Fantastic video and insight! Thanks for including me in the process. It was a great conversation that sparked a fury of new questions and ideas that I'm excited to pursue. It was also just cool to meet one of my youtube idols! Great work as always.
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
thanks for being my guide!!
@PhotonBeast5 ай бұрын
Aw man! Cool KZbin dads collab!
@Latexasends5 ай бұрын
I thought l these were the same ppl
@RoelfvanderMerwe5 ай бұрын
Hahahahahahaha @@Latexasends
@donlikejohn5 ай бұрын
@stewarthicks is the barbican in London utopian in its essence do you think? I wonder if when the project was built, it may have subscribed to the kind of fantasy that FLW was proposing with his idea of the decentralised city.
@onemorechris5 ай бұрын
i really like the way you have filmed yourself talking to the laptop when on a video call rather than cutting to grainy screen capture 👌
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
stewart was nice enough to offer it without my even asking!
@ikeyshuster98015 ай бұрын
Same! I noticed this as well
@misterscottintheway5 ай бұрын
@@PhilEdwardsInc the benefit of working with other KZbinrs
@kraanialepsy5 ай бұрын
When videographer can’t stand that low res webcam and laptop mic😂
@jarupongch5 ай бұрын
Frank Lloyd Wright's Broadacre and Le Corbusier's plan for Paris should be a prime example of never let an architect perform city planning. Personally, I think their plan should be taken as self-expression of Architect's personality and world view. But never shall be taken as something literal. Also, there seems to be a trend for famous architects to have this grand vision of "Utopia" in their own top-down view with little to no regards to actual human living, and how a society functions. *cough cough Brasillia*
@purplebrick1315 ай бұрын
@@jarupongch as a city planner: this, this so so much. Architecture is a different discipline for a reason
@AmitGupta-lx4gu5 ай бұрын
Chandigarh is pretty nice
@TheNinetySecond4 ай бұрын
Completely agree. I'm always struck with the utter disregard for what actually goes on in the real world - Jan Gehl's famous, but positively banal concept of "life between the buildings". In my studies with urban planning, I've yet to find a real life example of the material qualities of a house or even a district trumping the immaterial qualities of how people live there. Collectives, associations, even HOAs or municipalities tend to have a large influence on how people shape their day-to-day, and the collective consciousness that permeates it all is usually so much more influential than any given physical structure. Sure, material factors such as cars (noise, pollution, physical danger) can have a strong impact, just as ugly buildings can have an impact, but curiously, these things are very rarely what architect's attempt to treat. It's almost always lofty ideals of decentralization or optimization that are completely divorced from the lived and living reality of the people who would inhabit these worlds. If architects were meant to be planners, they would be taught to focus on humility, empathy and analysis, rather than creativity and bombastic egos.
@victorkreig60894 ай бұрын
You say that, and yet city planners have done nothing be insultingly bad jobs ever since it was an actual career with a name. Literally every city worth a damn are only like that because the designs are over 500 years old and therefore everything has had to work within those frameworks instead of being made by city planners who would have undoubtedly ruined them if given the room
@TalwinderDhillonTravels4 ай бұрын
@@AmitGupta-lx4gu if you are in car lol
@ger1285 ай бұрын
It looks like Wright made a laundry list of personal gripes with modern cities (wires, traffic, streetcars) and made a plan to get rid of all of them
@nicrule44245 ай бұрын
I think you nailed it. He focused on changing things he didn’t like without much regard for why they were that way in the first place. "Slums? Just don't have them."
@mfaizsyahmi5 ай бұрын
@@nicrule4424 Flank Lloyd Wright: "Just don't be poor lmao"
@tonycosta33025 ай бұрын
The reason we have poor people is because of bad architecture. Yeah, right. Architects have delusions of grandeur… in terms of their limited intellect.
@jspihlman5 ай бұрын
@@mfaizsyahmi or tall
@finleyhartley81635 ай бұрын
I constantly click on Stewart's videos thinking it is one of yours. Now I click yours and it is still Stewart Hicks! My brain can't handle it.
@Robin_Goodfellow5 ай бұрын
I knew I wasnt the only one!
