Where did it come from? Possibly someone entered the winning powerball numbers into a script one day, and out came this masterpiece. Possibly this is what a waste of time would look like if it were mapped out using coordinates.
Amusing Musings for your Perusing: Life-Affirming Energy in Architecture, Design, and Culture
Advocacy of anomalously meaningless space and programmless place is a raging debate among mockitectural thinkers. American ideaologies and current contextual practicionalities consume every inch of our space and make it do something. This is really an extension of a society constricted by programming every minute of the day. Mockitects must fight this growing trend by programming meaningless spaces.
My personal favorite is the "bottomless pit of lies." The underground "red level security" bunker with no public access is a great example of mockitecture. What is important about this mockitectural prominade is that it not only creates a formal "bottomless pit," but it also engages the user into the experience of the joke. And this is where the mockiteture happens. Many of the existing mockitecture projects are funny, but they do not actively engage the user in the joke.
While "It floats on fountains" is funny, and would be a very valid mockitectural project, what really makes it funny is the "disconnection" and possibly the anger one would feel when entering the library through an underground tunnel. A metaphor for the anger and disconnection some feel toward the administration. I am not advocating architecture that makes you angry, but as a concept, I think this is very appropriate in a George W. Bush Library. It is the idea of experiencing the joke that makes it even funnier.