"The only way forward, if we are going to improve the quality of the environment, is to get everybody involved"
About this Quote
Rogers isn’t offering a warm group hug of civic participation; he’s issuing an architectural brief for survival. “The only way forward” has the bluntness of a constraint on a site plan: there are no elegant detours, no signature building that can “solve” the environment by itself. Coming from an architect famous for high-tech spectacle and exposed systems, the line quietly flips the genre. The environment isn’t a backdrop for design genius; it’s the client, the budget, and the deadline all at once.
The subtext is an indictment of two comforting myths: that environmental quality can be outsourced to experts, and that it can be fixed through boutique lifestyle tweaks. “Get everybody involved” sounds inclusive, but it’s also coercive in the best democratic sense. Rogers is smuggling politics into professional language: zoning boards, transit agencies, developers, tenants, voters, supply chains. The built world is a collective machine; so are its emissions. If everyone is implicated in the damage, everyone has to be implicated in the repair.
Context matters here. Rogers came of age alongside postwar reconstruction, mass urbanization, and the late-20th-century realization that modernity’s conveniences carried hidden costs. His work often celebrated transparency and infrastructure; this quote extends that ethic to governance. It’s a call to make environmental responsibility as unavoidable as the plumbing. Not “awareness,” not “innovation,” but participation at scale - the unglamorous kind that changes codes, habits, and power.
The subtext is an indictment of two comforting myths: that environmental quality can be outsourced to experts, and that it can be fixed through boutique lifestyle tweaks. “Get everybody involved” sounds inclusive, but it’s also coercive in the best democratic sense. Rogers is smuggling politics into professional language: zoning boards, transit agencies, developers, tenants, voters, supply chains. The built world is a collective machine; so are its emissions. If everyone is implicated in the damage, everyone has to be implicated in the repair.
Context matters here. Rogers came of age alongside postwar reconstruction, mass urbanization, and the late-20th-century realization that modernity’s conveniences carried hidden costs. His work often celebrated transparency and infrastructure; this quote extends that ethic to governance. It’s a call to make environmental responsibility as unavoidable as the plumbing. Not “awareness,” not “innovation,” but participation at scale - the unglamorous kind that changes codes, habits, and power.
Quote Details
| Topic | Nature |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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