Mobilization of the multi-tasking machine: Up-cycling the interstate and defense highways

Date
2001
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Abstract

The metropolis is governed by a certain internal logic, an ' operating system' that we are often blind; initiated at the command line and materialized through mass mobility. The code for this operating system is realized through both very specific and more esoteric social rules and practices, conventions (local code restrictions, signs and semantics) which encode our motive environment, directing our movement, allowing or more often determining our personal inertia. This operating system has more to do with timing and the interactivity of planned coincidences than with built form. While speculative, this thesis preemptively explores a potential amendment to the jurisdictional constraints between architects and developers, planners and policymakers; seeking a collaborative and comprehensive approach to reconditioning the metropolis by up-cycling our highways for alternate occupation, multiplicity and intermodality. This thesis is both a speculation into one area of the metropolitan 'operating system'---it functions as a precursor to a larger manifesto, an initial attempt to decipher, decode and recode the metropolis. Mobilization of the multi-tasking machine.

Description
Degree
Master of Architecture
Type
Thesis
Keywords
Landscape architecture, Urban planning, Regional planning
Citation

Frantom, Wyatt Jacob. "Mobilization of the multi-tasking machine: Up-cycling the interstate and defense highways." (2001) Master’s Thesis, Rice University. https://hdl.handle.net/1911/17422.

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