Rem Koolhaas Books
Showing 1-10 of 10

by (shelved 2 times as rem-koolhaas)
avg rating 4.25 — 1,827 ratings — published 1995

by (shelved 1 time as rem-koolhaas)
avg rating 4.53 — 315 ratings — published 2011

by (shelved 1 time as rem-koolhaas)
avg rating 3.86 — 22 ratings — published 2013

by (shelved 1 time as rem-koolhaas)
avg rating 4.00 — 2 ratings — published

by (shelved 1 time as rem-koolhaas)
avg rating 3.96 — 295 ratings — published 2000

by (shelved 1 time as rem-koolhaas)
avg rating 4.00 — 163 ratings — published 2016

by (shelved 1 time as rem-koolhaas)
avg rating 3.67 — 27 ratings — published

by (shelved 1 time as rem-koolhaas)
avg rating 4.22 — 90 ratings — published 2001

by (shelved 1 time as rem-koolhaas)
avg rating 4.56 — 9 ratings — published 2008

by (shelved 1 time as rem-koolhaas)
avg rating 4.24 — 3,635 ratings — published 1978

“The most [...] literal proposal to solve the problem of congestion comes from Harvey Wiley Corbett [...] Ultimately, Corbett calculates, the entire surface of the city could be a single traffic plane, an ocean of cars, increasing the traffic potential 700 percent. "[...We see] a very modernized Venice, a city of arcades, plazas and bridges, with canals for streets, only the canals will not be filled with real water but with freely flowing motor traffic, the sun glistening on the black tops of the cars and the buildings reflecting in this waving flood of rapidly rolling vehicles. From an architectural viewpoint [...] the idea presents all the loveliness, and more, of Venice. There is nothing incongruous about it, nothing strange..." Corbett's "solution" for New York's traffic problem is the most blatant case of disingenuity in Manhattanism's history. Pragmatism so distorted becomes pure poetry. Not for the moment does the theorist intend to relieve congestion; his true ambition is to escalate it to such intensity that it generates -- as in a quantum leap -- a completely new condition, where congestion becomes mysteriously positive [... Corbett and the authors of the Regional Plan] have invented a method to deal rationally with the fundamentally irrational. [They know] that it would be suicide to solve Manhattan's problems, that they exist by the grace of these problems, that it is their duty to make its problems, if anything, forever insurmountable, that the only solution for Manhattan is the extrapolation of its freakish history, that Manhattan is the city of the perpetual flight forward.”
― Delirious New York: A Retroactive Manifesto for Manhattan
― Delirious New York: A Retroactive Manifesto for Manhattan
“With the idea that a single creator can build a society wherein a huge number of people will live, Le Corbusier later approached Stalin. In India, he charmed a powerful provincial family and ended up making huge, sculptural relics in Chandigarh.”
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