Colleen Chiu-Shee / Reinventing the Collective for Ethical Design

Rein­vent­ing the Col­lec­tive for Eth­i­cal Design

The Theoretical Confluences of Fumihiko Maki’s “Collective Form” and Thom Mayne’s “Combinatory Urbanism”

Colleen Chiu-Shee

The 1950s and 1960s were a tran­si­tion­al era when the archi­tec­ture field saw the ide­o­log­i­cal shift from prin­ci­ples of High Mod­ernism to human-ori­ent­ed con­cerns. The shift gained momen­tum in con­comi­tance with the rise of urban design as a new aca­d­e­m­ic dis­ci­pline. This era also encom­passed the for­ma­tive years of Fumi­hiko Maki, a glob­al­ly renowned Japan­ese archi­tect and the 1993 Pritzk­er Prize win­ner, who went to the Unit­ed States to study archi­tec­ture after wit­ness­ing the post-World War II trans­for­ma­tions in Japan. Maki reflect­ed on his life expe­ri­ences and world trav­els dur­ing his for­ma­tive years and con­sol­i­dat­ed his thoughts in the book Inves­ti­ga­tions in Col­lec­tive Form (1964). Maki’s notion of Col­lec­tive Form is not only a man­i­fes­ta­tion of his cross-cul­tur­al edu­ca­tion and prac­tice in archi­tec­ture and urban design, it also includes design philoso­phies that have last­ing impact in the fields that con­cern the built envi­ron­ment. Maki’s the­o­ries were influ­en­tial on Thom Mayne, anoth­er glob­al­ly renowned archi­tect based in the Unit­ed States and the 2005 Pritzk­er Prize win­ner. Mayne also devel­oped his archi­tec­tur­al edu­ca­tion and prac­tice dur­ing a tran­si­tion­al era with chang­ing ide­olo­gies in archi­tec­ture and pol­i­tics. Mayne expands on Maki’s notion of Col­lec­tive Form and illus­trates his design philoso­phies in the book Com­bi­na­to­ry Urban­ism: A Realign­ment of Com­plex Behav­ior and Col­lec­tive Form (2011).

Maki and Mayne express par­al­lel under­stand­ings of the built envi­ron­ment and under­ly­ing human sys­tems that tran­scend dis­ci­pli­nary, cul­tur­al, geo­graph­ic, and time lim­i­ta­tions. Their dis­cours­es about the col­lec­tive” involve con­flu­ences in mul­ti­ple dimen­sions: the con­flu­ence of design-relat­ed fields with increas­ing elu­sive bound­aries of aca­d­e­m­ic dis­ci­plines, the con­flu­ence of East­ern and West­ern ide­olo­gies, and the con­flu­ence of tra­di­tion­al and mod­ern con­cerns and design meth­ods. This essay con­tex­tu­al­izes Maki’s and Mayne’s design philoso­phies in their for­ma­tive years and dis­cuss­es impor­tant ideas at the con­flu­ences of their the­o­ries. These ideas point to an ambigu­ous, yet adap­tive qual­i­ty essen­tial in their ide­olo­gies. Revis­it­ing their notions of the col­lec­tive” unearths their shared sociopo­lit­i­cal val­ues, cen­tered on adapt­abil­i­ty, sus­tain­abil­i­ty and equi­ty in solu­tions to com­plex soci­etal prob­lems. Design prin­ci­ples and prac­tices aim­ing at col­lec­tive good empha­size the poten­tial for design to engen­der social-polit­i­cal changes, evoke the rethink­ing of archi­tec­tur­al prac­tice and edu­ca­tion, and pro­vide endur­ing lessons about design ethics for today’s diver­si­fy­ing fields of envi­ron­men­tal design.

Maki’s Unique Experience during His Formative Years

Maki is one of the few Japan­ese archi­tects of his gen­er­a­tion to receive deep influ­ences from inter­na­tion­al cul­tures. From 1952 to 1965, Maki stud­ied, taught and prac­ticed archi­tec­ture in Amer­i­ca and trav­eled around the world, before return­ing to Japan and start­ing his own prac­tice. Maki regards this peri­od as his for­ma­tive years” and con­sid­ers liv­ing in Amer­i­ca as his jour­ney to the west.” Trained main­ly as a mod­ern archi­tect, Maki also stud­ied urban design at Har­vard Uni­ver­si­ty and taught at Wash­ing­ton Uni­ver­si­ty in St. Louis (WUSTL) dur­ing the ear­ly 1960s. The fusion of East-West and local-glob­al influ­ences under­girds his for­ward-look­ing ide­olo­gies. His archi­tec­ture inte­grates local cul­tures and tra­di­tions with con­tem­po­rary mate­ri­als and technologies.

Maki’s aca­d­e­m­ic mentors—Kenzō Tange and Josep Lluís Sert—strongly influ­enced his views on archi­tec­ture and the city. At Tange Lab in the Uni­ver­si­ty of Tokyo, Maki learned about Wal­ter Gropius’s work at Har­vard Grad­u­ate School of Design (GSD) through read­ing L’Architecture d’Aujourd’hui and adopt­ed a very ratio­nal approach to prob­lem solv­ing and form-mak­ing. In the ear­ly 1950s, Tokyo was still recov­er­ing from the dev­as­ta­tion of WWII while Amer­i­ca was ris­ing as one of the epi­cen­ters for archi­tec­ture. In par­tic­u­lar, Har­vard and MIT had become the birth­place of inno­va­tion through the fusion of var­i­ous ideas trans­plant­ed from else­where, espe­cial­ly Europe. Lat­er, when Maki attend­ed the GSD, the school was shift­ing from the Bauhaus ethos under Gropius’s dean­ship to an empha­sis on urban­ism advo­cat­ed by Sert. Maki’s stud­ies at these two insti­tu­tions are fun­da­men­tal to his for­ma­tion, dur­ing which he devel­oped grow­ing inter­ests in the issue of iden­ti­ty in a mass soci­ety and the search for ways in which cities might accom­mo­date dis­tinc­tive places.”1 The post­war social-cul­tur­al con­di­tions inspired his explo­rations of the rela­tion­ship between archi­tec­ture and the city and between parts and the whole in urban complexes. 

Maki grounds his con­cerns about archi­tec­ture and the city in human­is­tic philoso­phies, yet his approach to address­ing socio-cul­tur­al prob­lems hinges on for­mal explo­rations. This approach res­onates with the ethos of the first Amer­i­can school that Maki attended—the Cran­brook Acad­e­my of Art. Eliel Saari­nen, who insists that search­ing for form is a fun­da­men­tal approach to art­ful cre­ations, designed the Cran­brook cam­pus and large­ly shaped its ethos. Maki was impressed by the cam­pus and read about Saarinen’s notion. Saari­nen might have indi­rect­ly stim­u­lat­ed Maki’s curios­i­ty in under­stand­ing and invent­ing the form of urban com­plex­es. After decades of prac­tice, Maki high­lights his per­sist­ing inter­est in cre­at­ing a human­is­tic envi­ron­ment through shap­ing spa­tial expe­ri­ences of the users. This inter­est is cen­tral to his design phi­los­o­phy of mod­ern archi­tec­ture and con­tem­po­rary cities, which is reflect­ed in his notion of Col­lec­tive Form.

Maki’s life­long inter­est lies in the con­flu­ence of place-mak­ing and build­ing-mak­ing. On one hand, Maki was strong­ly inter­est­ed in inves­ti­gat­ing the qual­i­ties of the built envi­ron­ment and the inter­twined link­ages between archi­tec­ture, groups of build­ings and the city at inter­re­lat­ed scales. On the oth­er, he was enthu­si­as­tic about explor­ing new tech­nolo­gies, mate­ri­als and mor­pholo­gies to shape high-qual­i­ty archi­tec­ture that per­forms not only aes­thet­i­cal­ly but also socio-psy­cho­log­i­cal­ly. In this way, his prac­tice is both ret­ro­spec­tive and for­ward-look­ing and allows con­sid­er­a­tions at build­ing and urban scales to inform each oth­er. Maki grounds his con­cerns in a fun­da­men­tal curios­i­ty about how archi­tec­ture can shape socio­cul­tur­al char­ac­ter­is­tics of the broad­er human soci­ety and express­es his visions through invent­ing build­ings as a for­mal expres­sion and spa­tial inter­ven­tion. Maki believes that his urban­is­tic approach great­ly con­tributes to more diverse, holis­tic con­sid­er­a­tions about the col­lec­tive than a clas­sic mod­ernistic design.

