What Remains When Architecture Forgets Itself – Aniket Bhagwat on beauty, abstraction, and philosophy in architecture

Aniket Bhagwat reflects on architecture’s lost connection to beauty, abstraction, and philosophy, urging a return to thoughtful making that roots buildings in meaning, memory, and cultural responsibility.

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Buildings are rising faster than thought, and the discipline has become strangely mute — preoccupied with performance, metrics, and imagery, but unanchored in meaning.


There is a growing emptiness in what we today call architecture. Buildings are rising faster than thought, and the discipline has become strangely mute — preoccupied with performance, metrics, and imagery, but unanchored in meaning. Somewhere between the “ efficiency metrics”and the render, we have lost the idea that architecture is a moral and cultural act — not merely a technical one.

When architecture loses beauty, abstraction, and philosophical pursuit, it ceases to speak. It stops being a language of our collective memory and becomes only a form of consumption. Beauty — not as ornament or polish, but as coherence between life and form — is what roots buildings in the human condition. It is what allows a person to pause, to breathe, to feel that the world makes sense, however briefly. In its absence, space becomes an object of transaction, something to be bought, sold, and soon forgotten.

Abstraction, on the other hand, allows architecture to transcend the literal. It turns material into metaphor — a wall into the idea of boundary, a courtyard into a fragment of the sky, a garden into the rhythm of time. Without abstraction, architecture cannot think; it can only reproduce. 

The city then fills with buildings that are efficient but devoid of imagination — they explain everything, and therefore, say nothing. Cities need them – make no mistake – but they are the background against which architecture must speak .

Philosophy is what keeps architecture ethical. It allows the architect to ask uncomfortable questions: who benefits from this work, what histories does it erase, what futures does it permit? When we abandon philosophy, architecture becomes servile — obedient to power, indifferent to consequence. It becomes real estate: a profession of supply chains, not of conscience.

Architecture at its best has always been a form of resistance — against forgetfulness, against the erosion of place, against the arrogance of speed. The act of making with care is itself defiance in a world that builds too quickly. Every thoughtful wall, every measured void, every fragment of shade or silence becomes an argument for a slower, more attentive life.

Our society needs architecture not as spectacle, but as continuity — something that holds memory without nostalgia, that allows time to gather and sediment. When a building remembers, it teaches us to remember. When it listens, it allows us to speak.

Perhaps the question then is not what architecture can do for progress, but what it can do for meaning.

The measure of our buildings should not be their scale or innovation, but their capacity to hold life with dignity.

To make space is to take responsibility for how people will feel, remember, and belong.

Without beauty, abstraction, or philosophy, architecture becomes construction. But with them — even in small, quiet ways — it becomes culture. And that, finally, is what gives a society its soul.

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One Response

  1. When societies are struggling to build on consumption
    Architecture in in its true sense and meaning looses hold on what is and what is not.
    Great Architecture does not need volume of work but creative spaces to be made and lived.

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