Architecture Australia

Australian educators abroad

Liam Young

Speculative architect and director; Coordinator SCI-Arc Fiction and Entertainment, Los Angeles; Founder of Tomorrow’s Thoughts Today and Unknown Fields

How we perceive the cultures and spaces around us is largely determined by mediums of fiction and entertainment. These extraordinary shared languages are the vehicles through which we exchange ideas and engage with our environment. It is impossible to underestimate the importance of media in the production of culture. In film, video games and literature, we have always imagined alternative worlds as a means to understand our own world in new ways.

Architects once speculated on the impacts of industrialization and then mass production. Now, the forces that shape our cities and spaces fall, to a large extent, outside the remit of what we traditionally understand as architectural practice. In the context of network technologies, autonomous infrastructure, immersive and pervasive media and a collapsing climate, it is urgent that we widen the scope of architecture beyond buildings alone. Too often, architecture programs are training students for a profession that no longer exists or that is, at best, struggling to remain relevant. Why shouldn’t architects design the next Hollywood blockbuster or virtual reality environment, video game landscape, marketing campaign or network platform? Ideology rarely evolves at the same pace as technology but, through these practices, we can imagine and speculate on the implications and consequences of these systems. In this way, storytelling is a critical act of architecture.

I run the postgraduate Master of Science in Fiction and Entertainment at the Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc) in Los Angeles. In this one-year degree, students work with world-renowned professionals in the worlds of film, fiction, animation, games and documentary making to build new forms of architectural practice. We deploy techniques from these popular media to visualize new worlds and to prototype the architectural and urban possibilities of emerging technologies. Across the degree, we don’t just design singular buildings but, rather, we animate scenarios, narrate stories and visualize speculative worlds in which we can project new cultural trends and environmental, political and economic forces. We travel out on location shoots to document existing phenomena, exaggerate present trends and

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Architecture Australia

Architecture Australia6 min readArchitecture
Australian Embassy in Washington, D.C. Bates Smart
In its first purpose-built embassy building in the United States (1965–69), Australia was presented through a white prism, demonstrating a mastery of international rationalism. The young federation adopted a “palazzo-like” monumentality – a civic mod
Architecture Australia4 min read
Flipside Circus’s Brisbane Circus Centre Blok Modular
When the bright colours of the big top float above an otherwise ordinary urban landscape, everyone knows that the circus is in town. Blok Modular’s design for the Brisbane Circus Centre at Hamilton Reach, north of Brisbane, expands on an analogy for
Architecture Australia5 min read
Geelong Arts Centre (Stage 3) ARM Architecture
My first thought on seeing ARM Architecture’s Little Malop Street Redevelopment for the Geelong Arts Centre (GAC) is: Have they gone too far this time? The building is wrapped in what appears to be a white billowing curtain, complete with twisted cor

Related