@kutter_ttl67865 ай бұрын
A Phil Edwards, Stewart Hicks crossover? You just made my weekend even better!
@neuswanger5 ай бұрын
This!
@sevensaturn5 ай бұрын
It's the Deadpool vs. Wolverine of KZbin documentarians.
@miaxavier25135 ай бұрын
I love the awkward segment about what comment on to make on the {interesting] car design
@ain92ru5 ай бұрын
Subreddit r/theyknew is fitting, because of course he knew how the car looked like
@PhotonBeast5 ай бұрын
I mean, the design looks... distinct.
@colinneagle44955 ай бұрын
I dub it the "Overcompensator 3000"
5 ай бұрын
That thing looks like "The Ambiguously Gay Duo" car.
@merreborn5 ай бұрын
That was the first time I've ever full on belly laughed at a phil edwards video. I usually come here for insight and analysis, not world class comedy
@khill645 ай бұрын
The car bit killed me 🤣🤣
@CAPUSA5 ай бұрын
big dana carvey energy
@damonroberts73725 ай бұрын
FLW built a reputation for being ahead of his time... could it be that he satirized SUV drivers, before there were even SUVs?
@loconius5 ай бұрын
Oh my God, me too
@Kudos2685 ай бұрын
That inner monologue sounded like my anxiety 😅
@barrywainwright3391Ай бұрын
It's all part of him being a visionary
@colinneagle44955 ай бұрын
Let's just say, there's a reason why Frank Lloyd Wright is the top most famous architect, and not the most famous city planner. Also, is it just me, or does the central government skyscraper looming over rural neighborhood feel really like a panopticon style watchtower?
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
that's definitely how it felt to me! especially cause in some of his writings he basically acts like it'd be one person in charge.
@tuninggamer5 ай бұрын
@@PhilEdwardsInci wonder who he would put in charge…
@BuildNewTowns4 ай бұрын
That's what I was thinking. Like they wanted to be able to look down and see what everyone was doing.
@jtbDDOepMNNVIpk5 ай бұрын
Me: I’m not sure I’m interested in this topic. My brain: it’s Phil. You’ll like it. Me: in we go….
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
🫡
@ryanortega15115 ай бұрын
It’s like ‘Inside Out’.
@josav095 ай бұрын
I always forget the difference between a profesional and a professional that does KZbin until you get a nice shot with professional audio instead of a zoom call recording
@CooperSmithson5 ай бұрын
my new favorite minute of youtube: phil grappling with frank lloyd wright's *interesting* looking car
@jonreznick55315 ай бұрын
This is an epic crossover. I first clicked on one of your videos a few years ago because I thought from the thumbnail that it was a Stewart Hicks video LOL.
@SkylorBeck5 ай бұрын
The inner monologue about the car is gold. Love it.
@mulad5 ай бұрын
Broadacre City has been stuck in my mind ever since seeing a physical model of the idea as a teen back in the '90s, possibly at the Frank Lloyd Wright house in Oak Park, IL. As someone who had spent his life being shuttled around by parents in cars and wishing for a stronger sense of place and community, I saw that we did build something very similar in the 2nd half of the 20th century. Wright had a great talent for eye-catching building designs, but his ideas really fell apart at this sort of scale (though my architect uncle also didn't like Wright's roofs, which apparently get damaged and leak under Midwestern snow loads, so some degree of practicality was missing there too). Wright wasn't alone, as you note, since Le Corbusier and others also had ideas of spread-out cities rather than more compact, walkable ones. There are many suburbs out there that lack any real center, and I hope we work harder on undoing that going forward. It's perfectly possible to have amenities like community gardens on a much smaller, more granular scale than what Wright was thinking about. I can certainly see how people wanted to get away from the pollution emanating from cities through Wright's lifetime, but we have managed to make cities far cleaner than they were at that time, and we don't need to waste all that space
@warsawpacked4185 ай бұрын
I think you are right on. If you want to understand a person, ask them to design a utopia.
@crawkn5 ай бұрын
The common error of Utopias is that they are narrowly conceived. The part FLW got right was decentralization, which can allow for a significant variety of innovations, but it can't be done without some common public spaces and regulations. We are not exclusively independent nor purely collective creatures, we are both.