The Post-War Innovative Modernists

World War II destroyed many cities and trig­gered a series of rapid, far-reach­ing social impacts. A gen­er­a­tion of inno­v­a­tive, young mod­ernists emerged after the war, who sought to rebuild and mod­ern­ize their cities after wit­ness­ing the destruc­tion. Maki is one of the pro­gres­sive archi­tects who were great­ly influ­enced by the Mod­ern Move­ment and its post-war trans­for­ma­tions. Maki was born in the Yaman­ote dis­trict of Tokyo in 1928. In the 1930s, the Bauhaus move­ment entered Japan and mod­ernistic build­ings rep­re­sent­ed excel­lence in design.2 By the 1950s, archi­tects who chal­lenged the valid­i­ty of mod­ernism, espe­cial­ly mod­ernist approach­es to design­ing cities, have begun their explo­rations of new lan­guages and inno­v­a­tive methods.

After WWII, there was an ongo­ing trend towards an urban focus in archi­tec­tur­al dis­cours­es. The 1950s saw an increas­ing dis­sat­is­fac­tion towards com­po­si­tion­al design approach­es that empha­sized rigid align­ment of func­tion­al zones. Archi­tects, espe­cial­ly the younger gen­er­a­tion of mod­ernists, prob­lema­tized the sim­plic­i­ty of geo­met­ric ratio­nal­i­ty and shift­ed their atten­tion to region­al, con­tex­tu­al, and anthro­po­log­i­cal con­cerns. From then on, numer­ous urban­is­tic explo­rations emerged inter­na­tion­al­ly to expand the design philoso­phies and method­olo­gies for design­ing archi­tec­ture and urban complexes.

Ville radieuse (The Radiant City), 1930, Charles-Édouard Jeanneret (Le Corbusier)
1

Ville radieuse (The Radiant City), 1930, Charles-Édouard Jeanneret (Le Corbusier)

The Monumental Axis in Brasília
2

The Monumental Axis in Brasília

From CIAM to Team 10 

Inspired by dra­mat­ic tech­no­log­i­cal and social changes, the archi­tec­ture field under­went ide­o­log­i­cal trans­for­ma­tions dur­ing the ear­ly twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry. In 1928, a group of avant-garde archi­tects found­ed the Inter­na­tion­al Con­gress­es of Mod­ern Archi­tec­ture (CIAM), led by Le Cor­busier and Giedion until the 1940s. CIAM mem­bers were strong­ly influ­enced by Le Corbusier’s designs and the­o­ries, seek­ing com­pre­hen­sive, urban­is­tic approach­es to human envi­ron­ment. They grad­u­al­ly direct­ed town plan­ning efforts to a rigid align­ment of func­tion­al zones, sep­a­rat­ing dwelling, work, recre­ation, and cir­cu­la­tion. This move­ment gained momen­tum after the fourth CIAM meet­ing on the Func­tion­al City” in 1933 when Le Corbusier’s Ville Radieuse (Radi­ant City, 1935 [ 1 ]) rose to be an inter­na­tion­al par­a­digm, doc­u­ment­ed in The Athens Char­ter.3 After WWII, the Athens Char­ter grad­u­al­ly became an influ­en­tial guide­line for city design inter­na­tion­al­ly. In Amer­i­can archi­tec­ture schools, archi­tects adopt­ed CIAM’s mechan­i­cal prin­ci­ples that empha­sized func­tion­al zon­ing and two-dimen­sion­al lay­out in stu­dio teach­ing, includ­ing Wal­ter Gropius’s and Mar­cel Breuer’s stu­dios at the GSD and Lud­wig Hilberseimer’s stu­dios at Illi­nois Insti­tute of Tech­nol­o­gy.4 One man­i­fes­ta­tion of the Func­tion­al City is the Plan for Brasília designed by Lucio Cos­ta and Oscar Niemey­er in 1956. [ 2 ] The plan exem­pli­fied a method of impos­ing order, progress and sta­bil­i­ty on Brazil’s new cap­i­tal, aim­ing to estab­lish a city based upon equal­i­ty and justice.

Dur­ing the 1950s, dis­sat­is­fac­tion with CIAM’s design prin­ci­ples increased. At the 1949 CIAM con­gress, Bruno Zevi crit­i­cized the dom­i­nant ratio­nal­ist atti­tudes, led by Le Cor­busier, Gropius, and Giedion, for exclud­ing alter­na­tive views on mod­ern design. At the same meet­ing, Sert ini­ti­at­ed dis­cus­sions about the heart of the city. Young CIAM mem­bers became increas­ing­ly con­cerned about neigh­bor­hood,” clus­ter” and asso­ci­a­tion” and demand­ed a more organ­ic, region­al and con­tex­tu­al approach to imag­in­ing the city. At the 1953 CIAM con­gress, Ali­son and Peter Smith­son advo­cat­ed that a hier­ar­chy of human asso­ci­a­tions” (house, street, dis­trict, city) should replace prin­ci­ples of func­tion­al sep­a­ra­tion.5 The Smith­son cou­ple and Aldo van Eyck offi­cial­ly formed Team 10 in 1954 and chal­lenged CIAM’s mod­ernist approach at the 1956 con­gress. The rise of Team 10 ulti­mate­ly led to the reor­ga­ni­za­tion of CIAM in 1959. Team 10 mem­bers aimed at a new begin­ning” depart­ing from what they had inher­it­ed from mod­ernism and began search­ing for new design approach­es for the society’s real­iza­tion-of-itself” through var­i­ous explo­rations on urban the­o­ries and new for­mal lan­guages, which were illus­trat­ed in Team 10 Primer (1962). They empha­sized the impor­tance of human scales, anthro­po­log­i­cal asso­ci­a­tions, and the social com­plex­i­ty of a com­mu­ni­ty. Many mem­bers vis­it­ed, and taught in, Amer­i­can schools, such as WUSTL, Uni­ver­si­ty of Penn­syl­va­nia, Colum­bia Uni­ver­si­ty and Har­vard, trans­form­ing archi­tec­tur­al edu­ca­tion. Maki became col­leagues with Jacob Bake­ma (1959−61) and Aldo van Eyck (1961−62) at WUSTL, devel­oped friend­ship with Team 10 mem­bers and par­tic­i­pat­ed in Team 10’s meet­ing in 1960. Maki’s view toward mod­ern archi­tec­ture large­ly par­al­leled the group’s aspi­ra­tions, sug­gest­ing influ­ences from the post-CIAM human­is­tic turn.

Tange and Metabolism

Maki’s world­view always had a strong tie to his inher­ent Japan­ese back­ground. Dur­ing his for­ma­tive years he main­tained close con­tacts with Ken­zō Tange and the Metabolists. 

