The election and inauguration of Donald J. Trump as the president of the
United States of America have provoked an unprecedented intensity of
reflection in virtually all academic disciplines. The professions of
architecture and planning, faced with the phenomenon of a
self-proclaimed "builder-in-chief," have found themselves facing a
series of fundamental questions, both old and new. How should we think,
teach, and practice under a developer presidency? What sort of walls
will we and won't we choose to build? What are our commitments of
critical thought, and what obligations should we turn our energies
toward?
The essays gathered in And Now explore the nature of architecture's
many long-standing complicities. Architecture coordinates colossal
expenditures (of material, of energy); it scripts forms of labor (in its
construction, in its operation, and in the programs it houses); and it
is both a repository and generator of capital. Architecture
participates, centrally, in defining modes of life, whether for the
privileged or the dispossessed--designing and building the boundaries
between the "haves" and the "have-nots." This fundamental reality of
architectural practice need not inspire either nihilism or defensiveness
but should rather be understood, quite simply, as the terrain we
navigate. Naming these complicities and the injustices they perpetuate
is a first step toward addressing them.