SurfaceCities studio projects 2009:

In 1960, Kevin Lynch published The Image of the City, an influential architecture textbook, which awakened us to the problems of legibility in American cities. Lynch’s book ties legibility to navigation, civic identity, and the special pleasure of simply looking at cities. 2010 will be the 50th anniversary of The Image of the City. In order to commemorate the contributions of this book and reflect on how the notion of legibility in cities might be applied or revised through the use of networked mobile technologies, the SurfaceCities Studio developed concepts for an interactive version of The Image of the City. This new versionis unlike Lynch’s original printed text; it is responsive, location-aware and has vibrant animated graphics and sound. Itthus prioritizes multimedia over text, interaction over reading, and concrete experience over abstract study.In resituating Lynch’s work for networked mobile technologies, post-professional students in the SurfaceCities Studio developed and answered a broad range of research questions on cities and related those questions to themes that interested them personally: media, discourse, urbanism, technology, and ecology. During the semester, students completed three problems in which they developed new concepts, proposals, and technology prototypes to study the contemporary cityscape.The studio visited Boston, one of Lynch’s three original case studies, in early October and used the city as a test case.

 

John Zissovici
Associate Professor
Cornell Department of Architecture

John Zissovici received his bachelor’s and master’s of architecture from Cornell University. He teaches architectural design and courses that deal with the impact of digital media on architectural thinking. His current research on imagescape urbanism in Google Earth, brings into alignment his various teaching interests.



Yanni A. Loukissas
Visiting Lecturer
Cornell Department of Architecture

Yanni Alexander Loukissas teaches design theory and studio, with a focus on computational methods. He holds a Ph.D. in design and computation from MIT, as well as a Master of Science in architecture studies, also from MIT, and a Bachelor of Architecture from Cornell. He has written and lectured extensively on the culture of computa