Dilapidated Dwelling

Where I live, there seem to be two kinds of space. There is new space, in which none of the buildings are more than about ten years old, and there is old space, in which most of the buildings are at least twenty years old, a lot of them over ninety years old, and all are more or less dilapidated. Pa...

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Published in:Architecture_MPS
Main Author: Patrick Keiller
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: UCL Press 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444.amps.2015v6i3.001
https://doaj.org/article/a84a276a45e1436584a0dd212f547be5
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spelling ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:a84a276a45e1436584a0dd212f547be5 2023-05-15T15:18:13+02:00 Dilapidated Dwelling Patrick Keiller 2015-01-01T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444.amps.2015v6i3.001 https://doaj.org/article/a84a276a45e1436584a0dd212f547be5 EN eng UCL Press https://uclpress.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.14324/111.444.amps.2015v6i3.001 https://doaj.org/toc/2050-9006 doi:10.14324/111.444.amps.2015v6i3.001 2050-9006 https://doaj.org/article/a84a276a45e1436584a0dd212f547be5 Architecture_MPS, Vol 6 (2015) Architecture NA1-9428 Urban groups. The city. Urban sociology HT101-395 article 2015 ftdoajarticles https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444.amps.2015v6i3.001 2023-02-26T01:33:00Z Where I live, there seem to be two kinds of space. There is new space, in which none of the buildings are more than about ten years old, and there is old space, in which most of the buildings are at least twenty years old, a lot of them over ninety years old, and all are more or less dilapidated. Patrick Keiller begins his 1998 essay The Dilapidated Dwelling with a concise and simple description of the issues he raises in both the essay and the film to which it relates, The Dilapidated Dwelling , 2000. In both film and word Keiller’s description of the UK’s physical infrastructure at the turn of the millennium was both depressingly evident and in need of explanation. Continuing in the vein of his most famed films London , 1994, and Robinson in Space , 1997, The Dilapidated Dwelling is narrated by an invisible voice that probes the peculiarities of the economic, political and social conditions of late 20th century Britain through the prism of its infrastructure, urban blight and, in particular, its housing. The narrator, a woman is recalled to Britain after two decades in the Arctic investigates ‘the predicament of the house’, discovering that the most recent advances in industrial manufacture have left the house building industry practically untouched. By contrast, changes to the global economy and the emergence of the digital age have conspired to create wealth that has seen the market price of the existing, dilapidated housing stock skyrocket. Revisiting the ideas of Constant, Buckminster Fuller and Archigram she discusses the anomalies of housing supply and demand that have allowed some to escape housing poverty and yet leave millions in ‘dilapidated dwellings’. To coincide with the the launch of its three year project Housing – Critical Futures , Architecture, Media, Politics, Society, is republishing Keiller’s essay and re-showing his film. The essay is reprinted from Keiller’s recent book, The View From the Train , Vesro, 2013; and the film is shown as part of a one day series of film screenings and ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles Arctic Fuller ENVELOPE(162.350,162.350,-77.867,-77.867) Architecture_MPS
institution Open Polar
collection Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
op_collection_id ftdoajarticles
language English
topic Architecture
NA1-9428
Urban groups. The city. Urban sociology
HT101-395
spellingShingle Architecture
NA1-9428
Urban groups. The city. Urban sociology
HT101-395
Patrick Keiller
Dilapidated Dwelling
topic_facet Architecture
NA1-9428
Urban groups. The city. Urban sociology
HT101-395
description Where I live, there seem to be two kinds of space. There is new space, in which none of the buildings are more than about ten years old, and there is old space, in which most of the buildings are at least twenty years old, a lot of them over ninety years old, and all are more or less dilapidated. Patrick Keiller begins his 1998 essay The Dilapidated Dwelling with a concise and simple description of the issues he raises in both the essay and the film to which it relates, The Dilapidated Dwelling , 2000. In both film and word Keiller’s description of the UK’s physical infrastructure at the turn of the millennium was both depressingly evident and in need of explanation. Continuing in the vein of his most famed films London , 1994, and Robinson in Space , 1997, The Dilapidated Dwelling is narrated by an invisible voice that probes the peculiarities of the economic, political and social conditions of late 20th century Britain through the prism of its infrastructure, urban blight and, in particular, its housing. The narrator, a woman is recalled to Britain after two decades in the Arctic investigates ‘the predicament of the house’, discovering that the most recent advances in industrial manufacture have left the house building industry practically untouched. By contrast, changes to the global economy and the emergence of the digital age have conspired to create wealth that has seen the market price of the existing, dilapidated housing stock skyrocket. Revisiting the ideas of Constant, Buckminster Fuller and Archigram she discusses the anomalies of housing supply and demand that have allowed some to escape housing poverty and yet leave millions in ‘dilapidated dwellings’. To coincide with the the launch of its three year project Housing – Critical Futures , Architecture, Media, Politics, Society, is republishing Keiller’s essay and re-showing his film. The essay is reprinted from Keiller’s recent book, The View From the Train , Vesro, 2013; and the film is shown as part of a one day series of film screenings and ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Patrick Keiller
author_facet Patrick Keiller
author_sort Patrick Keiller
title Dilapidated Dwelling
title_short Dilapidated Dwelling
title_full Dilapidated Dwelling
title_fullStr Dilapidated Dwelling
title_full_unstemmed Dilapidated Dwelling
title_sort dilapidated dwelling
publisher UCL Press
publishDate 2015
url https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444.amps.2015v6i3.001
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long_lat ENVELOPE(162.350,162.350,-77.867,-77.867)
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op_source Architecture_MPS, Vol 6 (2015)
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