@lordmanatee4395 ай бұрын
This reinforces the idea that modern planners must use evidence based research and not design places upon the personal whims of mad geniuses.
@Vodhin5 ай бұрын
I don't know why you had such a problem describing what that car looked like. It's a hotdog in a hamburger bun. Nothing wrong with that...
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
yeah! exactly!
@ThellVallock5 ай бұрын
10:20 Honestly I look at that design and think "Oh hey someone made a motorcycle helmet for rats."
@farmboyjad5 ай бұрын
There's a deep, cruel irony inherent in Wright's top down, fully vertically integrated plans for a city that he envisioned as "decentralized". Like, my guy, you didn't decentralize at all, you just made yourself and your specific lifestyle choices the keystone of it all.
@jonathanjernigan38655 ай бұрын
The decentralization was physical, not political
@yanikkunitsin14665 ай бұрын
1:52 "No slum. No scum" well hello LA skidrow, SF campings, Bagota and Rio favellas, fentonyl avenue in Vancouver. It's not a choice.
@longiusaescius25375 ай бұрын
@yanikkunitsin1466 literally all government choices except Bogota, and Rio Brazilian government brought in cheap labor turned out to be an eternal money sink
@thomasdevine8675 ай бұрын
Jules Verne's Nautilus was supposed to be egalitarian. But most of the interior was taken up with Nemo's private suite. 19th century utopians couldn't seem to escape class.
@patlussenden45365 ай бұрын
When you mentioned marketing I wondered if architects design utopias like fashion designers do couture collections. They inform the design community of a studios design aesthetics. Then other studios borrow features, colors, and ideas to build the “Porte Perte” of every day housing, commercial structures etc..
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
that's a good analogy!
@kaitlyn__L5 ай бұрын
Oh, I see it now! The car looks like a snail! 🐌 😊 Also it’s so weird that he specified no landlords and no private ownership… but still has a mansion? For… presumably the guy who takes the place of the Mayor? As well as the Fancy Apartments and Workers Homes you mentioned.
@Kate-Breity14 күн бұрын
Just found you. This was only the second video I watched of yours. Legit laughed at the inner car design dialogue / decision angst section. Brilliant. What a fun “nugget” in the middle of it all. I hope there’s a follow up or Patreon or newsletter something delving into the car more.
@stevie7965 ай бұрын
Love how your production quality is steadily increasing. This is super nice fidelity. Feels good to watch.
@ImNotYourPal5 ай бұрын
I recently discovered your channel and I’m completely hooked on your content. Thank you very much for all these videos!
@mhldnkv5 ай бұрын
Wow! Great video! I have been following both of you guys for a while and I'm so glad you colaborated together! I hope to see more of these in depth analyses in the future! :) Thank you both!!
@Minikin13 күн бұрын
The driver's name is Richard. Solid video. Came across your channel recently and have been loving it.
@onemorechris5 ай бұрын
having always lived in very old cities like London (that’s spent over 1000 years of overlapping old and new)…. its still kind of odd to think of someone building a city from the ground up-from nothing to complete, regardless of the ideas within them. some odd ideas in here too
@kutter_ttl67865 ай бұрын
Could be worth exploring Brasilia. That's a good example of a city being built from scratch using modern (at the time) principals of city planning. I don't know enough about it to say how successful it's been, but it's certainly interesting.
@AlRoderick5 ай бұрын
You have examples of newly built communities designed to take the pressure off London in your own country, like Milton Keynes.
@onemorechris5 ай бұрын
@@AlRoderick Milton Keynes probably isn’t a shinning example
@AD_AP_T5 ай бұрын
I currently live in a ~150 year old "planned city". The main difference between it and a comparable "organic" city is that it's laid out in a way that's easier to navigate, and the roads are overall much better.
@JacobCarlson5 ай бұрын
So great to see Stewart in this video. I love both of your channels for very similar reasons, so it was great to see you both work together.
@SpudMackenzie26 күн бұрын
Oh nice, I'm always mixing you and Stewart Hicks up so this will be fun to follow.