In Maki’s impres­sion, Tange was eager to exper­i­ment with new ideas. Tange’s lab fea­tured a dis­tinc­tive inter­na­tion­al approach to design and pre­sent­ed dual characters—an atmos­phere for both art cre­ation and sci­en­tif­ic research. The atmos­phere at Tange’s lab inspired Maki to favor a dynam­ic process of col­lec­tive deci­sion-mak­ing. Maki recalls:

The issue is always how to proceed from a blank sheet of paper to realization – that is, how to direct and influence group behavior in a concentrated and unique way toward a certain objective. I hold as my ideal an organizational structure in which the group, while centered around one person and one theme, is in a state of flux, pushed this way and that way by internal contradictions and conflicts of imagination. Decisions are gradually made on the basis of objective reasoning, as is necessary for the creation of something as concrete as architecture.6

Dur­ing the 1950s, Japan under­went rapid post­war con­struc­tion. A group of young Japan­ese archi­tects, cen­tered on Jun­zō Sakaku­ra and Ken­zō Tange, began to explore new lan­guages, con­cepts and approach­es for build­ing cities. The group, formed in 1958, named them­selves shinch­in­taisha, name­ly, metab­o­lism. In a bio­log­i­cal sense, metab­o­lism is the essen­tial exchange of mate­ri­als and ener­gy between organ­isms and the exte­ri­or world. It also means to replace the old with the new. The group adopt­ed the word to express their ambi­tions to active­ly, meta­bol­i­cal­ly devel­op a city through con­tin­u­ous growth and renew­al.7 They sought to solve urban prob­lems caused by Japan’s explo­sive growth on scarce land through build­ing arti­fi­cial ground” in the absence of tab­u­la rasa.” In 1960, the group ini­ti­at­ed the World Design Con­fer­ence (WoDe­Co) in Tokyo, aim­ing to intro­duce their for­ward-look­ing, urban approach­es to politi­cians, busi­ness­men, jour­nal­ists and aca­d­e­mics both with­in and beyond Japan. As a men­tor to the Metabolists, Tange empha­sized his inter­ests in the future city at the WoDe­Co and pre­sent­ed his Plan for Tokyo, which fea­tured utopi­an megas­truc­tures and influ­enced many metabolists’ approach­es to urban design. He lec­tured about Tech­nol­o­gy and Man,” argu­ing that we would con­sid­er our cities in the same way as life, as organ­ic beings com­posed of change­able ele­ments, as the cell, con­tin­u­al­ly renew­ing its metab­o­lism and still retain­ing as a whole a sta­ble form.”8

In 1958, when Maki returned to Japan tem­porar­i­ly as a fel­low of the Gra­ham Foun­da­tion, he met the Metabolists and assist­ed the WoDe­Co orga­niz­ers. He pro­posed the Shin­juku Plan togeth­er with Masato Ōta­ka, who pre­sent­ed their ideas of Group Form at the WoDe­Co. In the pre­sen­ta­tion titled Coop­er­a­tion of Design­ers,” Ōta­ka stated: 

… The city is composed of countless persons, countless individuals; ...wealth becomes more and more concentrated, developed, and transformed. With regard to this dynamic modern city I would like to propose a method of Group Form… dividing the city space into two sections: the machine-like sections and the human sections; and also of dividing it into two spaces: the space for speed and the space for people to walk.

After the WoDe­Co, Maki dis­tanced him­self from oth­er Metabolists, favor­ing organ­ic urban growth and link­age” over mas­ter plan­ning” and being con­cerned about the world rather than just Japan.9

The Decline of the American City and the Rise of Urban Design

Maki’s mem­oirs often speak about the influ­ences from his involve­ment in Team 10 and Metab­o­lism, both of which inspired him to search for inno­v­a­tive design prin­ci­ples in the 1950s. The Metabolists in Japan put faith in tech­nol­o­gy and pro­posed gigan­tic utopi­an archi­tec­tur­al struc­tures. Team 10 mem­bers invit­ed Maki to attend their Bag­nols-sur-Ceze con­fer­ence in south­ern France in 1960. They expressed con­cerns about how to effec­tive­ly house large num­bers of pop­u­la­tion, yet reject­ed Metabolists’ ideas of megas­truc­tures due to con­sid­er­a­tions of human­i­ty and region­al­ism. The expo­sure to reflec­tive, for­ward-look­ing debates at the encounter of the Metabolists and Team 10 mem­bers great­ly shaped Maki’s design think­ing at the inter­sec­tions of tech­nol­o­gy and human­i­ty, of archi­tec­ture and the city, of reflec­tions on his­to­ry and visions of the future, and of East­ern and West­ern ideologies.

Wendell O. Pruitt Homes and William Igoe Apartments aka Pruitt-Igoe Housing, 1954, St. Louis, Missouri
3

Wendell O. Pruitt Homes and William Igoe Apartments aka Pruitt-Igoe Housing, 1954, St. Louis, Missouri

Pruitt–Igoe Housing
4

Pruitt–Igoe Housing

Nev­er­the­less, Maki has devel­oped his own approach­es to design amid the then ongo­ing world­wide trans­for­ma­tions of mod­ern archi­tec­ture. His inspi­ra­tions also includ­ed some pre­cur­sors’ ideas cen­tered on form and derived from the chang­ing con­di­tions in post­war Amer­i­can cities. Dur­ing the 1940s, Amer­i­can cities were fraught with urban ill­ness­es such as indus­tri­al decline, auto-depen­den­cy, urban sprawl and racial-eco­nom­ic divi­sions. The white flight had left aging urban cen­ters con­gest­ed with non­white pop­u­la­tions pre­vent­ed from mov­ing to sub­urbs.10 Sup­port­ed by Pres­i­dent Tru­man, the Con­gress passed the 1949 Hous­ing Act which made fed­er­al funds avail­able for cities to clear large areas in city cen­ters and build mas­sive pub­lic hous­ing. Rede­vel­op­ments in the fol­low­ing years typ­i­cal­ly pre­sent­ed a CIAM approach or a Cor­bu­sian appear­ance, with mul­ti­ple high-rise tow­ers orga­nized repet­i­tive­ly in rows, occu­py­ing giant super blocks merged from many exist­ing city parcels. The Pruitt–Igoe Hous­ing, designed by Minoru Yamasa­ki in 1950, best exem­pli­fied the mod­ernist urban renew­al projects. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The chal­lenges of main­te­nance, crime and social con­flict in the com­plex drew increas­ing crit­i­cism. Archi­tec­tur­al design was blamed as a major cause. Despite the fail­ures of such ear­ly urban renew­al efforts, it was dur­ing the years of Pruitt–Igoe’s rise that Sert had become the dis­tin­guished pre­cur­sor who great­ly pro­mot­ed urban design at the GSD. Since the ear­ly 1950s, Sert led dis­cus­sions and design stu­dios on the future of the city cen­ters as opposed to con­tin­ued sub­ur­ban sprawl. Short­ly after com­plet­ing his study at the GSD, Maki went to WUSTL in 1956 and co-taught archi­tec­ture stu­dios with Roger Mont­gomery, exper­i­ment­ing with designs for urban renew­al. Sert’s, Maki’s and Montgomery’s opti­mism towards revi­tal­iz­ing Amer­i­can cities led to the two ear­li­est Urban Design degrees in Amer­i­can schools: Sert found­ed the Mas­ter of Urban Design degree at Har­vard GSD in 1960; Maki and Mont­gomery estab­lished the Mas­ter of Archi­tec­ture and Urban Design pro­gram at WUSTL School of Archi­tec­ture in 1961. The ini­tial focus­es in these stu­dios were to explore city design and test solu­tions for real­is­tic urban renew­al projects.

Maki’s intense expo­sure to West­ern influ­ence large­ly con­tributed to what dis­tin­guish­es Maki from his Japan­ese archi­tect peers. Under Sert’s dean­ship at the GSD, Maki wit­nessed the ascent of urban design in the archi­tec­tur­al aca­d­e­m­ic world. He was influ­enced by dis­cours­es from pre­cur­sors who rethought urban form and order in Amer­i­can cities. For exam­ple, in 1943, Eliel Saari­nen pro­posed his vision of organ­ic order” and organ­ic decen­tral­iza­tion” as the sur­gi­cal repair of dete­ri­o­rat­ed or blight­ed areas of fail­ing cities.” He empha­sized that the fun­da­men­tal rea­son for suc­cess or fail­ure in all town-build­ing depends on whether or not town for­ma­tion is based on the archi­tec­tur­al prin­ci­ple of organ­ic order.”11 Maki’s notion of Group Form shares Saarinen’s empha­sis on organ­ic order. Györ­gy Kepes wrote in Lan­guage of Vision (1944) that the vision is a device of ori­en­ta­tion” and a means to mea­sure and orga­nize spa­tial events” in both phys­i­cal and human spheres and that the vision must evolve into a lan­guage of space that can enable humans’ sen­si­bil­i­ty to per­ceive space-time rela­tion­ships. Maki’s premise for inves­ti­gat­ing Col­lec­tive Form res­onates with Kepes’s advo­ca­cy for renewed visu­al rep­re­sen­ta­tion of dynam­ic orga­ni­za­tions in con­tem­po­rary cities. Maki encoun­tered Kepes at the first Har­vard Urban Design Con­fer­ence (HUDC), when Kepes pre­sent­ed his research on the Per­cep­tu­al Form of the City,” con­duct­ed with Kevin Lynch at MIT and lat­er pub­lished as Lynch’s The Image of the City. The focus of the study was on human’s per­cep­tions of their rela­tion­ships to the phys­i­cal world. At the sec­ond HUDC, Kepes and Lynch togeth­er sug­gest­ed that a good urban envi­ron­ment should be coher­ent, con­nect­ed and growth-facil­i­tat­ing.12 This idea is a crit­i­cal ref­er­ence for Maki’s notion of Col­lec­tive Form. In 1960, Louis I. Kahn lec­tured about Order and Form” at the WoDe­Co to the Metabolists includ­ing Maki. Kahn sug­gest­ed that design is form-mak­ing in order” which could emerge out of growth and sup­port diver­si­ty and inte­gra­tion.13 Kahn’s phi­los­o­phy con­nects phys­i­cal form with social order and favors organ­ic growth and social inclu­siv­i­ty. Maki’s writ­ings cite Kahn’s work, echo­ing his beliefs. 

