MIRNY. The Prison of Time

Speculative architecture is sometimes used by speculative architects to enhance our awareness of dystopian elements that thread their way through societies, even when a society is striving for utopian ideals. This contradiction exists because a dystopia to one person may be viewed as a utopia to ano...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vasilevskyte, Eiva
Other Authors: Brown, Daniel
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Victoria University of Wellington 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/8820
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spelling ftvuwellington:oai:researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz:10063/8820 2023-08-15T12:40:15+02:00 MIRNY. The Prison of Time Vasilevskyte, Eiva Brown, Daniel 2020 http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/8820 en_NZ eng Victoria University of Wellington http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/8820 Author Retains Copyright Architecture Narrative Propaganda Text Masters 2020 ftvuwellington 2023-07-25T17:29:24Z Speculative architecture is sometimes used by speculative architects to enhance our awareness of dystopian elements that thread their way through societies, even when a society is striving for utopian ideals. This contradiction exists because a dystopia to one person may be viewed as a utopia to another – and dystopian conditions can sometimes become so commonplace that they are no longer viewed as out of the ordinary. The site for this design research investigation is Mirny, Yakutia, Siberia, located 450 kilometres south of the Arctic Circle – a city of almost one million people with no access by road, set in permafrost year-round. The city developed around the open pit Mirny diamond mine that once brought wealth to the community; but while the diamonds are now mostly gone, the mine remains – one of the largest, toxic open holes in the world. With the depletion of diamonds, the city became largely forgotten, but the population remained. Yakutia is defined by the enormous pit and its decades-old, never-changing, Soviet-era architecture – lost in time. The utopian ideal from which the city was born is now shrouded in dystopian conditions. But the people, those born in the city who have lived there all their lives, have known nothing else; they remain unaware of the utopian/dystopian contradiction. This thesis looks at how transformations within our evolving built environments can result in contradiction. It challenges speculative architecture to enhance our ability to recognise such contradictions, distinguishing between utopian and dystopian urban conditions when they simultaneously define a city. Master Thesis Arctic permafrost Yakutia Siberia Victoria University of Wellington: ResearchArchive Arctic Mirny ENVELOPE(113.961,113.961,62.535,62.535)
institution Open Polar
collection Victoria University of Wellington: ResearchArchive
op_collection_id ftvuwellington
language English
topic Architecture
Narrative
Propaganda
spellingShingle Architecture
Narrative
Propaganda
Vasilevskyte, Eiva
MIRNY. The Prison of Time
topic_facet Architecture
Narrative
Propaganda
description Speculative architecture is sometimes used by speculative architects to enhance our awareness of dystopian elements that thread their way through societies, even when a society is striving for utopian ideals. This contradiction exists because a dystopia to one person may be viewed as a utopia to another – and dystopian conditions can sometimes become so commonplace that they are no longer viewed as out of the ordinary. The site for this design research investigation is Mirny, Yakutia, Siberia, located 450 kilometres south of the Arctic Circle – a city of almost one million people with no access by road, set in permafrost year-round. The city developed around the open pit Mirny diamond mine that once brought wealth to the community; but while the diamonds are now mostly gone, the mine remains – one of the largest, toxic open holes in the world. With the depletion of diamonds, the city became largely forgotten, but the population remained. Yakutia is defined by the enormous pit and its decades-old, never-changing, Soviet-era architecture – lost in time. The utopian ideal from which the city was born is now shrouded in dystopian conditions. But the people, those born in the city who have lived there all their lives, have known nothing else; they remain unaware of the utopian/dystopian contradiction. This thesis looks at how transformations within our evolving built environments can result in contradiction. It challenges speculative architecture to enhance our ability to recognise such contradictions, distinguishing between utopian and dystopian urban conditions when they simultaneously define a city.
author2 Brown, Daniel
format Master Thesis
author Vasilevskyte, Eiva
author_facet Vasilevskyte, Eiva
author_sort Vasilevskyte, Eiva
title MIRNY. The Prison of Time
title_short MIRNY. The Prison of Time
title_full MIRNY. The Prison of Time
title_fullStr MIRNY. The Prison of Time
title_full_unstemmed MIRNY. The Prison of Time
title_sort mirny. the prison of time
publisher Victoria University of Wellington
publishDate 2020
url http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/8820
long_lat ENVELOPE(113.961,113.961,62.535,62.535)
geographic Arctic
Mirny
geographic_facet Arctic
Mirny
genre Arctic
permafrost
Yakutia
Siberia
genre_facet Arctic
permafrost
Yakutia
Siberia
op_relation http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/handle/10063/8820
op_rights Author Retains Copyright
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