Architecture as Political Memory and Agency
Explores architecture’s role in political identity, urban symbolism, and historic reckoning.
Cornell University
Race and Modern Architecture
Esra Akcan
University of the Arts London
Architecture Depends
UNSW Sydney
Walter Benjamin’s topology of envelopes and perspectives
University of Technology Sydney
The political construction of Medellín’s global image
Christina Deluchi
Birkbeck University of London
The Ground Zero Mosque that Wasn’t One: Media and Architecture in America
Overview
This theme explores how architecture operates as a living archive of political identity, cultural symbolism, and historical confrontation. Buildings are never neutral — they carry ideologies, reinforce narratives, and shape how societies remember, forget, and imagine. Architecture is not just about space, but about power: who it includes, who it erases, and what stories it tells or silences.
Why It Matters
- Urban Form as Ideology: Cities and buildings encode political intentions — whether nationalistic, colonial, resistant, or restorative.
- Memory & Erasure: Architecture helps societies process — or obscure — histories of violence, migration, race, and faith.
- Representation & Identity: The built environment shapes who belongs, who is seen, and how communities are perceived in the public imagination.
- Media & Spectacle: Architecture is increasingly consumed not just in person, but through media and narrative conflict.
Core Concepts
Racialized Modernism
- Analyzes how race is structurally embedded in the language and practice of modern architecture.
- Advocates for a more inclusive historical and spatial narrative in architectural theory.
Contingency in Design
- Argues that architecture 'depends' — on politics, culture, materials, labor — and cannot be viewed as autonomous or self-contained.
- Emphasizes relational thinking in design.
Philosophy of Urban Surfaces
- Applies Walter Benjamin's ideas to spatial envelopes and perspectives, showing how urban form shapes political perception.
- Buildings as layers of visual and ideological meaning.
Urban Image as Political Tool
- Dissects Medellín's transformation into a global case study of urban renewal and how architecture was central to this rebranding.
- Questions the authenticity and politics of spatial image-making.
Architecture, Fear, and the Media
- Examines the public controversy around the so-called 'Ground Zero Mosque' and how architecture became a flashpoint for cultural and religious anxieties in post-9/11 America.
- Shows how buildings can become battlegrounds in political media narratives.
Key Questions
Historical Reckoning
- How do cities physically reflect histories of racism, exclusion, or imperialism?
- Can architecture serve as a tool for reparative justice?
Political Representation
- Who is represented in the design and naming of public space?
- How does architectural form influence national identity or cultural conflict?
Media Perception
- How do buildings become political symbols through media portrayal?
- What happens when architecture becomes spectacle?
Agency In Practice
- Can architects intervene meaningfully in systems of inequality?
- What ethical responsibilities do designers have when shaping contested spaces?
Suggested Use
For Architects Urbanists
A framework for integrating ethics, memory, and political awareness into design.
For Historians Cultural Theorists
A tool for analyzing space as a form of political discourse.
For Policy Makers Educators
A guide for examining how built environments impact inclusion, heritage, and justice.