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1961年伦敦的几个勤于观察又富于想像的年轻学生和青年建筑师志同道合,凑在一起,出版了一份像宣传画那样的大张刊物,取名“阿奇格兰姆”(Ar-chigram)。它是分别取英文 Architec-tural Telegram 两字的前半部与后半部合成,寓意于这份刊物像一份建筑电报,把当前的各种建筑问题紧缩为一个信息形象,迅速传布出去。他们还做了不少城市设计方案,命名为计算机城市、步行城市、插入式城市、爆发城市、速建城市等(图1)。尽管这份刊物出自无名小卒之手,这些方案也都远离实际,既无权威性,又非经典性,然而他们却是
In 1961, a group of young, imaginative young students and young architects who were observing and imagining in London joined together and published a large publication, such as a poster, named “Achidemram” (Ar). -chigram). It synthesizes the first half and the second half of the words Architec-tural Telegram in English respectively, which means that this publication is like a construction telegram, which narrows down all current architectural issues into an informational image and quickly disseminates it. They also did a lot of urban design projects and named them computer cities, pedestrian cities, plug-in cities, outbreak cities, and rapid-building cities (Figure 1). Although this publication is from the hands of an unknown player, these programs are also far from reality, neither authoritative nor classical, but they are