 7, 2023
To Improve the Future of Public Housing, This Architecture Firm Looks to the Past
by Ian Volner
0
OBJECTS
February 7, 2023
The Radical Potential of “Prime Objects”
by Glenn Adamson
0
PEOPLE
February 20, 2023
Xiyadie’s Queer Cosmos
by Xin Wang
0
PEOPLE
February 13, 2023
How Michael J. Love’s Subversive Tap Dancing Steps Forward
by Jesse Dorris
0
SHOW AND TELL
February 7, 2023
Finding Healing and Transformation Through Good Black Art
by Folasade Ologundudu
0
BOOK REVIEW
February 13, 2023
How Stephen Burks “Future-Proofs” Craft
by Francesca Perry
0
ROUNDTABLE
February 27, 2023
Making Use of End Users’ Indispensable Wisdom
by Tiffany Jow
0
PEOPLE
February 7, 2023
The New Lessons Architect Steven Harris Learns from Driving Old Porsches
by Jonathan Schultz
0
PERSPECTIVE
February 7, 2023
The Day Architecture Stopped
by Kate Wagner
0
OBJECTS
February 7, 2023
The Overlooked Potential of Everyday Objects
by Adrian Madlener
0
ROUNDTABLE
February 7, 2023
A Conversation About Generalists, Velocity, and the Source of Innovation
by Tiffany Jow
0
OBJECTS
February 7, 2023
Using a Fungi-Infused Paste, Blast Studio Turns Trash Into Treasure
by Natalia Rachlin
Untapped is published by the design company Henrybuilt.
BOOK REVIEW
02.03.2025
After a 50-Year Pause, Archigram Keeps the Dream Alive

The British architecture collective’s latest magazine, Archigram Ten, is part retrospective and part futurism.

Colorful graphic diagram of modular residential units
People’s Architecture Office’s “Plugin Houses” concept, featured in Archigram Ten. (Courtesy Circa Press)


Franchises tend to thrive on frequent releases: You don’t want your fans to forget that you were ever around. Any producer would sputter at the idea of a half-century wait for a next installment, but Archigram—the zany 1960s paladins of paper architecture who have just done exactly that—have not been running your typical fantasy series. They’ve recently released the latest edition of their magazine, Archigram Ten (Circa Press), a full 50 years after publishing the previous one. It’s a welcome occasion for them to reflect on once crazy visionary ideas that have now become almost routine while still agitating for things that remain half-mad, if fully appealing.

We now live among the kinds of things that Archigram dreamed of—biomorphism, Burning Man, prefab revivalism, working from home, smart homes, van life, private space exploration, high-tech architecture as a venerable quantity, and other things both demotic and highbrow—so it is exhilarating to have the band back together to tell us their thoughts on where architecture is heading, and why.

Archigram’s surviving founding members—Peter Cook (who edited the issue), David Greene, and Michael Webb—do so alongside Dennis Crompton, who died in last month at the age of 89, and contemporaries including Winka Dubbeldam, Thom Mayne, Odile Decq, and Tomás Saraceno, and their emphatically droll but enthusiastic tone remains fully intact.

Early on, Cook answers questions from an imagined reader:

So Archigram never went away…?

AS AN ATTITUDE IT HAS NEVER GONE AWAY
IT IS EVEN MORE NECESSARY THAN EVER
ARCHITECTURE MUST MOVE FORWARD
ARCHITECTURE MUST INVENT

Archigram were the great mod dreamers, a London collective that took square aim at all the square ideas prevailing in architecture—and blew them up on the pages of their proto-zine, in exhibitions, and elsewhere with anarchic glee. The magazine, whose nine-and-a-half-issue run (they’re more fun than most people) unfolded between 1961 and 1974, featured a torrent of architectural fantasies: “Walking City” (self-explanatory), “Plug-In City” (enormous scaffolding and Metabolism-esque capsules designed to fit into cities that already existed—or didn’t), the “Cushicle” (a sort of self-propelled spacesuit for planet Earth), “Info-gonks” (TV-projecting glasses and headsets). There were rocket-objects and hovercraft-objects and all sorts of other utopian visions somewhere between Modesty Blaise and Barbarella.

