"I believe very strongly, and have fought since many years ago - at least over 30 years ago - to get architecture not just within schools, but architecture talked about under history, geography, science, technology, art"
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Rogers is making a slyly radical demand: treat architecture less like an elective and more like a way of reading the world. The line’s real force is in its bureaucratic specificity. He isn’t asking for more “appreciation” or a token studio class; he’s fighting for architecture to slip past the gatekeepers of curriculum and show up everywhere the state already agrees matters: history, geography, science, technology, art. That list isn’t decorative. It’s an argument that buildings are never just “design,” they’re evidence - of power, climate, materials, labor, public policy, and collective taste.
The subtext is a critique of how education partitions knowledge into polite silos, then acts surprised when citizens feel powerless in the face of the built environment. If architecture lives only inside architecture schools, it becomes a priesthood: experts speak, everyone else inhabits. Rogers wants architectural literacy as civic literacy, because planning decisions, housing density, transport, and public space are political whether we name them or not.
Context matters: Rogers built high-tech monuments (the Pompidou, the Lloyd’s building) that flaunt structure and services, turning a building into a readable diagram of how it works. That aesthetic maps onto his educational plea. Make architecture legible early and broadly, and you don’t just produce future architects; you produce voters who can argue about a skyline, a street, a school, with something sharper than taste. The 30-year refrain signals frustration, but also persistence: culture doesn’t shift by epiphany; it shifts by rewriting the syllabus.
The subtext is a critique of how education partitions knowledge into polite silos, then acts surprised when citizens feel powerless in the face of the built environment. If architecture lives only inside architecture schools, it becomes a priesthood: experts speak, everyone else inhabits. Rogers wants architectural literacy as civic literacy, because planning decisions, housing density, transport, and public space are political whether we name them or not.
Context matters: Rogers built high-tech monuments (the Pompidou, the Lloyd’s building) that flaunt structure and services, turning a building into a readable diagram of how it works. That aesthetic maps onto his educational plea. Make architecture legible early and broadly, and you don’t just produce future architects; you produce voters who can argue about a skyline, a street, a school, with something sharper than taste. The 30-year refrain signals frustration, but also persistence: culture doesn’t shift by epiphany; it shifts by rewriting the syllabus.
Quote Details
| Topic | Teaching |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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