Abstract:
Metamorphic architecture is the architecture of evolution. It adapts and transforms as the requirements of the user dictate, much as a living thing will adapt to its physical surroundings.
This report asks about the relevance of such a dynamic architecture in todays environment of rapid change. It is put that despite the ever-accelerating rate of change that society today is subject to, modern architecture is simply not keeping pace: architects continue to design innappropriately static memorials to the past which fail to respond to the change that every other aspect of life is subject to.
This investigation into the relevance of metamorphic architecture today takes the form firstly of a discussion into the concept of 'change'. The history and roots of forms of metamorphism in architecture are looked at, and several precedents set by the proponents of metamorphic architecture during the 60s are documented and discussed. In the light of the experiences and lessons of that period, the implications and impact of temporary and adaptable architecture on society are considered and related to todays situation.
Hence this document can be summed up as an investigation into the force of change in society and how that force impacts on architecture and the built environment.