Review­ing Maki’s for­ma­tive years, his aca­d­e­m­ic expe­ri­ence, inter­na­tion­al trav­els and his inter­ac­tions with his inter­na­tion­al peer archi­tects have played fun­da­men­tal roles in shap­ing his dis­tinc­tive char­ac­ter­is­tics as an archi­tect. Maki devel­oped unique design think­ing dur­ing a cru­cial, tran­si­tion­ing peri­od in mod­ern archi­tec­ture. His writ­ings on Col­lec­tive Form cap­ture major debates dur­ing the ide­o­log­i­cal shift in the mid-twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry. His the­o­ries exem­pli­fy the post-CIAM ide­o­log­i­cal break­throughs in archi­tec­tur­al think­ing toward human­ism and urbanism.

Investigations in Collective Form (1964)

Maki’s book Inves­ti­ga­tions in Col­lec­tive Form (1964) con­sol­i­dates his philoso­phies of archi­tec­ture and urban design as an emerg­ing prac­ti­tion­er and edu­ca­tor. One of the most mem­o­rable peri­ods in Maki’s life was from 1958 to 1960, when he trav­eled on the Gra­ham Fel­low­ship and retraced philoso­pher Tet­surō Watsuji’s foot­prints record­ed in his book Fudō (1928). Trav­el­ing from Japan to Europe, Wat­su­ji observed the mon­soon region in Asia, the deserts in the Mid­dle East and the mead­ow­lands in Europe, com­par­ing the three regions’ civ­i­liza­tions.14 Maki stud­ied the for­ma­tion of ver­nac­u­lar set­tle­ments in var­i­ous cli­mates and cul­tures in South­east Asia, India, the Mid­dle East and Europe. He also vis­it­ed new mod­ern cities, such as Chandi­garh (Maki met Le Cor­busier at Chandi­garh). The forms and orga­ni­za­tions of tra­di­tion­al set­tle­ments inspired Maki to pro­pose the con­cept of Group Form. When Maki fin­ished his trip in 1960, he returned to WUSTL and wrote an essay on three par­a­digms of Col­lec­tive Form based on his trav­el notes, which was even­tu­al­ly devel­oped into the book Inves­ti­ga­tions in Col­lec­tive Form, pub­lished by WUSTL in 1964 and reis­sued in 2004. 

Compositional Form, Megaform and Group Form. Redrawn by author based on the original diagram in Fumihiko Maki’s Investigations in Collective Form, 1964.
5

Compositional Form, Megaform and Group Form. Redrawn by author based on the original diagram in Fumihiko Maki’s Investigations in Collective Form, 1964.

In the book, Maki reflects on diverse East­ern and West­ern ideas and par­a­digms of archi­tec­ture and urban design, con­tem­plates the desired qual­i­ties of con­tem­po­rary cities and illus­trates how to oper­a­tional­ize cor­re­spond­ing design prin­ci­ples. The book con­sists of two chap­ters: the first, writ­ten by Maki and Ōta­ka, elab­o­rates on the for­mal char­ac­ter­is­tics and spa­tial ratio­nales in three typolo­gies of Col­lec­tive Form—Compositional Form, Megaform and Group Form [ 5 ]; the sec­ond, writ­ten by Maki and Jer­ry Gold­berg, inves­ti­gates link­ages among com­po­nents of Col­lec­tive Form. Com­po­si­tion­al Form refers to the pre­dom­i­nant Cor­bu­sian design in ear­ly CIAM projects. Megaform includes Metabolists’ schemes fea­tur­ing super­struc­tures”. Maki cri­tiques the for­mal rigid­i­ty and spa­tial lim­i­ta­tion of these two par­a­digms and advo­cates Group Form. He sug­gests that ver­nac­u­lar set­tle­ments have evolved incre­men­tal­ly and organ­i­cal­ly at a human scale, respond­ing to local set­tings. Maki argues that these three mod­els cap­ture basic rela­tion­ships between indi­vid­ual ele­ments and the whole in an urban com­plex; they are not mutu­al­ly exclu­sive and can coex­ist in one con­fig­u­ra­tion. Maki’s notion of Col­lec­tive Form was well-received in the field, praised by renowned archi­tects such as Wal­ter Gropius, Kevin Lynch, Aldo van Eyck, and Jacob Bake­ma. Maki’s philoso­phies under­ly­ing the advo­ca­cy of Group Form par­al­lel the con­cerns about con­texts, urban­ism and human­ism expressed by Team 10 and Lynch. 

Maki posits at the begin­ning of his book that urban soci­eties are a dynam­ic field of inter­re­lat­ed forces” in a state of dynam­ic equi­lib­ri­um,” whose char­ac­ter changes over time. This under­stand­ing of the dynam­ic nature of cities fun­da­men­tal­ly dif­fers from the mod­ernist view which views urban dynam­ics as dis­or­der and back­ward­ness. Maki regards urban design­ers as the most con­cerned observers of a soci­ety and its phys­i­cal, tech­no­log­i­cal and social changes. Poised to tack­le and influ­ence urban dynam­ics, Maki points to the then inad­e­qua­cy of spa­tial lan­guages for cre­at­ing coher­ent urban spaces amid socio-tech­no­log­i­cal dynamism. He ini­ti­ates the search for adapt­able forms of the collective—especially a col­lec­tion of buildings—as impor­tant seg­ments of the city.

Maki empha­sizes the dis­tinc­tion between form and design. Refer­ring to Kahn’s pre­sen­ta­tion at the WoDe­Co on Form and Design,” Maki con­sid­ers form as an out­come of the built envi­ron­ment that is observ­able and belongs to the view­er, where­as he views design as design­ers’ infer­ence about form based on site con­di­tion, bud­get lim­i­ta­tion and client’s ideas. Form is shaped by col­lec­tive acts and belongs to the soci­ety, where­as design is an indi­vid­ual activ­i­ty and is per­son­al to design­ers. Form appears and changes accord­ing to the coor­di­na­tion of plur­al designs. Based on his under­stand­ings of form and design, Maki ana­lyzes the design ratio­nales under­ly­ing the three con­cep­tu­al typolo­gies of Col­lec­tive Form.

