
Where uncertainty, division, separation, havoc, and disease befall communities worldwide, many of us have resorted to embracing ways to bring solace, gratification, indulgence, and joy into the spaces we inhabit. Rather than setting out to work on an issue that directly and explicitly discusses the problems of our times as the focus, our 14th Issue sets out to critically examine the spaces, places, and routines that give us pleasure because of—and despite—the chaos. Reminded of Bernard Tschumi’s words in “The Pleasure of Architecture”, where he posits that “the ancient idea of pleasure still seems sacrilegious to contemporary architectural theory”, this issue of informa aims to study pleasure as a tool with agency.
What is there to be said about pleasure, through the lens of architectural discourse? In the context of a global pandemic, quarantine, and lockdown, what creative strategies for placemaking have we imagined? How does the relationship between public and private get reconfigured, when the architectural and urban typologies meant to intentionally exude pleasure to users—theaters, plazas, beach clubs, gyms, churches, amusement parks, restaurants, etc—become high-risk sites for contagion? What unexpected places do we “escape” to, regardless of an individual’s economic resources? How has the very idea of home been challenged to meet our current needs? When our bodies are both what is at danger, as well as what endangers others, how have we reimagined intimacy and the spaces where it unfolds?
