Critical & Temporal
Investigates architecture and urbanism through the lenses of critique, temporality, and cultural analysis. Engages with ephemeral, seasonal, and political dimensions of space and time.
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Accumulation by Dispossession in the Vertical City: A Harveyan Reading of New York
In The New Imperialism (2003) and Rebel Cities (2012), David Harvey reframes urbanization as central—not peripheral—to the dynamics of contemporary capitalism. Extending Marx’s theory of accumulation, Harvey argues that cities function as “spatial fixes” for surplus capital. When profitability falters in primary circuits of production, capital turns toward the built environment: infrastructure, real estate, housing, and large-scale urban redevelopment. Continue reading
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Aesthetic Neutrality as Ideological Evasion: On Arundhati Roy and the Politics of Silence at Berlinale

The debacle at this year’s Berlinale crystallizes a far deeper crisis in contemporary cultural institutions: an epistemological abdication disguised as neutrality. When Wim Wenders, serving as the festival’s jury president, intoned that filmmakers must “stay out of politics,” he did so not as an apolitical aesthete, but as a custodian of an ideologically saturated status quo that wants Continue reading
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Chelsea Waters | Architecture, Water & Urban Design

1. The Highway as a Linear Flood Barrier Big idea: the highway becomes a raised spine that blocks or slows storm surge from the Hudson. How this works Why Chelsea is suited for this Urban design effect:You don’t see a wall — you see planted slopes, seating edges, bikeways, and subtle grade changes doing flood Continue reading
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Distribution of Housing Types and Hybrid Mix

Housing Model — Hudson Hotel, 357 West 57th Street, Manhattan The housing model for the former Hudson Hotel reimagines the site as a hybrid residential and civic ecosystem, transforming a single-use hospitality building into a mixed-tenure, mixed-use housing framework that responds to Midtown West’s affordability pressures, transient populations, and service-worker displacement. Housing types are deliberately distributed Continue reading
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Mapping Memories: Un-Erased Architectures and Invisible Geographies in India

Architectural history in India has long been shaped by a selective cartography—one that privileges monumental, imperial, and easily legible structures while marginalizing sites that resist dominant historical narratives. Beyond the canon of Mughal mausolea, Rajput forts, and colonial civic buildings exists a dense substratum of architectural production that remains physically present yet culturally obscured. These Continue reading
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Ruins, Power, and the Architectural Imagination: Toward a Critical Theory of Preservation

Ruins have long served as generative objects for intellectual reflection. As architectural remnants that mark temporal rupture, they exist in an ambiguous interval between persistence and disappearance. Their material incompleteness has historically encouraged meditations on theology, on the rise and fall of political orders, and on aesthetic theories of fragmentation, entropy, and the sublime. Yet Continue reading
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The Medium, the Message, and the Multitude:

Multiculturalism as Media Theory in Contemporary American Creative Culture Abstract Multiculturalism in the United States is frequently discussed in terms of representation—whose identities appear in images, narratives, and institutional spaces. Yet this framing overlooks a deeper, more transformative development: multiculturalism is not merely a shift in social demographics or representational politics but a reconfiguration of Continue reading
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Rethinking the Brooklyn Marine Terminal

A Critique of the Vision Plan Abstract The recently approved Brooklyn Marine Terminal (BMT) Vision Plan represents one of New York City’s most ambitious waterfront redevelopment initiatives of the early twenty-first century. The plan integrates maritime modernization, mixed-income housing, public open space, and climate resilience strategies within a 122-acre site at the confluence of Red Continue reading
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Selling the Commons. The Systematic Erasure of Section 9 Housing

In a deal cloaked in the language of “revitalization” and “affordability,” the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) has once again put public land on the auction block. This time, it’s the Manhattanville Houses in West Harlem — a public housing campus home to thousands of New Yorkers who have, for decades, weathered systemic neglect, Continue reading
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Unhomely Homes: Dwelling as Dislocation in a Global Age

“We do not dwell because we have built, but we build and have built because we dwell.”— Martin Heidegger¹ At the root of Heidegger’s inquiry lies a rupture. His distinction between building and dwelling opens a chasm that continues to haunt architectural discourse: the ontological dissonance between shelter and home, between house and world. Yet Continue reading