@MarcioHuser5 ай бұрын
Lol, that car 🤣
@chaseism5 ай бұрын
This is the team up I am so fucking pumped to see! Two of my favorite KZbinrs together at last!
@NotIT5 ай бұрын
Ace and Gary called. They want their car back.
@jimurrata67855 ай бұрын
I definitely suggested this collab when you first started your channel. Well done, Phil! 👍
@rykleyruby16825 ай бұрын
Love the car segment
@mattshellback9258Ай бұрын
I loved the video, but I have to confess that the segment with the car was properly funny. How in the world you were able to handle it tactfully was an architectural editing feat in and of itself, respect.
@johncampbell43895 ай бұрын
Now I know where car from "Ambiguosly Gay Duo" came from.
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
ace and gary were big flw fans.
@johncampbell43895 ай бұрын
@@PhilEdwardsInc I wonder if the car for Ace n Gary was inspired by FLW but all but forgotten except for the subconscious mind.
@kedrprao5 ай бұрын
Phil's thumbnails always get the message across in a hilarious manner.
@fltof24 ай бұрын
“Maybe you can’t know who you want yourself to be until you imagine it.” What an amazing line! … Thank you for this thought, it comes at a point where I really needed it.
@TheAdventuresofRussell5 ай бұрын
If you want to look at the ideal city, you should look to his students. Walter and Marion Griffin did an amazing job with Canberra. Unfortunately our government got a bit arrogant and decided to do their own thing. So proud to be a Canberran all the same.
@mattfrank91203 ай бұрын
Your video popped up abd im hooked on your channel. I laughed way too much during the car interlude in the middle 😂
@philippeh65175 ай бұрын
Amazing how two KZbinrs that I've been watching for a long time, now appear together in a video!
@rjlangen5 ай бұрын
I've been watching your videos for a while now and I have to say you're production quality has gone up so much recently
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
ah thanks i appreciate it!
@axelprino5 ай бұрын
I wouldn't even have noticed that the car kinda looked like a you-know-what if it wasn't for that bit. To me at first glance it looked like a bicycle sit. BTW it never occurred that the designers behind these utopic cities might not really wanted to see them come to fruition but rather just used them as promotional stunts, but it does make a lot of sense. I always assumed it was an exercise more along the lines of a "if I had infinite resources" kind of thought.
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
i was totally on that page too
@BOABModels5 ай бұрын
Talking of rebuilding London, another great architect, Sir Christopher Wren wanted to redesign the city after the Great Fire in 1666. His ideas had broad boulevards radiating from his masterpiece, the new St Paul's cathedral. This would have given London a grid system which it never got - it was seen as too complex and expensive so Wren rebuilt St Pauls and 51 other churches but not London as a whole. Thanks for another interesting and expertly made video, Phil.
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
oh that's cool- thanks for that fact
@BOABModels5 ай бұрын
@@PhilEdwardsIncYou're welcome. Incidentally, the fantastic KZbinr Jay Foreman has done a series called Unfinished London all about the development of the British capital.
@sonny50685 ай бұрын
I love your channel so much Phil! Keep up the great work!
@AnonymousFreakYT5 ай бұрын
The thing is…. Not everyone wants the same thing. Some people *LOVE* living in dense cities. For them, an ultra dense city filled with easy public transit is utopia. Other people *HATE* dense cities, for them, Broadacre may very well be a utopia. For others, a cabin in the woods nowhere near anyone else is utopia.
@stevenolson39774 ай бұрын
True, but how many would be willing to live in such a low density setting while also paying for the true cost of utilities and infrastructure?
@delftfietser4 ай бұрын
One wonders why cities don't tax the suburban dwellers so as to cover the infrastructure costs. It seems like all city governments do this.
@lugi254 ай бұрын
Yeah but most people need to live in cities, for work. So why not make them better, since majority of ppl live in urban places.
@hunter85505 ай бұрын
Phil excellent vid, love your channel. Keep it up
@carspn15 ай бұрын
Me in the first few seconds: "wow this would be a perfect video to feature Stewart Hicks" Me, when @stewarthicks shows up: *di caprio point*
@SearchParty5 ай бұрын
What would you name your utopia, phil?
