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Architecture Against Architecture

A Manifesto

Reinier De Graaf

$42.99

Hardback

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English
Verso Books
24 March 2026
Architecture, as we know it, may be coming to an end, and architects only have themselves to blame. The profession is out of touch, refusing to acknowledge the changes in the conditions that they work, or to reflect on how they go about doing their job. In Architecture Against Architecture, Reinier de Graaf sets out a 14-point manifesto of what needs to be done to revolutionise architecture for the 21st century.

With wit and insight, De Graaf anatomises the future of the profession and calls for the end the era of the Staritect. How architects should unionise. Why there should be a mandatory retirement age of 67. That building should not be copyrighted. How to use AI in practise. At the same time, he looks at the economics and politics of design. He offers strategies of why we should stop building. That architects should design to adapt to climate change rather than to mitigate it. To reuse rather than demolish. And the vital question of whether an architect can refuse a project on moral grounds.

This book will provoke and challenge readers. De Graaf wants to rebuild architecture from the ground up and make it relevant again.
By:  
Imprint:   Verso Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 210mm,  Width: 140mm,  Spine: 21mm
Weight:   353g
ISBN:   9781804299036
ISBN 10:   1804299030
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Replaced By:   9781804299043
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reinier de Graaf (1964, Schiedam) is a Dutch architect and writer. He is a partner in the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA), where he leads projects in Europe, Russia and the Middle East. Reinier is the co-founder of OMA's think-tank AMO and Sir Arthur Marshall Visiting Professor of Urban Design at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of Four Walls and a Roof: The Complex Nature of a Simple Profession, Architect, verb.: The New Language of Building and the novel The Masterplan. He lives in Amsterdam.

Reviews for Architecture Against Architecture: A Manifesto

Following the diagnosis that 'the architecture profession is at war with the present', Reinier de Graaf calls for disarmament and conscientious objection in his manifesto Architecture Against Architecture. With a touch of anarchism, this work is an absolute must-read and perfectly timely. -- Arno Brandlhuber, b+ and HouseEurope! De Graaf has often been adept at pointing out the foibles of contemporary architectural practice, but this is a far more direct provocation. Going beyond playful observation and witty turn of phrase, Architecture against Architecture is an often hilarious but excoriating description of the state we're in and a timely and urgent call to arms. 'Arise ye architects from your slumber' indeed! -- Ingrid Schröder, Director of the Architectural Association, London Kicking off with a punch, Reinier de Graaf urges readers to unlearn and reimagine architecture's role in modernity. With wit, insight, and vulnerability, he crafts a sharp, fact-driven argument that deepens our understanding of practice, academia, and the climate crisis-an essential, provocative read for all shaping the built environment. -- Tosin Oshinowo, Oshinowo Studio A much-needed reality check to the popular image of the master architect at his drawing desk. Grounded in his own personal professional experience, De Graaf poses an incisive, self-reflective and unfiltered challenge to architects - one a entertaining as it is unsettling. -- Maria Lisogorskaya, Assemble We stand with Reinier de Graaf's Architecture Against We Architecture in its call: Demolishing buildings is a mistake, a huge waste and a violent act for those who live there and those who built them. Stop talking about sustainability if we are not able to reuse, repair, transform or improve what already exists. -- Anne Lacaton & Jean Philippe Vassal One of the great services an insider in the establishment can grant to everyone else is to become a mole, giving away power's secrets. As this book proves, Reinier de Graaf has become one of our great contemporary moles, burrowing through buildings into the world of the 21st century oligarchy, so as to reveal to the rest of us those weak spots we could strike in order to collapse the entire edifice -- Owen Hatherley, author of <i>The Alientation Effect</i> A wake-up call for the architectural profession. In an era marked by environmental degradation, political instability, and technological disruption, architecture faces a profound crisis of relevance - if not legitimacy. De Graaf argues that the discipline must undergo a fundamental re-examination - not merely adapting to change, but redefining its very premises. -- Nikolaus Hirsch, Director of CIVA Brussels and editor of e-flux Architecture With equal amounts of sarcasm, facts and figures, and thoughtful reflections, de Graaf presents a necessary and a well-documented recount of the history of architecture and the path that led us here-a moment in which the discipline feels captive to its own contradictions. A call for attention that is not exempt of provocative suggestions for a radical course of action. -- Ethel Baraona Pohl, dpr-barcelona ...grapples with hard truths. And there's no easy fix. We cannot take agency unless we fix ourselves. Engaged, angry, and dark at times. De Graaf is making a powerful call to humility. -- Sam Chermayeff, Sam Chermayeff Office Architecture Against Architecture presents a lucid critique of the architecture profession's delusional self-image. With forensic precision and a dark humour, de Graaf exposes the contradictions between architectural ideals and their real-world entanglements. Obligatory reading for anyone interested in the present and future of architectural discourse. -- Jack Self, Editor-in-Chief Real Review To be clear, Architecture Against Architecture is not a hopeful book.it is a lucid one. Its ambition lies not in charting a new future, but in insisting that the old one is no longer tenable. Whether the profession can endure the level of introspection the book demands remains an open question. What de Graaf makes clear is that the time for debunking myths has passed. What remains is the harder task of deciding what, if anything, architecture is willing to give up to persist at all. That this question is posed from within one of the world's most influential architectural practices only sharpens its force. The manifesto does not arrive from the margins. It comes from the center-and it is addressed, uncomfortably, to everyone still standing there. As such, Architecture Against Architecture stands as a must-read for architects willing to confront not just their image, but the costs of continuing to defend it. -- Erick Villagomez * Spacing Vancouver *


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