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The Technological Alibi: Performance Without Spatial Ambition

Author:Isa Source:  Updated:2026-03-17 17:03:49 Clicks:
Much of today’s contemporary public realm is competent — but much of it is forgettable. These plain spaces recede into the background of attention and become part of the automatism of moving through or passing by. Increasingly

Much of today’s contemporary public realm is competent — but much of it is forgettable. These plain spaces recede into the background of attention and become part of the automatism of moving through or passing by. Increasingly, ecological and technical performance functions as a professional alibi: landscapes become difficult to criticise because they perform well technically, even when their spatial qualities remain weak.

Across cities, we see landscapes that perform efficiently: they drain, cool, count biodiversity units, and meet accessibility codes. They satisfy planning frameworks and sustainability metrics. They are technically sound — and yet many feel flat: too correct, too safe, interchangeable, and emotionally thin. The problem is not ecological thinking. It is what happens when landscape is reduced to measurable performance alone.

Gardens by the Bay, Singapore

Concepts that were genuinely radical a few decades ago — ecological thinking, blue-green infrastructure, nature-based solutions — are now so widely adopted that they risk becoming professional wallpaper: rhetorically ambitious, yet spatially timid. The language remains progressive, but the ground plane often feels cautious.

When Rem Koolhaas described “Junkspace” back in 2001, he lamented environments shaped by accumulation, efficiency and market logic — spaces optimised for throughput rather than meaning. If architecture has its Junkspace, landscape may now be developing its own equivalent — what we might call junkscapes: spaces optimised for compliance and circulation rather than memory.

Superbloom at The Tower of London

Many landscapes are described as innovative simply because they implement rain gardens, biodiverse planting palettes or green infrastructure systems. Yet these strategies are now standard elements of contemporary practice. Their presence alone no longer constitutes innovation. When applied without spatial ambition, they risk becoming technical features inserted into otherwise conventional layouts.

This is not a call to abandon ecological performance. The problem emerges when technological frameworks replace spatial ambition rather than supporting it.

Appleby Blue Almshouse, UK

Landscapes should not only be responsible. They should also compel attention — inviting people to slow down, to notice, to feel grounded in place. In a world that feels increasingly uncertain and fragmented, that invitation matters.

When landscape architecture legitimises itself primarily through technical metrics, those metrics risk functioning as a technological alibi — protecting technically correct but spatially timid landscapes from critique. The discipline must ensure that technological performance supports spatial ambition rather than replacing it.