Weekend Times


Google Workspace

Business News

Architecture isn’t neutral. It’s been shaping political power for millennia

  • Written by Kim Dovey, Professor of Architecture and Urban Design, The University of Melbourne

Among his other ongoing projects, US President Donald Trump has spent much of his second term on a renovation[1]. The Oval Office has been converted into a miniature palace festooned with gold bling, the rose garden has been paved over, a triumphal arch is planned and the new ballroom will be larger than the White House.

Why bother turning Washington into a royal “court”? Well, architecture makes a big difference to the ways power is practised and courted.

While it’s easy to see buildings and public spaces as somewhat neutral or superficial, it’s not. Like the frame of a painting, it frames the spaces in which politics takes place, both literally and symbolically.

The spaces and symbols of power work together to choreograph the action and shape the narrative. We can see this throughout architectural history. Here are some global examples.

Invisible power

The Forbidden City[2] in Beijing is a nested set of walled and gated precincts with multiple courtyards, within which the Emperor was largely hidden from public view.

Here, power was sustained by being invisible.

A tall wall in China with a large portrait of a man
Chairman Mao features prominently on Tiananmen gate. Author provided, Author provided (no reuse)

When the five-year-old Tongzhi was crowned in 1861, his mother, the Empress Dowager Cixi, placed him on a throne in front of a thin curtain and governed from behind it[3].

Everyone knew what was going on, but the legitimating imagery was crucial as Cixi ruled China for more than 40 years through two child emperors.

The revolution brought new imagery. The Forbidden City was opened to the people as a museum, Mao appeared on Tiananmen gate (where his image remains), and the vast Tiananmen Square was created as the antithesis of the closed courtyard.

Party elites moved into the Zhongnanhai compound next door, but there is no presidential palace, nor any consensus on where the current president lives.

Power through surveillance

Topkapi Palace in Istanbul, now also a museum, was home to Sultans of the Ottoman empire from the 15th to 19th centuries.

There is much fascination with the ways the sultan’s quarters and harem were designed to manage complex interrelations between eunuchs, wives, concubines and slaves, and with the beautifully designed audience halls and courtyards.

A white tower with a pointed roof overlooks an ornate Turkish palace
The Tower of Justice loomed large, whether the Sultan was sitting in it or not. Nicole Ashley Rahayu Densmoor/Pexels[4]

The tallest building is the Tower of Justice, which is located between the Sultan’s quarters and the Imperial Council Chamber, through which the sultan ruled the empire.

From within it the sultan could sit behind a golden grill placed high in the wall of the chamber. He could overhear and oversee council discussions without being seen.

Architecture isn’t neutral. It’s been shaping political power for millennia The Sultan could listen to the council from behind the grill, unseen. Author provided, Author provided (no reuse)

Here, the building becomes an agent of power without the presence of the sultan. The councillors must act as if he were there.

This is the panoptic power of surveillance that has morphed more broadly into the surveillance state[5] and surveillance capitalism[6].

Telling stories

The Palace at Versailles[7] was where Louis XIV retreated as his empire declined in the late 17th century.

The building was designed around a ceremonial route as visitors were led through a sequence of salons, named as planets (Venus, Mars and Mercury) as they approached the Sun King (Apollo).

The route then turned at the Salon of War, to enter the vast Hall of Mirrors. The view across manicured gardens produced an illusion of control over nature, which ever way one looked.

Architecture isn’t neutral. It’s been shaping political power for millennia Versailles’ Hall of Mirrors is among the most famous (and visited) examples of power through opulence. Myrabella/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA[8][9]

Hitler’s Chancellery in Berlin[10] was modelled on Versailles, but designed to dwarf it.

The approach to the chancellor’s office was a long promenade from a Court of Honour, through a sequence of Greek, Roman and Nazi styled chambers to a vast and empty “Hall of Marble”. The marble was not just for looking at, as Hitler put it, visitors “should have practice in moving on a slippery surface”.

A black and white image of a large long hall made of reflective marble Both the material and the size of the Hall of Marble exerts power. Hoffmann/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA[11][12]

The chancellor’s office was mostly notable for its size: about 400 square metres. The Oval Office is just 75 square metres.

Both Versailles and the Chancellery were extremes of legitimating architecture, produced when the regime was fragile, whether at the end or the beginning of the empire.

If there is a thread connecting these examples, it’s that the trappings of power have an inverse relation to its legitimacy: the over-production of buildings and bling suggest a regime lacks credibility.

The corollary, however, does not hold. There is no ideal state where the trappings of power dissolve. Buildings are expensive and have great inertia, so most new leaders adopt the pre-existing centres of power along with the embodied legitimacy.

The British prime minister lives and works in a terrace house where the legitimating narrative lies in the idea of a house in “common” with its neighbours − number ten, first among equals.

The black door and brick exterior of 10 Downing Street in London While a nice terrace house, the British prime minister’s house is a lot more humble than many official residences. Lukas Coch/AAP[13]

Mythological power

One of the earliest centres of power is the Minoan “palace” of Knossos (1900–1375 BCE), in Crete.

