Bioreboot
The Architecture of R&Sie(n)
Princeton Architectural Press
By Giovanni Corbellini
Introduction by François Roche
9-1/2 x 6-1/2 in; 224 pp ; 132 xolor and 105 b/w images
Paperback
ISBN 9781568988696
ISBN10 1568988699
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Bioreboot -- What do you call an architecture firm that draws inspiration from the most extreme aspects of nature and human psychology? When faced with this challenge in 1989, architect François Roche decided that the best way to express his firm's design philosophy would be to change its name every few years. Presently, the Paris-based practice goes by the name of R&Sie(n). Pronounced "heresy" in French, the firm's radical approach—what they refer to as a "chameleon strategy"—permeates everything they do, right down to their gender-bending, morphed anti publicity photo. Led by Roche, R&Sie(n)'s investigative approach to architecture focuses on developing technological experiments—cartographic distortions and territorial mutations—in order to explore the bond between
building, context, and human relations. Each building is a process, a dynamic device with the tenacity of a parasite that uses every means offered by architecture to perform an ecologically useful function.
Bioreboot features nineteen projects—illustrated with extensive plans, photographs, and renderings—along with essays and interviews, providing the most comprehensive monograph of this elusive, intriguing firm to date. Despite working with oppositional relationships—machinery versus nature, purity versus
corruption, paranoia versus rationality—theirs is an architecture whose primary aim is the ecological and social improvement of the place in which it exists. The 2003 Mosquito Bottleneck project mixes objective paranoia with a desire for safety. Designed as a trap for dangerous, West Nile Fever-infected mosquitos, the intestinelike private home in Trinidad weaves together all of its surfaces—floor, facade, and roof—with plastic wire and shrink-wrap. (Un)Plug, a speculative skyscraper project commissioned in 2000 by the Parisian electricity company EDF, features a glass facade of swelling, photoelectric pustules that allow the building to gain enough solar energy to disconnect from the urban energy grid. Bioreboot is a thought-provoking leap into the future and a clarion call for the development of a new relationship between contemporary architecture and the world of nature.
Giovanni Corbellini is an architect and architecture critic. He is a professor at the University of Trieste. Corbellini is the author of numerous articles on contemporary architecture and urban design. He has contributed to the online journal Arch'it since 2003.
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