Changing the Rules

Architecture is about to enter its first magical phase: a time when buildings actively co-operate with their inhabitants; when objects know what they are, where they are, what is near them; when social and physical space lose their tight coupling; when walls and partitions change with mood and task. As engineers and scientists explore how to digitise the world around us, the classical constraints of design, ruled so long by the physics of space, time, and material, are starting to crumble. Documents can be laid down in one place, automatically cloned, and a copy picked up in another. Meetings scheduled for 9am to l0am can be joined by latecomers at noon, who then participate in a captured form of the event and are ’edited into’ the past. People on the West coast of the USA can participate, in a telepresent way, with their colleagues on the East coast, and hold a meeting against a virtual backdrop, such as a production line in their Taiwanese factory. Walls can seem to dematerialise, remote objects can be touched virtually, reshaped, passed through one another. Technology is moving inexorably so that being in