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The Interior Design of [Free] Knowledge

Author

Listed:
  • Alberto Corsín Jiménez
  • Adolfo Estalella
  • Zoohaus Collective

Abstract

What would a "free knowledge bank'look like if it were to be designed as an architectural object? The challenge was posed by El Ranchito, a curatorial project based at Madrid's contemporary art centre, Matadero, to the art and architectural collective Zoohaus in 2011. The project aimed to turn into a 3-D model (hereafter known as the Offfficina) a variety of architectural "collective intelligences' (based on do-it-yourself, retrofitted, community-driven architectural designs and adaptations) that Zoohaus had long been collecting and documenting from locations the world over. This essay tells the story of the making and travails of the Offfficina. It describes the work that Zoohaus has been carrying out in documenting constructive techniques worldwide: their use of diagrams, photographs, videos or digital social media in experimenting with, or improvising new models and forms of architectural representation. Furthermore, it describes the challenges faced in turning such "models' into "prototypes': when the experimental form must remain openly recursive to its own re/presentational sources. The paper ends by describing the most radical of such recursive transformations, where the Offfficina was turned into an "ambient' or atmospheric object, and in the process reimagined (free) knowledge as dimensional piece of interior design

Suggested Citation

  • Alberto Corsín Jiménez & Adolfo Estalella & Zoohaus Collective, 2014. "The Interior Design of [Free] Knowledge," Journal of Cultural Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 7(4), pages 493-515, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:jculte:v:7:y:2013:i:4:p:493-515
    DOI: 10.1080/17530350.2013.859632
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