THE CRAFTED CITY ARCHIVES

COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

ART VERSUS CRAFT

Art, in the common reasoning, is superior to craft, set apart for a higher purpose. Contrary to common reasoning, I believe that they are the same thing in ultimate effect. Only art is stripped of the practical constraints integral to craft, becoming a subset requirement of well considered craft.

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CITIES, COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce CITIES, COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

THE LOVABILITY OF WHERE YOU LIVE

Most of the inhabitants of cities have not fully fleshed out what the ideal city, actually looks like, works like, or feels like. The dreamer, and the NIMBY, the planner, and the chronic complainer, the entrepreneur, and homeless man all occasionally ponder our own vision of a city. We see through the lens of our own narrow interests, missing an all encompassing vision of the community. Our lens doesn't permit the vision of how the whole place works, and how all the various pieces all work together to make a better place…

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CITIES, COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce CITIES, COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

THE IDEAL CITY

Most of the inhabitants of cities have not fully fleshed out what the ideal city, actually looks like, works like, or feels like. The dreamer, and the NIMBY, the planner, and the chronic complainer, the entrepreneur, and homeless man all occasionally ponder our own vision of a city. We see through the lens of our own narrow interests, missing an all encompassing vision of the community. Our lens doesn't permit the vision of how the whole place works, and how all the various pieces all work together to make a better place…

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COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

THE INTERSECTION

Naturally, I had to push a button to cross the intersection. In Southern California, the traffic engineers have decreed that pedestrians need to register their presence in order to cross a street. Otherwise no light will come on telling me that it is safe to cross. I, being the dutiful citizen that I am, pushed the button…

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TRANSITION, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce TRANSITION, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

THE PRIVATE PLACE

It seems to be an accepted fact that where many inhabitants live in great cities, are also deeply compromised as places to live. The so-called price of living in that great place. The wealthy, and the fortunate few who with live the quirky exceptions are the only ones who defy the compromise.

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CITIES, PROCESS, TRANSITION, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce CITIES, PROCESS, TRANSITION, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

MAKING A BUILDING AND CONTRIBUTING TO THE PUBLIC PLACE

An architect is trained to think of each building as a discrete whole, bounded by its sides and top. An object understood on its own; more simply put, four walls and a roof. A program is understood, the needs of the inhabitants are thought through, and a shape is made to wrap what goes on inside. If the program is lavish, if the architect is a sculptor and makes a statement with each work, the shape is fully considered from all sides. This isn’t about the rugged self-reliance of the architect. Those who commission the building, and those who build it see it as a very singular act, governed by vague notions about ‘fitting in’.

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COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

CHARACTERISTICS OF CRAFT

There may be numbers on how many individuals are preoccupied by craft across the globe. No matter how many exactly; suffice to say that it is in sufficient numbers that we are not in any risk of losing the trait in our universal society. It is a self-sustaining characteristic, and it has been with us since creation.

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COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

CRAFT

Craft exists in spite of the forces surrounding and influencing it. It derives from the love of a human being for the materials, the process, and the realization of making something exceptional. It exists, often not by choice, but by a great inner desire of the craftsperson. Because craft is the act of making something useful, thought through, and with an artist’s sensibilities, it can be the most compelling of endeavors…

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COMMENTARY, CITIES, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce COMMENTARY, CITIES, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

I LOVE MY CAR, I LOVE TO WALK

It's very easy target to identify the desire for a local place as a faddish antidote for perceived threat of globalism, the threat of a folly that propagates an increasingly secular and disenfranchised world. Given that the localism movement is, in some part, a reaction to global sameness, he may have correctly identified the fad. Folks with reactionary blood in their veins, conspiracy theorist types who ascribe every evil to corporations, and practical people who believe that shipping food halfway around the world is silly, all flock all flock to a desire to return to local economies and networks.

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COMMENTARY, CITIES, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce COMMENTARY, CITIES, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

BRUTALISM

It's very easy target to identify the desire for a local place as a faddish antidote for perceived threat of globalism, the threat of a folly that propagates an increasingly secular and disenfranchised world. Given that the localism movement is, in some part, a reaction to global sameness, he may have correctly identified the fad. Folks with reactionary blood in their veins, conspiracy theorist types who ascribe every evil to corporations, and practical people who believe that shipping food halfway around the world is silly, all flock all flock to a desire to return to local economies and networks.

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COMMENTARY, CITIES, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce COMMENTARY, CITIES, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

LOCAL

It's very easy target to identify the desire for a local place as a faddish antidote for perceived threat of globalism, the threat of a folly that propagates an increasingly secular and disenfranchised world. Given that the localism movement is, in some part, a reaction to global sameness, he may have correctly identified the fad. Folks with reactionary blood in their veins, conspiracy theorist types who ascribe every evil to corporations, and practical people who believe that shipping food halfway around the world is silly, all flock all flock to a desire to return to local economies and networks.

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COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

ICONS IN THE CRAFTED CITY

One of the great experiences of an interesting and vibrant city is in the personal act of moving through it. The processional quality of walking down streets endowed with the quality of being great ‘outdoor rooms,’ the act of moving through from one interesting surprise to another, these all make cities compelling to be in on a day-to-day basis. Even to someone very familiar to a certain street processional, moving through one of the great urban volumes remains a sublime experience. Taking-in the space itself, the tree canopy, the mass and detail of the flanking buildings, the shop windows that draw you in, and the interesting vantage point that you see ahead, these are the things that keep us in love with a city over time.

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COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce COMMENTARY, ARCHIVES 2010 Douglas Joyce

VARIATIONS ON DEFENSIBLE SPACE

In the 1970s, Oscar Newman led a study out of Washington University regarding issues of territoriality in the spaces near and between buildings. His thesis was that the way that buildings were arranged can and did physiologically affect their inhabitants as well as those who were passers by. The results of these studies resulted in the landmark book, Defensible Space. The study and book launched a movement that offered the idea that appropriate design could be a deterrent to crime and a basis for building a healthy community.

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