Many were fairly well plotted out; some were loose suggestions. They explained their “Instant City” traveling spectacle, essentially a balloon-borne music-and-anything-else festival, in characteristic form: “The likely components are audio-visual display systems; projection television; trailered units; pneumatic and lightweight structures; and entertainment facilities, exhibits, gantries, and electric lights.” It was Monty Python’s (conceivably) Flying Circus, with enough illustrations to rival Terry Gilliam.

Archigram liked mobile architecture. They liked intestinal mechanical elements as the source of form. They liked architecture that could expand or contract, the idea of pneumatic enclosures, and the dissolution of visible enclosure altogether. Their curtain walls gave way to shower curtains, and yes, there would be swinging fun inside.

They borrowed ideas from space shuttles and submarines and Airstreams and sci-fi, operating in a shambolic mode with tongue partly in cheek—and yet fervently believed that something like all of these things would be great if only it might be figured out. Michael Sorkin pointed out that, “Ironists, they never were. Satirists for sure, but the power of their imaginings abides in a fundamental straightness, the absence of the distancing wink, the nondestructive drollery.”

The group was inspired by Situationism, but their cause wasn’t Marxist revolution: Archigram loved situations and adored spectacle. Their mode was Dadaist-Futurist-Advertising Supplement. As aesthetic radicals, they loathed the drab torpor of late rigor-mortis Modernism, in both its corporate and council-estate forms. They once exclaimed, “WE HAVE CHOSEN TO BYPASS THE DECAYING BAUHAUS IMAGE WHICH IS AN INSULT TO FUNCTIONALISM.”

They nailed their 9.5 theses to the door of the Modernist cathedral, arguing against the theology of the architect-god creating a perfect world in which mere users could only degrade perfection. Their federalizing platform was simple: “The determination of your environment need no longer be left in the hands of the designer of the building: it can be turned over to you yourself.”

The mode was, as Simon Sadler puts it in his 2005 monograph on Archigram’s work, “techno-pop-libertarianism” before the term took on more unfortunate connotations. They imagined “the possibility of an architecture without architecture, organizing experience without incarcerating it.” They wanted liberation, and wondered: “Do buildings help towards emancipation of the people within? Or do they hinder because they solidify the way of life preferred by the architect?”

Close up of a brown building with folded geometry and multiple seams on every element
Barry Wark’s proposal for redeveloping the Glasgow School of Art. (Courtesy Circa Press)


Archigram’s print run, largely distributed through student channels, was a collage riot. You’d find Anna Karina and the Yellow Submarine and Louis Armstrong and almost anyone else cut-and-pasted in. This wasn’t merely impish surrealism, but seemed instead an active reaction to the Modernist tendency to excise humanity from any depictions of its built work.

The group was given to musing about how, say, rainfall, or someone lighting a cigarette, might actually be more important to an urban vibe than any buildings in a given setting—the kind of self-effacing thinking that architects tend to never do. Theirs was a fascination with the ephemeral and the mutable as elements ultimately perhaps beyond the realm of architecture, but in any case, to be encouraged.

Betraying a common British bohemian feint, the Archigram fellows were somewhat less raffish than they seemed. A number of them worked as architects for the London County Council, all of them worked for Taylor Woodrow Construction, and if they didn’t get around to building much collectively (it’s Monte Carlo’s loss for their one near-project), they did so separately. These were real architects who were providing provocations in their spare time, not permanent dabblers. They also published and encouraged content from a number of far-out architects, including Hans Hollein, Paolo Soleri, Claude Parent, Paul Virilio, Frei Otto, and John Outram.

They subsequently acquired an air of ill repute; their paper architecture seemed for a time about as dated as paper dresses. This often wasn’t quite their fault; lesser talents were offering constant unbuildable provocations and flooded the market. We don’t blame Duchamp for Catalan, and Archigram remains innocent. It didn’t help that architecture’s next swerve was to the past—to postmodernism—instead of to the future Archigram envisioned.

Their view of disposability as a desirable architectural quality also received due criticism amid a rising sense of the burgeoning landfills, befouled rivers, and warming climates it produced. This knock was a little unfair: Archigram’s ninth issue, on gardening, amplified an interest in an architecture that was more like nature, featuring elements whose decay and seasonal variation might be productive and not toxic elements of the broader ecosystem. Archigram was also always sure to make clear that their propositions were not immutable. “If we really believe in change,” they wrote, “it will be a change in what we believe in, rather than a change in the means towards a different ideal.”