The plan is in the form of a labyrinth, replete with corridors. All passages through the building are convoluted, and at its heart is a huge courtyard of unknown function (roughly the size of the proposed White House ballroom).

How power was practised at Knossos remains a mystery. There is little evidence of any king or queen, nor of the relative power of men and women, but it worked for about 500 years.

These ruins were famously a source for the later Greek myth of King Minos who had his architect Daedelus design a labyrinth to hide the big family secret: the half-bull, half-man figure of the minotaur.

According to this myth, the building worked by producing ignorance about how to get in or out, and by hiding a truth that can’t be told.

Of course, this is just a myth. But the architecture of power is built on mythologies of those who commission them.

Architecture embodies, hides and naturalises the politics of power, for better or worse.

References

  1. ^ a renovation (www.abc.net.au)
  2. ^ Forbidden City (www.taylorfrancis.com)
  3. ^ governed from behind it (www.scmp.com)
  4. ^ Nicole Ashley Rahayu Densmoor/Pexels (www.pexels.com)
  5. ^ surveillance state (www.tandfonline.com)
  6. ^ surveillance capitalism (www.google.com.au)
  7. ^ Palace at Versailles (www.taylorfrancis.com)
  8. ^ Myrabella/Wikimedia Commons (commons.wikimedia.org)
  9. ^ CC BY-SA (creativecommons.org)
  10. ^ Chancellery in Berlin (www.taylorfrancis.com)
  11. ^ Hoffmann/Wikimedia Commons (commons.wikimedia.org)
  12. ^ CC BY-SA (creativecommons.org)
  13. ^ Lukas Coch/AAP (photos.aap.com.au)

Authors: Kim Dovey, Professor of Architecture and Urban Design, The University of Melbourne

Read more https://theconversation.com/architecture-isnt-neutral-its-been-shaping-political-power-for-millennia-267742

The Weekend Times Magazine

Who Can Install A Private Power Pole?

Private power poles provide property owners with the freedom to choose where electricity will enter the building. It also offers protection from hazards associated with being directly connected to the...

A Modern Approach to Superannuation: SMSF Setup Online

For Australians seeking greater control over their retirement savings, self-managed superannuation funds (SMSFs) remain an attractive option. Today, advances in digital platforms have streamlined the process, making SMSF setup online faster...

Why You Should Hire an Agent When Shopping For a Luxury Home

Many home buyers find themselves in a conundrum when they think about buying a luxury property. They're excited to shop for such an amazing home, but overwhelmed by the amount...

The Importance of Professional Heating and Cooling Installation: A Guide for Homeowners

When it comes to maintaining a comfortable home, the importance of heating and cooling installation cannot be overstated. Whether you're looking to stay warm during cold winters or cool off...

Wedding DJ vs Live Band: Which Is the Right Choice for Your Wedding?

Choosing the right music for your wedding is one of your most important decisions. Music has the power to set the mood, create memorable moments, and ensure your guests have...

Ben & Jerry’s launches ‘next-level ice cream’ phenomenon

Get ready, ice cream fans – a new ice cream revolution is coming to Australian shores! Ben & Jerry’s is today officially launching its new range of flavours to the...

The Aussie Man Launches Debut Range of Men’s Grooming Products

Brand new Australian made men’s skincare company The Aussie Man has today announced the launch of their new range of organic skincare.  The Aussie Man uses hero natural ingredients such as...

Strong Australia panel interview with Kieran Gilbert

Kieran Gilbert, chief news anchor Sky News: The Business Council of Australia continued its Strong Australia series today. This time the spotlight on the city of Wagga. How are regional cities...

Australia’s top economists oppose the next increases in compulsory super: new poll

The five consecutive consecutive hikes in compulsory super contributions due to start next July should be deferred or abandoned in the view of the overwhelming majority of the leading Australian...

hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink สล็อตเว็บตรงbets10주소모음 주소모아pusulabetcasibom girişcasibomแทงหวย24casibom girişbetsmovejojobetgiftcardmall/mygiftsitus slot gacorGalabetsiti casino non aamssiti casino non aamsAnkara EscortpusulabetBest eSIM for Caribbean Cruisemigliore app scommessematbet girişmatbetartemisbetbetasusjojobetpusulabetjojobetsonbahispusulabet girişcratosroyalbet girişpusulabetgiftcardmall/mygiftmamibet logintimebetpusulabetcasibom girişjojobetbetnanopusulabetprimebahismarsbahisjojobet girişbets10vaycasinocasibomcasibomprimebahisvdcasinoPusulabetbetcioonwin girişpusulabetbetwoonmarsbahisjojobetkiralık hackerporncasibomgalabetmarsbahiscasibomdeposit 5000matbetultrabet girişcasibomcasibom girişsahabettipobetalgototojojobetsahabettipobet