Plan for Tokyo Bay, 1960, Kenzō Tange
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Plan for Tokyo Bay, 1960, Kenzō Tange

Plan for Tokyo Bay
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Plan for Tokyo Bay

Japanese Metabolism: The Nakagin Capsule Tower, 1972, Tokyo, Japan, Kisho Kurokawa
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Japanese Metabolism: The Nakagin Capsule Tower, 1972, Tokyo, Japan, Kisho Kurokawa

Three Types of Collective Form

Maki con­sid­ers Com­po­si­tion­al Form as the then most accept­ed out­come of mod­ern design in the 1950s. The ele­ments of Com­po­si­tion­al Form are indi­vid­ual build­ings con­ceived sep­a­rate­ly based on con­sid­er­a­tions of func­tion­al­i­ty, visu­al­i­ty and spa­tial rela­tion­ships on a two-dimen­sion­al plane. Design­ers pri­or­i­tize geo­met­ric, pro­por­tion­al ratio­nal­i­ty in their designs. Maki views the mak­ing of Com­po­si­tion­al Form as a nat­ur­al exten­sion of con­ven­tion­al archi­tec­ture. The mas­ter­plans of Brasília and Chandi­garh, com­ply­ing with prin­ci­ples in CIAM’s Athens Char­ter, exem­pli­fy Com­po­si­tion­al Form. In these new­ly planned cap­i­tal cities, each build­ing stands freely as a sculp­ture inde­pen­dent from oth­er build­ings and the field, pre­sent­ing an icon­ic, mon­u­men­tal image. Maki acknowl­edges the mer­it of this approach, espe­cial­ly in par­tic­u­lar his­tor­i­cal con­texts, yet sug­gests that designs fol­low­ing com­po­si­tion­al prin­ci­ples tend to neglect the space between soli­tary, autonomous build­ings and lack inter-build­ing link­ages and col­lec­tive coher­ence. The com­po­si­tion­al approach to design views urban devel­op­ment as a sta­t­ic, com­pletable process and there­fore fails in adapt­ing to urban changes. Its pre­scrip­tive, for­mal­ly deter­min­is­tic ratio­nal­i­ty is inher­ent­ly rigid and con­strains future alter­ations and evolution. 

Maki coined the term Megaform” in this book, defin­ing it as a large frame” accom­mo­dat­ing all urban func­tions, which would be real­iz­able with tech­no­log­i­cal inno­va­tion. A Megaform shares fea­tures of order and ratio­nal­i­ty with a Com­po­si­tion­al Form, yet grows with increas­ing demand. Tange’s Plan for Tokyo Bay [ 6 ] [ 7 ], his stu­dio at MIT themed A Com­mu­ni­ty for 25,000,” and the Metabolists’ schemes [ 8 ] best exem­pli­fy Megaform. These pro­pos­als con­cern the rela­tion­ship between the col­lec­tive and indi­vid­u­als. They share the aspi­ra­tion to gen­er­ate meta­bol­ic cycles of urban devel­op­ment in organ­i­cal­ly grow­ing infra­struc­tures which would accom­mo­date con­tin­u­ous growth. The Metabolists’ ide­al city con­sists of ele­ments with var­i­ous meta­bol­ic cycles. Ele­ments with long life­cy­cles include large-scale infra­struc­tures for trans­porta­tion and defense, such as high­ways, rails, har­bors, dams and enor­mous arti­fi­cial grounds” span­ning over ground-lev­el infra­struc­tures. These long-term, mas­sive infra­struc­tures serve as spines and plat­forms for the growth of small-scale ele­ments with short life­cy­cles, includ­ing res­i­den­tial, com­mer­cial, busi­ness and recre­ation­al clus­ters. The Metabolists believe that the com­bi­na­tion of megas­truc­tures and numer­ous indi­vid­ual cells would allow for con­tin­u­ous growth and simul­ta­ne­ous renewal. 

Hydra, Greece
9

Hydra, Greece

Hydra, Greece
10

Hydra, Greece


Japanese Agrarian Village—Shirakawago Village with its main axis running North-South
11

Japanese Agrarian Village—Shirakawago Village with its main axis running North-South

The con­cept of Megaform derived from the demand for mas­sive expan­sion in mod­ern cities and presents a Utopi­an nature. It con­tin­ues being imag­ined and exper­i­ment­ed with prac­tice. Reyn­er Banham’s book Megas­truc­ture: Urban Futures of the Recent Past (1976) presents hun­dreds of built and unbuilt projects fea­tur­ing Megaform. Maki views Megaform as a promis­ing approach to gen­er­at­ing mul­ti-func­tion­al urban com­plex­es incor­po­rat­ing envi­ron­men­tal engi­neer­ing and mod­ern infra­struc­tures. How­ev­er, he points out that although a megas­truc­ture enables change­able infills, it can become obso­lete itself and lead to sys­tem­at­ic fail­ures. This innate defi­cien­cy in megas­truc­tures shares the rigid­i­ty and mon­u­men­tal­i­ty of Com­po­si­tion­al Form.

Maki’s dis­tance from the oth­er Metabolists is evi­dent in the essay Towards Group Form,” co-authored with Ōta­ka and pub­lished in the Metabolists’ found­ing man­i­festo, Metab­o­lism: The Pro­pos­als for New Urban­ism (1960). Ques­tion­ing a sta­t­ic, rigid phys­i­cal struc­ture, Maki calls for a more sub­tle inter­nal order that under­lies the nat­ur­al evo­lu­tion of cities.”15 He insist­ed that a real urban order should accom­mo­date cer­tain degrees of dis­or­der and encour­age spon­tane­ity, pro­vid­ing an alter­na­tive inter­pre­ta­tion of city as process’ to the megas­truc­tur­al approach.” This ide­al form is a kind of mas­ter form which can move into ever new states of equi­lib­ri­um and yet main­tain visu­al con­sis­ten­cy and a sense of con­tain­ing order in the long run.”16 Against the inven­tion of geome­tries and the sta­t­ic nature of com­po­si­tion­al and mega form, Maki advo­cates for Group Form which is an organ­ic pat­tern derived from envi­ron­men­tal needs.

The con­cept of Group Form emerged dur­ing Maki’s two-year trav­els. Start­ing in 1958, Maki head­ed west from Japan to Chandi­garh, India; Isfa­han, Iran; Dam­as­cus, Syr­ia; Beirut, Lebanon; Cairo, Egypt; and Istan­bul, Turkey. He then vis­it­ed Greece and the rest of Europe. Maki observed numer­ous self-con­struct­ed hous­es scat­tered along the Mediter­ranean coast. He was impressed by the repet­i­tive pat­terns and the intri­cate order in these ver­nac­u­lar com­mu­ni­ties. He per­ceived qual­i­ties of dynamism, coher­ence, flex­i­bil­i­ty, inter­nal link­ages, and open-end­ed­ness in these organ­i­cal­ly grown, self-gov­erned com­mu­ni­ties. Maki began to use the term Group Form” to describe the form of tra­di­tion­al set­tle­ments, exem­pli­fied by Hydra Town in Greece [ 9 ] [ 10 ], Euro­pean medieval cities, North African vil­lages, Japan­ese vil­lages [ 11 ], and six­teenth-cen­tu­ry Dutch towns. 

Maki per­ceived an organ­ic whole in ver­nac­u­lar set­tle­ments such as Hydra. The form of the town emerged with the aggre­ga­tion and rep­e­ti­tion of its typ­i­cal hous­ing units and the streets, paths and pub­lic spaces con­nect­ing hous­ing clus­ters. The inter­nal order evolved incre­men­tal­ly over­time and was well under­stood by its res­i­dents. Each res­i­dent was a builder who would intu­itive­ly fit into the com­mu­ni­ty and car­ry on its tra­di­tions. The entire town was com­posed of gener­ic, sim­ple spa­tial ele­ments, which col­lec­tive­ly pre­sent­ed region­al cul­ture and iden­ti­ty. Maki found it fas­ci­nat­ing that these com­mu­ni­ties sur­vived for hun­dreds of years and main­tained their order and over­all image, being coher­ent both social­ly and phys­i­cal­ly. From hous­ing units, to hous­ing clus­ters and to the entire town, the over­all com­mu­ni­ty was spa­tial­ly rich and vibrant. To Maki, Hydra’s unique and intri­cate rela­tion­ships between parts and the whole were loose with­out a rigid hier­ar­chy, which essen­tial­ly brought an endur­ing qual­i­ty to the town. Even when indi­vid­ual hous­es were destroyed or replaced by sim­i­lar hous­es, the town’s over­all form would remain consistent. 

