Log 47: Overcoming Carbon Form
Fall 2019
“Until now, most environmental discourse in architecture has focused on carbon as a by-product of building and construction,” writes guest editor Elisa Iturbe in Log 47, “making it seem that at the ecological brink, architecture’s most pressing concern is energy efficiency.”
“Overcoming Carbon Form,” Log’s 200-page thematic Fall issue, reconceives architecture's role in climate change, away from sustainability and solutionism and toward architecture's formal complicity and potential agency in addressing the climate crisis. As Iturbe writes, “Decarbonization is not solely a question of technology and buildings systems but also a theoretical question for architecture and the city, one that questions carbon modernity as an obsolete cultural and material foundation for architecture.” To that end, the 24 authors – architects, artists, sociologists, historians, novelists, and policy makers – approach architecture’s role in the climate crisis in widely varied ways. From Pier Vittorio Aureli and Maria Shéhérazade Giudici on rethinking private property to Michael Bell and Eunjeong Seong on the house as power plant; from Holly Jean Buck on carbon sequestration infrastructure to Mimi Sheller on the military-infrastructural complex; from Skender Luarasi on anticipation to Albert Pope on urban obsolescence; from Lizzie Yarina on neoliberal resilience schemes and Gökçe Günel on a status quo utopia to Tahl Kaminer on the impossibility of autarky and Douglas Spencer on the fantasy of island life. Also in this issue, Kiel Moe on new perspectives, Rania Ghosn on geographic externalities, Laurence Lumley on asphalt, Ingrid Halland on plastic, Greg Lindquist on rolling coal, and Daniel A. Barber on air-conditioning. Plus an excerpt from Amitav Ghosh’s book The Great Derangement and a conversation with Rhiana Gunn-Wright on the Green New Deal.
This sold-out issue of Log is available as a PDF.
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Contents
Pier Vittorio Aureli & Maria Shéhérazade Giudici, “Islands: The Settlement from Property to Care”
Daniel A. Barber, “After Comfort”
Michael Bell & Eunjeong Seong, “Encrypting the Sun”
Holly Jean Buck, “On Carbonscapes by Design”
Amitav Ghosh, “The Great Derangement”
Rania Ghosn, “Carbon Re-form”
Gökçe Günel, “Status Quo Utopia”
Rhiana Gunn-Wright & Elisa Iturbe, “Talking Policy: The Green New Deal”
Ingrid Halland, “Being Plastic”
Elisa Iturbe, “Architecture and the Death of Carbon Modernity”
Tahl Kaminer, “Governance and the Climate Crisis”
Greg Lindquist, “Painting with Carbon”
Skender Luarasi, “A White Pyramid and a Center that Is Not as Center”
Laurence Lumley, “The Invisible Bituminous Desert”
Kiel Moe, “Nonlinear Perspective”
Albert Pope, “Accelerated Obsolescence”
Mimi Sheller, “The Origins of Global Carbon Form”
Douglas Spencer, “Island Life: The Eco-Imaginary of Capitalism”
Alican Taylan, “The Endgame of Carbon Form”
Lizzie Yarina, “Toward Climate Form”
And an observation on Hawaii . . .