Colorful aerial diagram with penciled lines and shapes filled in with colorful cubes
Smout Allen’s Rescue Lines proposal imagines the expansion, restoration, and reconnection of the United Kingdom’s forests. (Courtesy Circa Press)


Archigram Ten
is part retrospective and part futurism. The tone is proud, as it should be: “We don’t apologize for having ideas and forms and interweaving dreams with reality. In fact, we embrace strangeness and even inconsistency and even (occasionally) nonsense.” They aren’t just engaged in self-congratulation; the issue seems to radiate gratitude for others for realizing things that the group imagined. Gathered on this starship are dreamers from around the globe; more than half of them, the issue notes, weren’t even born when the previous issue appeared.

Some of these represent a continuation of Archigram’s old aspirations and dreams: People’s Architecture Office proposes plug-in elements for suburban infill—Missing Middle and Missing Monorail elements to boot. Winka Dubbeldam extols biophiliac “mutant” construction, “an altogether different model of buildings as hybrids, in constant exchange with their ecosystems and energy flows.” Marcos Cruz suggests a Biocene house; Tonkin Liu proposes mollusk shell–inspired lightweight structures; Ricardo de Ostos and Nannette Jackowski imagine rattan nesting structures for all sorts of things.

You’ll find well-earned reveries on things, such as contemplations on work-life melding and smart homes, that the group hoped for and have sort of come true. It’s welcome just to see Archigram and kindred thinkers muse on things that have come to seem prosaic in everyday life—but were emphatically not so just a few decades ago.

Some things remain the same. Craig Hodgetts complains about contemporary “glistening skins”—most architecture is intensely conformist still—just in a different way: “If we were talking about music, our cities would be made up of what’s heard in the confines of lifts, not the rowdy sounds of the arena.”

There’s also fretting about contemporary build-nothing miserablism. Our voyagers remain hopeful, and stress “cheerful.” Take Gilles Retsin, who extols robotic building possibilities as a still inadequately exploited prospect for an environmentally sustainable future: “Rather than virtue-signaling good intentions with small-scale, laborious building processes, an automated architecture could actually address the millions of sustainable homes that the world so urgently needs.”

The polyphonic approach here also frustrates any simple quest to determine what these architects think of architecture and design at large today—if their thoughts are ample elsewhere on such points.

A real kernel of interest can be found in things in the publication that Archigram didn’t quite as clearly imagine previously: Tomás Saraceno’s Cloud Cities and paint-splattering robotic architecture, for instance, or David Garcia’s vision for a series of radiation-instantiating visitor infrastructure for … Chernobyl. Odile Decq praises AI in an essay, as several contributors do—all channels of creativity are good! (Cook provides a note of caution that we humans are still necessary, writing that sometimes “computerized sequences generally follow straight paths, when what you need to do is think sideways.”)

If there are any slight criticisms to be made, one is that some of the renderings in the volume bear an anonymizing stamp of computerization, pallid compared to its glorious original hand-drawings. These folks believe in technology more than most of us do, though, so this is to be forgiven. Many of the new contributors are hugely talented architects and designers—but almost no one rises to the level of prose wit of the original troupe. Thankfully, we have several of them within.

If you need additional proof, consider an excerpt from an email about the publication written by founding member David Greene—run sideways, almost as a throwaway, in Archigram Ten:

“... in the past Peter was the creative impetus behind the very varied issue which often had a theme ... is it weird shit still...? ... What is the format? How many will be printed... if indeed it is on paper, is it ? or like Abb’s greatest hits presented in new media? (...) As you know [...], Archigram originally was a pamphlet with a very small audience and the first one reviewed in the AJ as lacking any rational thought ... as I guess so is this email (...).”

Who can resist that?



The magazine Archigram Ten will be the focus of the February 6 gathering of the New York Architecture + Design Book Club, a quarterly book subscription and event series organized by Untapped and the Brooklyn bookshop and cultural space Head Hi. The program will feature two of the publication’s contributors, Winka Dubbeldam and Barry Wark, in conversation with architect Michael Young. Find out more and RSVP on the book club’s website.