Tech[no]logical Space:
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Date
2019
Authors
Greenberg, Stephanie
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Abstract
Technology has been an underpinning determinant that
has perpetuated society’s cycle of disruption, disrupting
the typical logic surrounding the use and perception of
space. The reduction of physical spatial barriers, caused
by the full enablement of digital culture and technology,
has diminished both physical and social interactions.
This has resulted in local fragmentation and a global
connection . It has also caused acceleration in the temporal
dimension, resulting in a ‘sped-up’ lifestyle. These forms
of acceleration and propagation of the virtual realm have
not only compressed the time in which we perceive reality
but have also disrupted society’s normative understanding
of space. This new propagation of space, along with the
advancement of disruptive technology, has propelled
architecture into a new realm of experimentalism; thereby,
advocating for the enablement and translation of the
disruption caused by both digital and augmented culture
into architecture.
Situated in and focusing on Rosebank, this thesis will
explore architecture’s role as a mediator for disruptive
technologies. The building will respond to the spatial
transformation and societal disconnection created by
‘disruptive’ technologies through the utilisation of nature
and the transformation of speculated ‘left-over-space’.
Thus, through the demolition and design intervention of an
existing parking structure, it will propose a co-sharing work
pavilion. The design intends to facilitate the socialisation
and collaboration of the mobile workforce with the natural
environment. Through the emphasis of the natural world,
the social world and the human body, the building will
explore new spatial perceptions. These perceptions will no
longer be centred around the physical aspect of space, but
instead on human experience.
Society’s complete immersion of technology into everyday
practice, has made its implications unavoidable. Therefore,
it is continuously changing the way society interacts
with each other, nature and the built environments. The
pervasive nature of technology encourages architects to
start designing in anticipation of the future. As a platform
for the disruption caused by technological innovation, the
design and discourse act as respondents and enablers of
technology. They also use nature as a method to disturb
the disruption caused by technological innovation - through
its ability to restore diminished relationships between
society, nature and technology. This, therefore, speculates
on an alternative environment and future for architecture in
the workforce and, to a greater extent, society.
Description
This document is submitted in partial fulfilment for the
degree: Master of Architecture (Professional) at the
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South
Africa, 2018.
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Citation
Greenberg, Stephanie Nicole (2019) Tech[no]logical space:disruptive technologies and space, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, <http://hdl.handle.net/10539/28784>