Soupergreen-Souped Up Green Architecture features projects and essays that offer a critique of the prevailing approach to «green» architecture by interrogating the architectural discipline’s fairly narrow expectations for «environmental performance,» which are predominantly evaluated through scientific calculation and quantifiable measurement. In contrast, Soupergreen! re-examines the very nature of the environment as a human construct rather than a given condition—as a manifestation of philosophy’s long-recognized epistemological gap between reality and its appearance.
The book therefore addresses the manner in which the constructed nature of the environment both problematizes the assumption of humanity’s ability to objectively calculate and measure it, and also leads to habits and behaviors that are detrimental to the environment. It also argues that aesthetic «performances» are necessary to reveal new forms of environmental engagement, and that architecture’s unique aesthetic and spatial expertise might therefore be leveraged for valuable types of environmental performances that profoundly alter, enhance, and transform the public’s understanding of and actions toward the environment.
%text%