Archigram was an experimental architecture group in the 1960s comprised of Peter Cook, Michael Webb, Ron Herron, Warren Chalk, David Greene, and Dennis Crompton. They believed cities must be able to change and adapt or risk destroying themselves. Among their concepts were the Walking City, Plug-In City, and Instant City. Their designs emphasized flexibility and challenged traditional architecture. They influenced later buildings like the Pompidou Centre Museum in Paris and Kunsthaus Graz Museum in Austria.
Archigram was an experimental architecture group in the 1960s comprised of Peter Cook, Michael Webb, Ron Herron, Warren Chalk, David Greene, and Dennis Crompton. They believed cities must be able to change and adapt or risk destroying themselves. Among their concepts were the Walking City, Plug-In City, and Instant City. Their designs emphasized flexibility and challenged traditional architecture. They influenced later buildings like the Pompidou Centre Museum in Paris and Kunsthaus Graz Museum in Austria.
Archigram was an experimental architecture group in the 1960s comprised of Peter Cook, Michael Webb, Ron Herron, Warren Chalk, David Greene, and Dennis Crompton. They believed cities must be able to change and adapt or risk destroying themselves. Among their concepts were the Walking City, Plug-In City, and Instant City. Their designs emphasized flexibility and challenged traditional architecture. They influenced later buildings like the Pompidou Centre Museum in Paris and Kunsthaus Graz Museum in Austria.
The Walking City "They thought that change was integral to how a city works and if there was no ability to change then the city would destroy itself." The Plug-In City
A continuous fight between
the world we have and the world we want The Instant City Pompidou Centre Museum, Paris Pompidou Centre Museum, Paris Kunsthaus Graz Museum, Austria Kunsthaus Graz Museum, Austria Kunsthaus Graz Museum, Austria