cover image The State of Architecture at the Beginning of the 21st Century

The State of Architecture at the Beginning of the 21st Century

. Monacelli Press, $29.95 (144pp) ISBN 978-1-58093-134-2

As its ambitious title suggests, this collection of some 60 essays, manifestos and ruminations covers a lot of ground, but--as is often the case with such an assemblage of voices--that ground, writing-wise, is bumpier in some areas than others. The pieces come from talks presented at a Columbia University architecture conference, and in general, the most successful ones offer concrete solutions or sum up current architectural issues. For instance, architect Robert A.M. Stern's""Urbanism Is About Human Life"" is wonderfully succinct, down-to-earth and ego-free look at urban renewal (""Yes, we have junk space, but we don't need architects to theorize it""). Frank Gehry's consideration of""Architecture and Intuition"" is frank and reassuring (""It's wonderful to search your psyche and comb your life for meaning--for the meaning of the universe. But you're asking more than is humanly possible of yourself""). Less successful works tend to be show-offy, or ponder more esoteric topics, such as architectural writer Sylvia Lavin's essay""How Architecture Stopped Being the 97-Pound Weakling and Became Cool,"" in which she posits that a""cool person can make an uncool object cool, but an uncool person may or may not be cooled up by a cool object."" Editors Tschumi and Cheng don't struggle to unify the disparate voices, instead letting them stand as separate and sometime contradictory sides of architecture's ongoing debates. There's much food for thought here, but the pieces, by and large, are too brief to provide more than a snapshot of their illustrious contributors' ideas. 80 illustrations.