<p>Motivated
by the urgency of the challenges we all now face - environmental, social and
economic - young architects in Aotearoa are inventing new, alternative forms of
practice. </p>
<p> </p>
<p>In September and October 2019, <i>Making Ways: Alternative </i><i>architectural practice
in Aotearoa</i> took place at Objectspace gallery, Auckland. Taking the format of a staged, live, rolling workshop of events, the
exhibition included four practices that have emerged in Aotearoa New Zealand in
response to this context. Through essays, interviews and photographs, this
volume documents and reflects upon the exhibition and contextualises the
impetus toward ‘alternative’ forms of practice it captured.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>If
normative architectural practice is the production of a building for a client,
set within market conditions, then ‘alternative’ implies a departure from this
in the way that architecture might be realised, and in the way architectural
knowledge might be employed. <i>Making Ways </i>seeks
to remind the reader that the practice of architecture – and the use of
architectural imagination and knowledge – is a practice of multiple alternatives,
and a diverse and locally inflected undertaking. The exhibition was and the book is invested
in the diversity of architectural voices and operations that enable a lively
local architectural discipline to contribute meaningfully to the broader
cultural space it is part of.</p>
Funding
Warren Trust
University of Auckland, Faculty of Creative Arts and Industries