A blur forms in Switzerland

This post appeared in a previous blog and is here for posterity’s sake.

The blur building forms, then dissapates.

“The building doesn’t suggest new construction techniques,” said Usman Haque of Pletts Haque, a British architectural interaction design firm. “It proposes new ways of thinking about architecture, opening up our minds to what architecture can be. More and more, people are realizing that architectural design doesn’t involve just bricks and sticks and static forms, that it doesn’t need to have specific boundaries.
“It also makes us question where lies the difference between architecture and non-architecture … and if there is no difference, then what is architecture? It’s a question that has been turned around and around throughout the last 30 or 40 years.”