Maki’s empha­sis on the auton­o­my and influ­ence of each ele­ment (as opposed to a dom­i­nant over­all struc­ture) and his advo­ca­cy of a dynam­ic, coher­ent Group Form (as opposed to two-dimen­sion­al com­po­si­tions of soli­taries or a cen­tral­ized, pow­er­ful rela­tion­ship between parts and the whole) reflects that he val­ues col­lec­tive cul­ture, demo­c­ra­t­ic orga­ni­za­tion and incre­men­tal progress in an urban soci­ety. Group Form rep­re­sents a soci­ety with col­lec­tive orders and con­nec­tions that allow for inher­ent dynam­ics. Maki favors a dynam­ic, rec­i­p­ro­cal relationship—both in form and in operation—between indi­vid­u­als and the whole in a Group Form. Each indi­vid­ual units is a pro­to­type, which deter­mines the char­ac­ter of the ensem­ble at large. Once the link between the ele­ments and the whole is estab­lished, each unit can evolve freely and autonomous­ly while the char­ac­ter­is­tics of the whole remain con­sis­tent. Group Form grows cumu­la­tive­ly in a non-hier­ar­chi­cal process. Maki insists that in an organ­ic form such as a city, an urban order can only be main­tained if the auton­o­my of indi­vid­ual build­ings and dis­tricts is assured.”17 Group Form derives from con­cerns about local soci­eties, cul­tures, and their devel­op­ment. It rep­re­sents an urban envi­ron­ment with a flex­i­ble, demo­c­ra­t­ic order, which accom­mo­dates long-term spa­tial and social dynamisms while ensur­ing indi­vid­u­als’ autonomy.

To fur­ther dis­tin­guish Group Form from oth­er rigid typolo­gies, Maki high­lights its tem­po­ral dynam­ics. He sug­gests that Group Form can move into ever-new states of equi­lib­ri­um and yet main­tain visu­al con­sis­ten­cy and a sense of con­tin­u­ing order in the long run,” because its image derives from a dynam­ic equi­lib­ri­um of gen­er­a­tive ele­ments, not a com­po­si­tion of styl­ized and fin­ished object.”18 The over­all Group Form is an open-end­ed process with con­tin­u­ous evo­lu­tion. This notion embraces Group Form’s incom­plete, unpre­dictable and tran­sient char­ac­ter­is­tics, reflect­ing the urban con­di­tions then. Group Form is essen­tial­ly sus­tain­able, allow­ing for flex­i­ble social struc­tures that can adapt to unpre­dictable, rapid unban changes. 

Maki’s demo­c­ra­t­ic notions regard­ing human­is­tic con­cerns like­ly have derived from his expe­ri­ence in Amer­i­can acad­e­mia between 1953 and 1965. Liv­ing in Boston, St. Louis and New York, Maki wit­nessed the rise of com­mu­ni­ty move­ments against mod­ernist urban renew­al projects. Maki also read the work from influ­en­tial urban the­o­rists and edu­ca­tors, includ­ing Jane Jacobs, Kevin Lynch, and Aldo van Eyck, whose ideas res­onat­ed in crit­i­ciz­ing the mod­ernist approach towards city plan­ning from a human­is­tic, pop­ulist per­spec­tive. Maki’s empha­sis on the over­all, sus­tain­able image of Group Form par­al­lels Kepes and Lynch’s study at MIT on per­cep­tu­al form of the city (1954−1959), pub­lished as The Image of the City (1960).

Fumihiko Maki, Hillside Terrace Housing in 2010
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Fumihiko Maki, Hillside Terrace Housing in 2010

Both Maki and Team 10 mem­bers pro­posed ide­al urban form fol­low­ing their human­ist and social aspi­ra­tions. Group Form also par­al­lels the struc­tural­ist approach of adding dynam­ic indi­vid­ual ele­ments to cre­ate a clus­ter, in which indi­vid­ual ele­ments can change with­out alter­ing the over­all urban image. Aldo van Eyck (a Dutch Struc­tural­ist) iden­ti­fies archi­tec­tur­al reci­procity in part-whole, small-large and house-city rela­tion­ships and sought to cre­ate cor­re­spond­ing diver­si­ty-uni­ty and indi­vid­ual-col­lec­tive reci­procity in human soci­eties.19 To rec­on­cile the dual phe­nom­e­na, he empha­sizes the tran­si­tion­al, in-between places, res­onat­ing with Maki’s empha­sis on inter-ele­ment link­age in Group Form. They advo­cate that archi­tects should cre­ate organ­ic link­ages between indi­vid­ual ele­ments and the whole and between old and new ele­ments. Accord­ing­ly, the designs of new archi­tec­tur­al projects must respect exist­ing urban con­texts and fit into the rest of the city. Such propo­si­tions sug­gest a hum­ble, yet social­ly respon­si­ble, role of archi­tects in a soci­ety. Con­trast­ing mod­ernist design, which gen­er­ates self-inter­est­ed icons with a dom­i­nat­ing image over­writ­ing exist­ing orders in the city, approach­es exem­pli­fied by Maki and Team 10 are demo­c­ra­t­ic and plu­ral­is­tic. Archi­tects become medi­a­tors among indi­vid­u­als, among indi­vid­u­als, col­lec­tives and the soci­ety, and among the past, the present and the future.

Maki has great­ly enriched his notion of Col­lec­tive Form through inten­sive prac­tice. His basic approach to design remains start­ing with indi­vid­ual ele­ments to arrive at a whole.”20 Maki empha­sizes after years of prac­tice that space is an impor­tant medi­um and that the coher­ence of Col­lec­tive Form depends on the cumu­la­tive effect of the designs of both exte­ri­or spaces and archi­tec­tur­al forms. The under­ly­ing aspi­ra­tions in his inves­ti­ga­tions in Col­lec­tive Form have been cen­tral to the designs of his rep­re­sen­ta­tive projects, includ­ing Hill­side Ter­race [ 12 ], Tokyo Met­ro­pol­i­tan Gym­na­si­um, Keio Uni­ver­si­ty Shō­nan-Fuji­sawa cam­pus, and Repub­lic Poly­tech­nic cam­pus in Singapore.

The Confluence of Collective Form and Combinatory Urbanism

Maki has been a keen learn­er of local cul­tures across the globe and an active par­tic­i­pant in for­ward-look­ing dia­logues about peo­ple and the soci­ety. Maki’s cross-cul­tur­al under­stand­ing of the urban is root­ed in his inher­it­ed back­ground and inter­na­tion­al influ­ence. His con­tex­tu­al­ized explo­rations of adap­tive, sus­tain­able and demo­c­ra­t­ic envi­ron­ment and social sys­tems are high­ly rel­e­vant to today’s urban prac­tice and edu­ca­tion. His spa­tial-social con­cerns and eth­i­cal stance on design prin­ci­ples have endur­ing impact on archi­tec­tur­al and urban think­ing in an era chal­lenged by glob­al­iza­tion and increas­ing­ly volatile social-polit­i­cal dynamisms. Since the mid-twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry, fields relat­ed to archi­tec­ture and urban plan­ning have great­ly diver­si­fied and become increas­ing­ly inter­dis­ci­pli­nary. Archi­tec­tur­al and urban prac­ti­tion­ers face more com­plex urban prob­lems inter­twined on phys­i­cal, social and envi­ron­men­tal dimen­sions. Agen­cies shap­ing the built envi­ron­ment often hold diverse, con­flict­ing inter­ests. Cap­i­tal­ist ide­olo­gies large­ly dri­ve state and mar­ket forces. Attempts to inno­vate tra­di­tion­al approach­es to city mak­ing ought to continue. 

Thom Mayne, anoth­er reflec­tive archi­tect and pio­neer­ing thinker, has expressed sim­i­lar aspi­ra­tions as Maki and pub­lished Com­bi­na­to­ry Urban­ism: A Realign­ment of Com­plex Behav­ior and Col­lec­tive Form (2011) as a man­i­festo of his design philoso­phies. Mayne argues that the idea of using urban plan­ning as a means to con­trol urban growth based on the pre­dic­tion of future devel­op­ment has become obso­lete. He also refutes the idea that archi­tec­ture is about insert­ing sin­gle objects into a com­pre­hen­sive­ly planned urban matrix. The con­ven­tion­al pre­scrip­tive approach to urban design and devel­op­ment is increas­ing­ly inef­fec­tive in meet­ing human and soci­etal needs, since urban future can­not be accu­rate­ly pre­dict­ed, espe­cial­ly in increas­ing­ly mobile and rapid­ly chang­ing soci­eties. Mayne insists that archi­tects and plan­ners need to cre­ate new design con­cepts and meth­ods that address the com­plex inter­play of human and nat­ur­al forces that shape cities and influ­ence the future. Accord­ing­ly, archi­tec­ture must responds to urban forces active in its con­texts which tran­scend prop­er­ty bound­aries; urban plan­ning must cre­ate flex­i­ble, adap­tive spa­tial struc­tures that can accom­mo­date rapid, unpre­dictable social-spa­tial changes. Archi­tec­ture and plan­ning prac­tices must over­lap and con­verge both in scale and in their spa­tial-social concerns.

