Cities as Software
"Thinking about cities as a combination of ‘hardware’ (buildings, streets, parks) and ‘software’ (laws, rules, traditions, business models, cultural norms) is a useful conceptual model because it allows us to separate out things that are often conflated. A heritage building, for example, is hardware, because it has physical form. But it is also software, because it has cultural value and often a legal identity as having heritage value. The software determines what can be done with the hardware."
Allowing Innovation to Operate Without Capital
"the library as a platform for enabling innovation, learning and cultural development to occur in our communities without the need for capital."
Dematerialising
To me, really interesting view on the idea of city. It's really nice to see how the idea of an architecture that could be generated by the software is articulated. (Does software equal activities and relationships between those?)
This idea on libraries is articulated by Hugh Rundle here. Where the quotes and titles come from. This text was inspired by an incredible article by Marcus Westbury here.
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