Mackintosh School of Architecture / MArch by Conversion / Jack Garvin / Kilnamara, The Shape of Our Time

Kilnamara, The Shape of Our Time

The thesis argues for a slow, circular architecture—a progressive spatial practice that places the forensic documentation and psychological engagement with a building and its objects as agents for creation. Driven by ecology, economy, and emotion, this argument positions the material cultures of place as a critical, ethical site for future works, advocating for care and continuity in the inhabited environment. The research methodology takes an archaeological and ethnographic approach, moving through the study of things to the study with things.  Drawing from Sarah Pink’s Doing Sensory Ethnography, Bruno Latour’s Actor-Network Theory and Jules David Prown’s Mind in Matter I document – and interact with – the whole through its parts in a manner that abandons the binary divide between subjective experience and objective data. The result is a meticulous sensory depiction of the net loft in transition, to test how the theoretical attitudes I have developed through my studies may manifest in practice. The project is realised as a multi-modal triptych of film, drawing and publication but is to be continued (beyond submission) through a self build experiment that will involve the physical deconstruction of the structure, where every element and object will be forensically catalogued before being recomposed.

Video & Sound: The video (and associated soundtrack) engages the viewer, documents the essential sensory context and layers lived experience over the place as found.

Hand Drawing (1:10): A comprehensive record of the existing as network is presented as a top-down 1:10 X-Ray Isometric drawing. Future uses are projected above in bottom-up projection with the inflection point at eye level in order to achieve a dynamic spatial representation.

The Journal: Elected for its analytical rigour and accessibility, this format translates the project into a democratic, instructional publication for the layman/woman. Adapted in format from a Repair Manual to a Restorying Journal this publication is to be continually referred to in future remaking works.

Hand Drawing (1:10)

900m x 1400mm

Video & Sound
Exhibition