"The transmission of architecture and public space alters all the familiar issues of architecture and urbanism. All at
once, theory, practice, and education are confronted with questions that have no precedent of consideration within
the discipline. . . . The language and metaphors of networked, distributed computing apply even
greater torque to the straining conventional definitions of architecture: not only is real time now an active concern of
the architect, but the logistics of sustainable, transmissible illusion become as real as the most physical material
constraints. . . . . "
Marcos Novak
"http://www.ctheory.com/a34-transmitting_arch.html" |