Spectral Spec, Ghost Towns, and Architecture That Looks Like Other Things

Tianducheng-viaWikimediaCommons.jpgGhostBuildings.jpgClockwise from top: Tianducheng via Wikimedia Commons; Baugespanne; Bauprofils via Swicon & The Guardian

What’s the opposite of a scale model? A Bauprofil fits the profile: Guardian architecture critic Oliver Wainwright recently took a closer look at what he called ‘ghost buildings,’ a Swiss concept, also known as baugespanne, in which a life-size, low-cost ‘wireframe’ limns a proposed building project in situ. “Constructed from metal rods or wooden poles, fixed in place by wire guy ropes, the Swiss baugespanne or bauprofile are usually erected for a month, outlining the full height of the proposed development, with protruding markers to indicate the angle of the roof and direction of the walls,” Wainwright writes. “For taller buildings, tethered balloons can be used, and helicopters have even been employed to hover at a specified height for the tallest towers.”

ChineseGhostTown.jpgVia io9’s round-up

Of course, I initially thought he was referring to the Chinese ghost town phenomenon, the utterly desolate planned communities that seem to crop up, mirage-like, in the hinterlands of the Mainland. Indeed, Wainwright had covered the closely related saga of Zaha Hadid’s Galaxy SOHO in Beijing—namely, that it’s but a parametric shell of a building—before I (full disclosure) met him during Beijing Design Week last October. Given the generally overambitious and bloated real estate development business in China, it’s egregious but perhaps not unexpected… and, in short, flies in the face of the highly prudent Swiss approach.

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