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
listen there's charm to philville but no need to fight philtopia. you?
@PhotonBeast5 ай бұрын
Phil... opolis? Phil...bourghs? Phil...hill? For a touch of English, Phil-on-Tyme. But maybe my favorite might be Philadelphia; that sounds like a real place.
@WanJae425 ай бұрын
Philistine?
@AlRoderick5 ай бұрын
Philadelphia
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
@@AlRoderick this has a certain ring to it
@HumbertoMassa5 ай бұрын
One question: have you ever researched Brasília?
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
i haven't but this video made me want to!
@TalwinderDhillonTravels4 ай бұрын
@@PhilEdwardsIncalso look into Chandigarh, India
@rocko444444445 ай бұрын
The internal converation is the best thing that I saw on the 'tube this week. :D Keep up the good work Phil!
@mikeklubnika5 ай бұрын
this one was exceptionally well edited
@Tulpen235 ай бұрын
Two of my favorite KZbinrs ❤
@walkerharris20435 ай бұрын
Nice to see the two people I keep mixing up when they pop up in my recommendations in one place.
@goldie8195 ай бұрын
That aside about the car got me good. Thanks for another informative and entertaining video
@p.j.wilkins13215 ай бұрын
I never knew that the design of Ace and Gary's car from the "The Ambiguously Gay Duo" was stolen.
@The_Sofa_King5 ай бұрын
A utopia is something to strive for while also acknowledging it is extremely unreachable. Especially cause the world is a chaotic mess.
@jkavja5 ай бұрын
The crossover episode I've been waiting on!
@gregh3785 ай бұрын
Holy moly, a Phil Edwards - Stewart Hicks colab. I had no idea i needed that
@NickRaven5 ай бұрын
It was so great when you showed us the Philcar and debated what to call it. So cute!
@socrmaster5 ай бұрын
Ah, Phil and Stewart are two different people! So much learning has occured. Lol
@cybersuitM5 ай бұрын
The aside in your mind about the car…😂 absolutely fire.
@knpark20255 ай бұрын
"This city is a masterpiece and a disaster. A Utopia and a Dystopia." I like this overview so much. A Utopia designed in the image that I want right now will not be a pleasant place to live even for myself 10 to 20 years into the future, let alone other people. Just like when Plato coined it in Ancient Greece, Utopia is maybe the most useful and the least atrocious when it is exclusively kept as an illustrative tool or a thought experiment. I won't want to live in such a sparse neighborhood myself, I am a Korean and I need to go out and buy a six-pack at 3 A.M. from a 24-hour convenience store within 3-minute walking distance. But I can still be fascinated and intriuged by an architect's preferences and values by looking at a his own version of a perfect city.
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
haha i like your 6 pack at 3 am example
@AndreVeloso5 ай бұрын
Broadacre reminds me of Brasília, capital of Brazil - a futuristic, car centric, spread out city built on a flat terrain in the middle of nowere in the 60's, with very similar concepts....
@EvenFilms5 ай бұрын
The car diversion made me laugh really hard. One of your best bits in a while. The content was fantastic here also, I love learning about architectural pipe dreams. I wonder if something like this was ever tried in the real world. Also, Stewart Hicks?!? So awesome to see him here. ❤
@eliasQ135 ай бұрын
It should be fun to have a Sims city of these utopia, so you could really experience what their ideas were. Nice video style again and a nice sequel to the FLW series
@JohnFoley17015 ай бұрын
FLW: You’re a waste of space Tall person: Well I wasn’t designed by an architect
@Brickzie5 ай бұрын
Favorite twins collab on a video?! Glad I didn't skip!
