Branding (in) the city

The Chinese cityscapes have been undergoing dramatic changes during the last 30 years. The “One country,
two systems” and the socialist market economy have resulted in a complete redefinition of the rules of architecture and city
planning. Who is making the Chinese city right now? Neither the urban planners nor the architects
but exclusively investors, developers, landlords, banks and businessmen. The public domain, after having carried out for
almost half a century the burden of a total control over territories, is nowadays utterly disengaging itself from the production of
space and urban fabrics. The urban planners lines on the maps are reduced to be either pure infrastructural and networking
designs either clean delimitation of “private islands” on which developer will build luxurious residence with appealing names
or top fashion shopping malls (Star city, Château Regency, Free town, The Glory Land, Top Aristocratic, Merlin Champagne
Town, Upper East Side, Fortune Plaza, Sunshine 100, St Regis Residence, World City, Top of the World, Richgarden, City
Castle Blood and Royalty Apartments, Versailles de Shanghai, Parkview Hyper Castle, etc…). Unmistakably, the boosted free
market economy coupled with the disengagement of the public sector logically ends up in an excessive privatisation of space.
In such a context, everything becomes business, everything is money and **//everything is a consumption
product//**. Toothpaste is a product, cars are products, art is a product, architecture is a product, living space is a …product.

How do we sell a product? We advertise it! The city of products as expected blends into the city of advertisements.
The Chinese contemporary urban spaces are overwhelmed by images, billboards, signs, neon lights, logos,…Naked Asian
beauties are promoting the up-to-date Loreal shampoos, whole facades are covered with brands collages, digital renderings of
the hyper-super-modern-new building inhabited by beautiful rich people are enclosing the construction (destruction) sites
of the yet to come happy urban future. “We live in a world of images” should be replaced by a more down-to-earth “We live
in the city of images”.

What is fascinating about this phenomenon in a country like China is to see with which intensity the fiction of an
expected (but improbable) future is continuously plunged within the urban reality. Almost like an urban acupuncture, the images
of the bright Chinese and global dreams are colonizing the entire city’s points of energy and in between spaces. Phantasms and
images of wealthy and luxurious lives, while being projected on every corner street corner, are ever imposing the consumption
imaginary tales as the new paradigms. As fictional and real urban spaces interweave, limits are blurred,
perceptions are modified and behaviours are transformed. In the city of images, notions such as authenticity, or its reverse,
fake, have become obsolete. Architecture has on one hand been merely converted into a physical support for the image
and on the other into an image in itself. Lacking structural meaning or essence, it is now seen as a pure representative
or symbolic artefact. Techniques of habillage, camouflage, maquillage, post-modern collages of signs, seem to have
replaced architectural thinking and process. The fragmentation of the built environment and of its objects has led to the
installation of the images not only in the residual spaces but right on the front stage of the archi-decorum. Out of
the architects’ control, ads have become a primary architectural material. Most of the times seen as parasites, these assets in
fact truly crystallize the failures of an architectural domain responding to the instability of the city by generic spaces. In the
ever standardised environment, one only needs to replace the front billboard and add some furniture in order to transform
a shop into a restaurant. Space identity has been transferred from its essence to its signs.

The city of products entails efficiency and profitability upon the built environment. Space has to make money. Facades
or roofs of buildings become possible incomes for any owner who decides to rent them to the city of images. Although this
phenomenon is somehow global, it has reached such a level in China that one can only be amazed by its proportions. The
branded space is everywhere; an incredible density of signs is populating the cities. Every shop, big or
small, wears a billboard hat either covering half of its body either doubling or tripling in some cases its facade. Huge steel
support structures are mounted overnight above buildings, on their facades, next to the highways or around construction sites.
The enormous energy deployed in these constructions, their impressive frame structures and their surprising and sometimes
inventive locations in the city emphasize qualities worth to consider more closely.

Since Under covered spaces has already emerged behind the decorum, these billboards should be regarded more
as potential architectural objects which are presently wasting a lot of space, effort, materials and possibilities. The depressing
mono-functionality of these objects (hold the vertical surface of representation) is calling for renegotiations. The panels
and their massive backstage steel structures are waiting for architectural subversion and activation. The
whole backside of the image could be reinvested in order to change what used to be a structure into an infrastructure,
a locus for architectural resurgence. How could we live behind or within the image? How
could we transform the billboard into something else than a mere representation display? How could we induce usage,
programmes and meaning in it? One could imagine an architecture of additions, reconquering existing structures and
considering them as sites and fertile ground for hybridizations. Prototypes of hybrid billboards could be developed in order to
generate new cross-typologies. New ways of inhabiting the city and using its assets could be promoted. ADhouses, ADshops,
ADmassage parlors, ADtoilettes, ADbars, ADcinemas,ADparks,ADhotels,etc… If architects engaged critically and creatively
with what is still seen as urban parasites, efficient and surprising solutions could emerge and maybe ad(d) some more meaning
in the city of images.

Posted by Benjamin Beller / 17.2 years ago / 28794 hits

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