5. How Buildings Learn - Stewart Brand - 5 of 6 - “The Romance of Maintenance”
This six-part, three-hour, BBC TV series aired in 1997. I presented and co-wrote the series; it was directed by James Muncie, with music by Brian Eno. The series was based on my 1994 book, HOW BUILDINGS LEARN: What Happens After They’re Built. The book is still selling well and is used as a text in some college courses. Most of the 27 reviews on Amazon treat it as a book about system and software design, which tells me that architects are not as alert as computer people. But I knew that; that’s part of why I wrote the book. Anybody is welcome to use anything from this series in any way they like. Please don’t bug me with requests for permission. Hack away. Do credit the BBC, who put considerable time and talent into the project. Historic note: this was one of the first television productions made entirely in digital--- shot digital, edited digital. The project wound up with not enough money, so digital was the workaround. The camera was so small that we seldom had to ask permission to shoot; everybody thought we were tourists. No film or sound crew. Everything technical on site was done by editors, writers, directors. That’s why the sound is a little sketchy, but there’s also some direct perception in the filming that is unusual. BBC Writer/presenter: Stewart Brand Brian Eno, original music: James Runcie, Producer

6. How Buildings Learn - Stewart Brand - 6 of 6 - “Shearing Layers”

Stewart Brand on Maintenance as an Organizing Principle | Mindscape 341

1960: Housing Standards in Britain | Enquiry | Homes and Housing | BBC Archive

1. How Buildings Learn - Stewart Brand - 1 of 6 - “Flow”

3. How Buildings Learn - Stewart Brand - 3 of 6 - “Built for Change”

Introduction to Architecture (1 of 8) - Jeff Kipnis

4. How Buildings Learn - Stewart Brand - 4 of 6 - “Unreal Estate”

Big Think Interview With Stewart Brand | Big Think

How Clarkson's £45M Farm OUTSMARTED The Entire Industry – They Never Saw It Coming!

What If We Could Design Our Buildings In A Way That Was Healthy For Both People And The Planet?

2. How Buildings Learn - Stewart Brand - 2 of 6 - “The Low Road”

Christopher Alexander - Patterns in Architecture

Stewart Brand - Whole Earth Discipline

Britain Sold Palestine to Pay Its WWI Debt. The Balfour Declaration Was a Banking Deal!

The Application of Feeling -- Christopher Alexander

The Scottish People Were Never Who We Thought — Ancient DNA Finally Revealed The Truth

How This Midcentury Modern House Harnesses the Sun

Advances in Architectural Geometry - MIT

Why German Engineers Couldn't Explain How Britain Built A Bomb That Bounced On Water