@Fey4184 ай бұрын
If you want to know what would have happened if such "utopia" were allowed to be built, look no further than Brasilia. I live in Brazil, and most Brazilians would curse if you dare say the biggest planned city of Brasilia is an utter failure in so many levels. It was built under a government who wanted to distance themselves from the "scums" of Rio de Janeiro (meaning they did not want to deal with protests from the commoners). They based every design on modernism with heavy use of what was so trendy at the time: tons and tons of concrete. Funny enough they needed the poor "scums" to build those heinous concrete buildings which would overheat in a tropical country begging for lots of air conditioning and ventilation. Those poor scums ironically ended up building dozens of slums around the city because their employer would not offer anywhere decent to sleep, and today those slums keep growing around an architectural "utopia" where its denizens were eager to flee from poor people in the first place. Some buildings keep begging for maintenance, modifications to modernize with todays living standards don't come cheap, and no one can live without an automobile. Similar narcissistic attempts are in progress in Egypt's new capital and Saudi Arabia's The Line. Cities are not meant to be drawn on a blank slate by child men. This doesn't mean we should not plan ahead, but any plan must take into account the real necessities of every citizen.
@ChristianBehnke5 ай бұрын
Stuart Hicks collab FTW! Love his channel.
@95keat5 ай бұрын
To be fair to the man, he did design this city in the 30s. The population and their requirements were a bit different then than today, almost one hundred years later. Not that he ever actually intended to make it. New york wouldnt build the first public subway until the year he first presented his plan for example.
@WalterBurton5 ай бұрын
The concept car. Cool video. 👍👍👍
@perrybarton5 ай бұрын
Interesting look at a plan I had never heard of, and it does shed some light on its designer's world view. Also, I've always thought that you and Stewart could pass for siblings, especially when you were rockin' the 'stache. Similar vocal timbre and delivery as well. 🤓
@Dev1nci5 ай бұрын
Ebenezer Howard worked on something similar. This vision was influential in my city with a street even named ‘Ebenezer’.
@KellenProctor5 ай бұрын
"Maybe you can't know who you want yourself to be... until you imagine it" good one Phil!!
@glennaa115 ай бұрын
I'm glad you touched on LeCorbusier - he was the first thing that came to my mind when the video started
@boazbrisker815 ай бұрын
Thank you for your work 🙏🏻
@pongop5 ай бұрын
Great video! I learned more about Wright and am thinking about utopias in an expanded view. I love utopia and utopias although they are problematic. But if we aim for perfect or at least far better, hopefully we'll end up at least a little better. If we imagine a better future, we can try to create it.
@joshcanavan36845 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this! A similar video on Buckminster Fuller’s “Old Man River’s City” project would be really interesting
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
oh i have been obsessed with figuring out a buckminster project
@0.0Seymour5 ай бұрын
One aspect of city planning that I hope people take into consideration is the standardization of roads. It annoys me to no end to go down a two-way lane road with lines, a shoulder, and a side-walk on one side; to then go down another another two-way lane road with with lines, no shoulder, and no side-walk. There are multiple other combinations but that is indeed the problem. Along with what an avenue truly is? or what is a boulevard? or what is a street? and so on and so on.
@nacoran5 ай бұрын
Great episode!
@felman875 ай бұрын
Ok, I'm 100% an idiot because, the entire time I'm thinking "He was an architect AND a composer?" I got Frank Lloyd Wright confused with Andrew Lloyd Webber.
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
his chandelier design was left wanting
@thomasdevine8675 ай бұрын
Actually, FLW did compose some tunes in his twenties. No one knows what they sounded like, and FLW said it was better for his reputation that way.
@ChicoEastridge5 ай бұрын
I never actually realized Stewart Hicks and Phil Edwards were different people until watching this video.
@ChicoEastridge5 ай бұрын
Although with editing and well timed shaving, this could just be next level gas lighting
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
no comment on the matter
@Matty0024 ай бұрын
humans: evolved over thousands of years from nomads to dense city dwellers architects: cities are clearly wrong. we must return to nomad because....
@PhilEdwardsInc4 ай бұрын
and then the cycle continues again....
@likebot.5 ай бұрын
Frank Lloyd Seuss designed that car full o' blindspots. The tires would be prohibitively expensive, not that there would be any way to power them in that design.
