How does the figure of the barricade relate to the form of our buildings and cities today? Can we learn anything from its architecture, its history, and the way it makes reference to the anarchist perspective that has been largely absent from our familiar urban thinking, marked as it is by the great dogmas of urbanism and urban planning? Can anarchist thinking produce a particular kind of architecture, in the same way that political regimes – social-democratic, liberal, communist, or fascist – have produced their own? This is the question we raised during a teaching session conducted by the Muoto agency at the Technical University of Vienna in spring 2024.1 It echoed an exhibition staged concurrently at MAK, the Museum of Applied Arts in Vienna, entitled Protest Architecture: Barricades, Camps, Superglue, featuring an architecture of revolt in the form of particularly realistic scale models reproducing camps and temporary installations erected during real contexts of revolt.2 Here, we want to take these two parallel events as an opportunity to question the possibility of an architecture that is consistent with anarchist thinking, i.e. open to occupation and free from the pressure of all-powerful public opinion. Is it possible? And what would it look like?
At a time of proliferating and overlapping regulation, our cities and buildings are becoming an increasingly immediate expression of our democracy, its principle of choice, its mode of governance and its regulatory power. Every façade material is discussed, every programme has to be approved. The positive aspect of this process is that our cities and buildings look clean and safe, and manifest a certain harmony. Conflicts between residents are also reduced. Our urban environment is the product of what we agree is good, of what most of us think should or should not be allowed. However, this situation raises the question: in this pursuit of collective perfection, are we not sacrificing a large part of our freedom?3
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