Abundance Not Capital

The Lively Architecture of Anupama Kundoo

What if architecture were not an instrument of capital? How to imagine and build a non-extractivist and non-exploitative architecture.

Capital’s voracious appetite forces architecture into a regime of “never enough.” The current realities of building involve extraction and exploitation, which, in turn, cause climate breakdown, environmental ruin, alienated labor conditions, and the destruction of local construction knowledge. But what if we could do architecture differently? What does non-extractivist architecture look like?

In this book, Angelika Fitz and Elke Krasny introduce the concept of abundance to call for a paradigm shift in architecture. Using as its example the exceptional work of architect Anupama Kundoo, this book shows that non-extractivist and non-exploitative architecture is undeniably possible. Kundoo, born in Pune, India, weaves together innovative technological experimentation and traditional crafts. With careful consideration of local resources, building skills, climate, and environment, she makes buildings that embody spatial beauty and graceful materiality.

Abundance Not Capital is a manifesto for creating a future-forward, alternative architecture.

Contributors: Shumi Bose, Jordan Carver, Peggy Deamer, Madhavi Desai, Angelika Fitz, Rupali Gupte, Ranjit Hoskote, Elke Krasny, Charlotte Malterre-Barthes, Shannon Mattern, and Laurie Parsons.

Copublished with Architekturzentrum Wien.
Introduction
Angelika Fitz and Elke Krasny
Abundance, not Capital
On the work of Anupama Kundoo
Angelika Fitz and Elke Krasny
Essays
All essays are newly commissioned; all titles are working titles.
1. Peggy Deamer: Architecture and Capital
2. Laurie Parson: Building Carbon Colonialism
3. Jordan Carver: Conditions of Labor in the Building Industry
4. Charlotte Malterre-Barthes (t.b.c.): Against Extraction
5. Manu Goswami: From Colonial Economies to National Space
6. Ranjit Hoskote: Modernist Utopias: Urbanism in India
7. Madhavi Desai: Women Architects in India
8. Nancy Adajania: Affective Relations with the More-than-Human
9. Shumi Bose: Making Homes
10. Shannon Matter: Practicing Maintenance in Architecture
11. Rupali Gupte: Imaginaries and Realities of Care
12. Elke Krasny: Liberating Abundance: Soothing Spaces for Dreaming, Resting, and Healing
Appendix
Illustrated list of selected works
About Anupama Kundoo
About the authors and editors
Bibliography
Index
Imprint

About

What if architecture were not an instrument of capital? How to imagine and build a non-extractivist and non-exploitative architecture.

Capital’s voracious appetite forces architecture into a regime of “never enough.” The current realities of building involve extraction and exploitation, which, in turn, cause climate breakdown, environmental ruin, alienated labor conditions, and the destruction of local construction knowledge. But what if we could do architecture differently? What does non-extractivist architecture look like?

In this book, Angelika Fitz and Elke Krasny introduce the concept of abundance to call for a paradigm shift in architecture. Using as its example the exceptional work of architect Anupama Kundoo, this book shows that non-extractivist and non-exploitative architecture is undeniably possible. Kundoo, born in Pune, India, weaves together innovative technological experimentation and traditional crafts. With careful consideration of local resources, building skills, climate, and environment, she makes buildings that embody spatial beauty and graceful materiality.

Abundance Not Capital is a manifesto for creating a future-forward, alternative architecture.

Contributors: Shumi Bose, Jordan Carver, Peggy Deamer, Madhavi Desai, Angelika Fitz, Rupali Gupte, Ranjit Hoskote, Elke Krasny, Charlotte Malterre-Barthes, Shannon Mattern, and Laurie Parsons.

Copublished with Architekturzentrum Wien.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Angelika Fitz and Elke Krasny
Abundance, not Capital
On the work of Anupama Kundoo
Angelika Fitz and Elke Krasny
Essays
All essays are newly commissioned; all titles are working titles.
1. Peggy Deamer: Architecture and Capital
2. Laurie Parson: Building Carbon Colonialism
3. Jordan Carver: Conditions of Labor in the Building Industry
4. Charlotte Malterre-Barthes (t.b.c.): Against Extraction
5. Manu Goswami: From Colonial Economies to National Space
6. Ranjit Hoskote: Modernist Utopias: Urbanism in India
7. Madhavi Desai: Women Architects in India
8. Nancy Adajania: Affective Relations with the More-than-Human
9. Shumi Bose: Making Homes
10. Shannon Matter: Practicing Maintenance in Architecture
11. Rupali Gupte: Imaginaries and Realities of Care
12. Elke Krasny: Liberating Abundance: Soothing Spaces for Dreaming, Resting, and Healing
Appendix
Illustrated list of selected works
About Anupama Kundoo
About the authors and editors
Bibliography
Index
Imprint
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