@michaelfay83975 ай бұрын
I'm from the area FLW is from so I've been aware of him and this for a long time. He was born just after the Civil War and grew up in the later part of the 1800s. To someone with that lifespan the buildings he was designing by 1900 and the rest of his life I figure were super-futuristic and looked like how spaceships do to us--lots of glass, long horizontal hovering roofs. Those are futuristic if what you grew up in was buildings built in the mid-1800s. It'd be like us trying to design what a city 50 years from now would look like. The big hot trend is work from home. Will it stay or is it passing? We can't tell what will happen. But then what if we then extrapolate that out and design a future "city" where most everyone works from home? It'd probably turn out strange and 50-100 years from now people would be living in cities that are very similar to what we have today thinking we went down a weird rabbithole designing super-spread out settlements. I'm not defending him or anything. He was really sharp and forward-looking on architecture so it's always been weird to see that his "ideal city" is like a proto-suburb with the worst aspects cranked up. I figure at the time in the 20s and 30s, the big trend people realized is that cars and transportation freed people from having to live directly next to each other and that was the central idea he latched on to.
@davebennett50695 ай бұрын
This was definitely part of the inspiration for the story "The Giver"
@brettito5 ай бұрын
That car bit was why I subscribe.
@janoswimpffen73055 ай бұрын
I recently visited Wingspan (Racine, Wisconsin) andwas once again struk by Wright's shortcomings, such s the angles ofthe roof leading to chronic leaks, including rain pouring onto the dining room table during an event hosting the state governor. While Wright's planned utopia was never built, there have been dozens of them that have come and gone throughout North Ameria. Often they are started by international or cross-continental emigrant groups and have some sort of cultural, social, or religious objective. I am quite familiar with two in my region; Freeland, Washington and Sointula, Briitsh Columbia. Both are on islands; Whidbey in the fomer case (~midway between Seattle and Vancouver) and Malcolm Island in the latter (very ysmall island off of the remote northern part of Vancouver Island). Both flourished around the turn of the last century. Sointula was founded by a Finnish group and older homes still exhibit some Finnish architetctural quirks. Little of the original design remains in Freeland. Thse two, and quite possibly most, utopias seem to only last a bit longer than a generation. Maintianing a utopia requires a stultifying amount of homogenity of behavior and norms which often alientates younger people once they begin to discover the wider world.
@tomaszprzetacznik78025 ай бұрын
My father was an architect, and before I got into graphic design, I considered going into architecture, I still have soft spot for architecture. Anyway, there used to be a good practice where, when designing large architectural layout like whole districts intended to be varied projects, one architect should not design everything-from the urban layout to the buildings, interiors, and even the details like furniture. Different people/teams should design the master plan and sample housing estates, while someone else should handle the main street layouts, and yet another architect should work on the further developments, and so on. The same goes for teams-everyone should do their part to avoid repetition. This was before the days of CAD.
@Curiouscrazy5 ай бұрын
The collaboration I always knew would happen, I've always felt you and Stewert Hicks had a very similar style in some way.
@Michael-j4h5 ай бұрын
I worked for Oneida Ltd . They started out as a religious Utopian community that practiced perfectionism and communalism .
@dotheherPyDerpy5 ай бұрын
Thanks for this short video essay! It makes so much sense to me that the conception of a utopia (as a creation) encompasses so many different purposes. I wonder if anyone has made a "utopia" model that uses AI to exaggerate the most "desirable" traits we would aspire to have in a city, if only as an exercise to identify what could be feasible amongst the mountain of requirements.
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
somebody train a simcity asap!
@Tchicka45 ай бұрын
I'm from a town close to Cloquet, Minnesota and have driven by that gas station many times. I knew it was a FLW designed building but never understood the context of why he would design a gas station of all things (before your video). It's crazy to imagine how grand he was thinking.
@QuestionMan5 ай бұрын
At first I thought: "Wow, Phil is going deep into a pricey, hardcore beer. What don't I know about this?"
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
if only!
@ryanortega15115 ай бұрын
What beer would you like?
@QuestionMan5 ай бұрын
@@ryanortega1511 Given the subject, I should say 'Utopias', but just can't bring myself to request it. It's expensive, but not among my favorites.
@throttleblip15 ай бұрын
Shaft mobile lol those phone dial wheels
@PhilEdwardsInc5 ай бұрын
for the longest time i thought this was a new cell phone company i hadn't heard of haha