Abstract
T he curriculum embedded in any building instructs as fully and as powerfully as any course taught in it. Most of my classes, for example, are taught in a building that I think Descartes would have liked. It is a building with lots of squareness and straight lines. There is nothing whatsoever that reflects its locality in northeast Ohio in what had once been a vast forested wetland (Sherman 1996). How it is cooled, heated, and lighted and at what true cost to the world is an utter mystery to its occupants. It offers no clue about the origins of the materials used to build it. It tells no story. With only minor modifications it could be converted to use as a factory or prison. When classes are over, students seldom linger for long. The building resonates with no part of our biology, evolutionary experience, or esthetic sensibilities. It reflects no understanding of ecology or ecological processes. It is intended to be functional, efficient, minimally offensive, and little more. But what else does it do?
Notes
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This article was originally published in I997.
References
Lyle, J. 1994. Regenerative Design for Sustainable Development. New York: Wiley.
Sherman, T. 1996. A Place on the Glacial Till. New York: Oxford University Press.
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© 2011 David W. Orr
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Orr, D.W. (2011). Further Reflections on Architecture as Pedagogy (1997). In: Hope is an Imperative. Island Press, Washington, DC. https://doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-017-0_19
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