Like Maki, Mayne expe­ri­enced socio-cul­tur­al changes dur­ing his for­ma­tive years which shaped his view toward archi­tec­ture and the city. Mayne stud­ied in archi­tec­ture schools dur­ing the 1960s, which was a tur­moil, tran­si­tion­al peri­od in Amer­i­ca. Mayne recalls expe­ri­enc­ing the ear­ly phase of the exhaus­tion of mod­ern projects and an antag­o­nist atti­tude toward the past when schools paid lit­tle atten­tion to urban his­to­ry edu­ca­tion. It was also a fraught time in Amer­i­can his­to­ry amid the Civ­il Rights move­ment and Viet­nam War. Against the back­drop of dra­mat­ic cul­tur­al-polit­i­cal changes, Mayne wit­nessed the dis­course about archi­tec­ture toward con­sid­er­a­tions of urban and nat­ur­al forces. Dur­ing Mayne’s ear­ly prac­tices in the 1970s, he real­ized that the ongo­ing social changes dri­ven by var­i­ous pow­ers with­in broad­er busi­ness and polit­i­cal com­mu­ni­ties were out of sync with archi­tects’ aspi­ra­tions. It was also a time of world­wide neolib­er­al turn in eco­nom­ic poli­cies. Amer­i­can ide­olo­gies were divid­ed by two preva­lent under­stand­ings of the government’s role: one notion favored unfet­tered free­dom in a laiss­er-faire envi­ron­ment and reject­ed col­lec­tive act, where­as the oth­er high­ly, almost reli­gious­ly, appre­ci­at­ed the impor­tance of the com­mu­nal. Such dilem­ma in real­i­ty made archi­tects’ dia­logues about the ide­al form of archi­tec­ture and the city seem lofty and Utopi­an. By the 1980s, the world had moved toward a more sin­gu­lar cap­i­tal­ist mod­el. Urban design as a pro­fes­sion and dia­logues about design ethics were disappearing. 

To Mayne, there has been an unre­solv­able cul­tur­al divide in Amer­i­ca root­ed in con­flict­ing val­ues, which makes it dif­fi­cult to nego­ti­ate and find the mid­dle ground. Mayne believes that col­lec­tive goals still are impor­tant for the over­all well­be­ing of a soci­ety and that equi­table dis­tri­b­u­tion of resources is cru­cial to a healthy econ­o­my. Cap­i­tal should not be owned only by a small group of peo­ple. There­fore, the dis­cours­es about what devel­op­ment objec­tives mat­ter to the soci­ety as a whole should shape archi­tec­tur­al think­ing. Archi­tec­ture becomes the reflec­tion of the world, con­sol­i­dat­ing con­flict­ing val­ues and social rela­tions in its phys­i­cal con­fig­u­ra­tion. Those who shape the built environment—be it archi­tects, urban design­ers or planners—must become thought lead­ers who bear the respon­si­bil­i­ty to respond to cur­rent socio-cul­tur­al con­di­tions and to stim­u­late pro­gres­sive cul­tur­al transformations.

Both Maki and Mayne trav­eled around the world, observed dif­fer­ent places through an anthro­po­log­i­cal lens and absorbed ideas from var­i­ous cul­tures. They share a sense of social respon­si­bil­i­ty. Both are inter­est­ed in the flu­id­i­ty, adapt­abil­i­ty and com­plex­i­ty of archi­tec­ture and the city. There are three par­al­lel ideas at the con­flu­ence of their ide­olo­gies. First, they both view archi­tec­ture and the city as open-end­ed, dynam­ic fields of inter­re­lat­ed forces. These inter­re­lat­ed forces shape Group Form in Maki’s view and are com­bi­na­to­ry” in Mayne’s term. In their views, archi­tec­ture and urban com­plex­es play infra­struc­tur­al roles in con­stant­ly chang­ing soci­eties. They refuse to view archi­tec­ture as iso­lat­ed, sta­t­ic objects; rather, they empha­size the orga­ni­za­tion­al and infra­struc­tur­al roles of archi­tec­ture in net­worked con­di­tions and high­light the soci­etal impor­tance of tan­gi­ble and intan­gi­ble inter­con­nec­tions among urban ele­ments. Mayne expands on this notion and views the built envi­ron­ment as infor­ma­tion land­scapes, which include ele­ments with autonomous char­ac­ter­is­tics. Build­ing inter­con­nec­tions and form­ing net­works with­in the infor­ma­tion land­scapes become the method for coher­ent­ly orga­niz­ing plur­al ele­ments and medi­at­ing between com­pli­cat­ed problems.

Sec­ond, both Maki and Mayne con­sid­er the trans­for­ma­tion and impact of urban com­plex­es over time. A sense of space influ­ences human expe­ri­ences and mem­o­ries; there­fore, archi­tec­ture and the city have last­ing socio-cul­tur­al impacts. Maki and Mayne aim to cre­ate adap­tive urban com­plex­es that can accom­mo­date future changes. To do so, they favor flex­i­ble con­fig­u­ra­tions that respond to both site con­di­tions and larg­er con­texts. Mayne argues that archi­tec­tur­al and urban design depends on iter­a­tive process­es of feed­back and adap­ta­tion. Both archi­tects have been high­ly reflec­tive in their prac­tices dur­ing which they con­tin­u­ous­ly cri­tique and chal­lenge their own think­ing and pro­pos­als with urban­is­tic, land­scape, tec­ton­ic, func­tion­al con­sid­er­a­tions. They regard design prac­tice as a reflec­tive, cumu­la­tive process that builds on crit­i­cal assess­ment of, and adap­tive adjust­ment to, plur­al prob­lems simultaneously. 

Third, both Maki and Mayne embrace ambi­gu­i­ty in urban com­plex­es, where mul­ti­ple lay­ers of con­stituent ele­ments and inter-ele­ment link­ages co-exist. They are inter­est­ed in link­ages, in-between spaces and inter­val behav­iors. Mayne par­tic­u­lar­ly rejects bina­ry world­views and advo­cates for the nego­ti­a­tion among plur­al, more nuanced under­stand­ings of issues at hand. Mayne holds archi­tects account­able in mak­ing deci­sions that result from the nego­ti­a­tion of con­flict­ing val­ues in the com­plex­i­ties and dynamisms of con­tem­po­rary societies. 

Over­all, both Maki and Mayne advo­cate for the cre­ation of urban sys­tems that both solve cur­rent, con­tex­tu­al­ized prob­lems and facil­i­tate endur­ing socio-cul­tur­al pro­gress­es in a broad­er soci­ety. They imbue socio-polit­i­cal aspi­ra­tions in their prac­tices and seek to inter­vene in intri­cate, inter­re­lat­ed urban spaces and polit­i­cal sys­tems, aim­ing to gen­er­ate endur­ing impact through the cre­ation of adap­tive urban com­plex­es. They also both advo­cate for expand­ing and reshap­ing archi­tec­ture and plan­ning edu­ca­tion to pre­pare prac­ti­tion­ers for tack­ling broad­er soci­etal chal­lenges that mat­ter for col­lec­tive, sus­tain­able wellbeing.

