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      Hannah Wood is an architect and writer currently based in Tanzania, East Africa. She received her Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Sheffield in the UK and Master of Architecture from the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts. Wood’s ongoing ‘Futures’ column for online publication Archinect is widely followed within the industry, the column explores technological developments set to shape the architectural profession in the coming decades.

       James Boden

      James Boden is a current student of the Master of Architecture programme at the University of Melbourne. Boden holds a Bachelor of Design in Architecture from the University of Sydney. In the past, he has worked for Candalepas Associates. Boden is interested in modest design approaches to housing and affordability and in channelling appropriate materiality that is both sustainable and endemic to its location.

       John Paul Rysavy

      John Paul Rysavy is an architect and collaborator in the design and research practice And-Either-Or. He worked with SHoP Architects, Will Bruder, Brian MacKay-Lyons, and David Heymann. He was a visiting scholar at the American Academy in Rome, the Charles Moore Foundation, and the Alvar Aalto Foundation. Rysavy is a recipient of the Stewardson Keefe LeBrun Grant from the Center for Architecture Foundation, the Francis J. Plym Fellowship from the Illinois School of Architecture, and the Richard Rogers Fellowship from the Harvard Graduate School of Design. He served as a guest critic at various academic institutions and held teaching positions at the University of Texas.

       Jonathan A. Scelsa

      Jonathan A. Scelsa is an architect and partner in the cross-disciplinary practice opAL. Scelsa’s design work has been supported by the New York State Council of the Arts, the Architectural League of New York, and the American Academy in Rome as the recipient of the Mark Hampton Rome Prize in Design. He was the co-editor of the book The Function of Style. Before founding op.AL, Jonathan practiced with Foreign Office Architects, Hashim Sarkis Studios, Smith-Miller and Hawkinson, and Bohlin Cywinski Jackson. Scelsa has taught at the University of Pennsylvania, Rhode Island School of Design, Pratt Institute, and the Harvard Graduate School of Design.

       Lachlan Welsh

      Lachlan Welsh holds a Bachelor of Environments in Architecture from the University of Melbourne and is currently working at DesignInc in Melbourne. His design work explores the ways in which digital design technologies can pair with architectural theory and history to generate new formal outcomes.

       Olympia Nouska

      Olympia Nouska is an architect based in Copenhagen and a teaching assistant for the Master programme: Political Architecture: Critical Sustainability at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture. Nouska is a founding member of By•Works, an architectural collective engaged in exploring the social and political implications of architectural materiality.

       Sir Peter Cook

      Sir Peter Cook is a graduate of the Bournemouth College of Art and the Architectural Association (AA) in London. Professor Cook has been a pivotal figure within the architectural world for 50 years. He is one of the founding members of the Archigram Group, who were jointly awarded the Royal Gold Medal by the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) in 2004. In 2007 he received a knighthood for his services to architecture. In 2011 he was granted an honorary Doctorate of Technology by the University of Lund.

       Sean Godsell

      Sean Godsell holds a Bachelor of Architecture (hons) from the University of Melbourne and a Master of Architecture from RMIT. He founded Sean Godsell Architects in 1994. Godsell is a Fellow of the Royal Australian Institute of Architects (FRAIA) and member of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). His work is published in the world’s leading architectural journals and he lectures and exhibits in the USA, UK, China, Japan, India, France, Finland, Germany, Italy and New Zealand as well as across Australia.

       Zeynep Tulumen

      Zeynep Tulumen is a graduate of the Master of Architecture Construction and City (hons) at the Politecnico di Milano. Tulumen attended the Alta Scuola Politecnica (ASP) programme, awarded with a double degree in Architecture. She is a PhD student at the Politecnico di Torino. Currently, she is undertaking research on gentrification and neighbourhood transformations from the perspective of inner cities of Istanbul.

      CONTENTS

       Editorial

       Deniz Balik Lokce The Real Deal

       Beatriz Colomina In Conversation: X-Ray Architecture

       Betsabea Bussi and Zeynep Tulumen Cities through the Looking Glass

       Sean Godsell Architecture and the Crisis of Identity

       Dominic On A Point Cloud Darkly

       Ben Waters A Museum Made Digital

       Anna Kilpatrick Unfinished Palazzo

       Alison Brooks In Conversation: Ideals, then Ideas

      EDITORIAL

       Anna Petrou, Brittany Weidemann and Harrison Brooks

      In design and architecture, the elusive attribute of original is continually sought after, and often viewed as a marker of success. Inflection vol. 6: Originals explores the contentious notion of originality and authorship in an increasingly digital society. How can architects and designers redefine their relationship with originality to enrich and inform their work?

      A preoccupation with originality has become ubiquitous in the design fields; however, historically, this has not always been the case. Prior to the Industrial Revolution, architecture was created from a catalogue of formalised techniques, associated with Classicism and Gothic. The advent of Modern Architecture in the 20th-century heralded a shift and originality became an essential constituent of ‘good design.’ Throughout the 20th-century, architects accepted this idea as fundamental. Contemporary technology, however, has disrupted these assumptions. As replication and copying become ever more commonplace due to emerging digital techniques and production, originality becomes ultimately meaningless.

      The phenomenon of Chinese copycat cities is critiqued by Betsabea Bussi and Zeynep Tulumen. The authors analyse the nature of ‘simulacrascapes;’ cities that begin as copies but over time develop their unique characteristics that reflect

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