

As a historian and theorist of architecture and urban culture, he is interested not just in how our cities function but also how they are designed, what they mean to people and how they are experienced. Without homes, shops and parks, without offices, workplaces and airports, our world would grind to a halt. His research explores how architecture and cities are experienced and re-used by the public.Īrchitecture and cities are crucial to how people live and society operates. Iain Borden is Professor of Architecture and Urban Culture at The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, London, England. Each piece is in some way a critique of capitalism and a thought experiment about how designers and city dwellers working together can shape the cities of tomorrow. Although many of the essays are driven by social, cultural, and urban theory, they also tell real stories about real places.


The essays range from abstract considerations of spatial production and representation to such concrete examples of urban domination as video surveillance and Regency London as the site of male pleasure. The international gathering of contributors includes art, architectural, and urban historians and theorists urban geographers architects, artists, and filmmakers and literary and cultural theorists. Many of the essays also draw on the social critique and tactics of the Situationist movement. An important inspiration for the book is the work of Henri Lefebvre, in particular his ideas on space as a historical production. A multistranded contemplation of the notion of "knowing a place," it is about both the existence and the possibilities of architecture and the city.

The Unknown City takes its place in the emerging architectural literature that looks beyond design process and buildings to discover new ways of looking at the urban experience. Essays on architecture as narrative and urban space as experience and the new geographies they create.