Conclusion

Fifty years after Maki pro­posed the notion of Col­lec­tive Form, Mayne finds it thought provoca­tive and use­ful for today’s dis­course about archi­tec­ture and cities. Dia­logues about the col­lec­tive” in archi­tec­ture, urban design and plan­ning stim­u­late new con­ver­sa­tions and argu­ments about ongo­ing soci­etal strug­gles in con­tem­po­rary cities. The notion of Com­bi­na­to­ry Urban­ism not only echoes Maki’s propo­si­tions of Col­lec­tive Form, it also con­tin­ues the socio-cul­tur­al debates about eth­i­cal prin­ci­ples for archi­tec­tur­al prac­tices orig­i­nat­ed dur­ing a tran­si­tion­al peri­od in the fields of archi­tec­ture and urban­ism. This stream of dis­course links many sem­i­nal ideas, includ­ing those from CIAM, Team 10, Tange, Sert and Lynch. It traces the his­tor­i­cal evo­lu­tion of archi­tec­tur­al and urban­is­tic ide­olo­gies and con­nects East­ern and West­ern inno­v­a­tive thoughts. The fields of archi­tec­ture and urban­ism have always pro­ject­ed the ide­al city. At the con­flu­ence of all the pro­gres­sive attempts lies debates about design ethics for prac­ti­tion­ers who shape urban sys­tems. Maki’s and Mayne’s notions about archi­tec­ture and the city are open-end­ed, ambigu­ous at the con­cep­tu­al lev­el, allow­ing for inter­pre­ta­tion and improve­ment. They inspire pro­duc­tive, nor­ma­tive debates aim­ing at soci­etal sig­nif­i­cance and hence pro­duce endur­ing impact on fields con­cern­ing the human envi­ron­ment and urban societies. 

With tech­no­log­i­cal inno­va­tion and mas­sive adop­tion of dig­i­tal tools, human con­nec­tions increas­ing­ly become more abstract and intan­gi­ble. Dis­course about Col­lec­tive Form brings back the dis­ap­pear­ing dis­cus­sion about the urban realm in a world with frag­ment­ed inter­ests and even more rapid changes. Would col­lec­tive aspi­ra­tions dis­ap­pear? What should be col­lec­tive form for today’s cities? How to build infra­struc­tures and pub­lic realm that sup­port col­lec­tive goals of cul­tur­al and soci­etal pro­gress­es? These ques­tions remain rel­e­vant to the cur­rent soci­ety and worth con­tin­ued dis­cus­sion. Solv­ing urban prob­lems requires col­lec­tive wis­doms syn­the­siz­ing con­sid­er­a­tions on plur­al dimen­sions, includ­ing eco­nom­ic, tec­ton­ic, urban­is­tic and envi­ron­men­tal fac­tors. These dimen­sions are struc­tur­al to a soci­ety. Tremen­dous efforts must be invest­ed in bal­anc­ing all these dimen­sions to gen­er­ate a bet­ter col­lec­tive outcome. 

Urban study is locat­ed with­in the real­i­ty of its con­text. His­tor­i­cal evo­lu­tion of ide­olo­gies in response to urban changes pro­vides lessons for address­ing con­tem­po­rary issues and prepar­ing for future changes. Today’s flows of cap­i­tal, knowl­edge and infor­ma­tion are increas­ing­ly con­nect­ed at a glob­al scale. Yet, new forms of social and cul­tur­al divide increase with cap­i­tal­ist urban pro­duc­tion. The urban realm is not lim­it­ed to man-made cities, but applies to a mul­ti-faceted realm inter­weav­ing nat­ur­al, arti­fi­cial and vir­tu­al ele­ments. This opens the pos­si­bil­i­ty of archi­tec­ture to con­tribute pro­found­ly toward the for­ma­tion of more diverse and fer­tile urban envi­ron­ments. Mayne sug­gests that the cur­rent busi­ness and polit­i­cal envi­ron­ment fails to facil­i­tate struc­tur­al change in con­tem­po­rary cities. There­fore, archi­tects, urban design­ers and plan­ners ought to be the imag­i­neers who reshape the soci­etal infra­struc­tures to enable socio-polit­i­cal changes. They ought to be opti­mistic and take the initiative.

  1. 1

    Fumi­hiko Maki, Explo­ration of Urban Design Lan­guage,” Fumi­hiko Maki, Phaidon, 2009, 16;

  2. 2

    Fumi­hiko Maki, Nur­tur­ing Dreams: Col­lect­ed Essays On Archi­tec­ture And The City, The MIT Press, 2008, 11;

  3. 3

    Har­ry Fran­cis Mall­grave, Mod­ern Archi­tec­tur­al The­o­ry: A His­tor­i­cal Sur­vey, 1673–1968; Cam­bridge Uni­ver­si­ty Press; 2005; chap­ter 14.

  4. 4

    Klaus Herdeg, The Dec­o­rat­ed Dia­gram: Har­vard Archi­tec­ture and the Fail­ure of the Bauhaus Lega­cy, The MIT Press, 1985, 102;

  5. 5

    Har­ry Fran­cis Mall­grave, Mod­ern Archi­tec­tur­al The­o­ry: A His­tor­i­cal Sur­vey, 1673–1968; Cam­bridge Uni­ver­si­ty Press; 2005; chap­ter 14.

  6. 6

    Fumi­hiko Maki, Nur­tur­ing Dreams: Col­lect­ed Essays On Archi­tec­ture And The City, The MIT Press, 2008, 13.

  7. 7

    Lin, Zhongjie (2010). Ken­zō Tange and the Metabolist Move­ment. Rout­ledge, 22.

  8. 8

    Rem Kool­haas, Hans Ulrich Obrist; edi­tors, Kayoko Ota with James West­cott; Project Japan : metab­o­lism talks; Köln: Taschen, 2011, 186–197.

  9. 9

    Rem Kool­haas, Hans Ulrich Obrist; edi­tors, Kayoko Ota with James West­cott; Project Japan : metab­o­lism talks; Köln: Taschen, 2011, 295.

  10. 10

    Mum­ford, Eric Paul, Defin­ing urban design: CIAM archi­tects and the for­ma­tion of a dis­ci­pline, 1937–69; New Haven : Yale Uni­ver­si­ty Press, c2009,

  11. 11

    Eliel Saari­nen; The City: Its Growth, Its Decay, Its Future,1943;

  12. 12

    Mum­ford, Eric Paul, Defin­ing urban design: CIAM archi­tects and the for­ma­tion of a dis­ci­pline, 1937–69; New Haven : Yale Uni­ver­si­ty Press, c2009, 101.

  13. 13

    Mall­grave and Christi­na Con­tan­dri­opou­los; Archi­tec­tur­al the­o­ry, Vol­umn II: An Anthol­o­gy from 1871 — 2005; Malden, MA : Black­well Pub., 2006–2008; 291.

  14. 14

    Fumi­hiko Maki, Nur­tur­ing Dreams: Col­lect­ed Essays On Archi­tec­ture And The City, The MIT Press, 2008, 26.

  15. 15

    Zhongjie Lin, Ken­zō Tange And The Metabolist Move­ment: Urban Utopias of Mod­ern Japan, 2010, 11.

  16. 16

    Fumi­hiko Maki, Inves­ti­ga­tions in Col­lec­tive Form, 1964,11.

  17. 17

    Fumi­hiko Maki, Explo­ration of Urban Design Lan­guage,” Fumi­hiko Maki, Phaidon, 2009,17.

  18. 18

    Fumi­hiko Maki, The Future of Urban Envi­ron­ment,” Pro­gres­sive Archi­tec­ture 45, Oct, 1964, 178.

  19. 19

    Vin­cent Ligtelijn and Fran­cis Strau­ven; Aldo van Eyck: writ­ings; The child, the City and the Artist: An essay on archi­tec­ture, The in-between realm; writ­ten in 1962; Ams­ter­dam, Nether­lands: SUN, 2008, 218.

  20. 20

    Fumi­hiko Maki, Fumi­hiko Maki, Phaidon, 2009, 6.

This essay derives from my master’s stud­ies at Wash­ing­ton Uni­ver­si­ty in St. Louis. I am grate­ful and deeply indebt­ed to all those who sup­port­ed me along the way. Spe­cial thanks go to my the­sis com­mit­tee Robert McCarter (chair), Eric Mum­ford and Seng Kuan. I also thank all my inter­vie­wees, includ­ing Fumi­hiko Maki, Thom Mayne, Cyn­thia Weese, Ben­jamin Weese, Robert Vick­ery, Jr., Peter MacK­ei­th, Robert Dan­nen­brink, Jr., Don­ald Bran­den­burg­er, Eric Pet­ters­son, and Ralph Insinger for their warm and insight­ful responses.