What is dwelling today? When Martin Heidegger asked this question in his famous ‘Bauen Wohnen Denken’ lecture (1951), his narrative entailed a critique of the quantitative and technological approach to the post-war housing crisis. However, rather than the poetic habitation praised by Heidegger, dwelling today has to be conquered against the new logic of socio-economic and environmental challenges that are dismantling the boundaries between private and public life. In the digital age, houses and even neighbourhoods are being transformed in unexpected ways across the globe. Cheap and available mobility, lifestyle changes, global English, and the emergence of a new highly educated middle class are the drivers of a profound transformation of our cities, patterns of inhabitation, imagination, appropriation and consolidation of lived spaces. This phenomenon has a truly global resonance, although its effects have particular manifestations in different countries and regions, often further exacerbating the gap in wealth and opportunity. The way Airbnb has disrupted the livelihoods in many cities – from Mumbai to New York, to Amsterdam, São Paulo, and Johannesburg – is but one example of this phenomenon. With the Covid-19 pandemic, this process was further accelerated, making homes the prime locus for social exchange, leisure and income generation. The developments of the last years prompt us to rethink the question of dwelling once again.

In Capital is Dead (2019), McKenzie Wark invites readers to engage in a thought experiment where the capitalist class is superseded by the so-called vectoralist class, which are those who own the ‘vectors’ of information that have dramatically changed many features of our everyday life. For Wark, the rise of technology, financialisation, neoliberalism and biopolitics are nothing but the effects of the emergence of a class that have come to dominate the logistics of the information vector. Wark’s post-broadcast-era media, dominated by the vectoralist class, suggests an alternative conceptual framework to Zygmunt Bauman’s software-era, as portrayed in his Liquid Modernity (2000). Both suggest, however, that we live in times that challenge the temporalities of everyday life, somehow expanding Marcos Novak’s concept of ‘liquid architectures’ (1991), characteristic of the new cyberspace as created by global information processes.

Once a space that embodied the spirit of the era of hardware and its focus on the durable, the bulky, the solid and the heavy, dwelling in the software era has arguably developed into a different condition. Considering this shift, in this issue of Footprint we aim to rethink the architecture of dwelling in the digital age, taking into account the current attributes of the everlasting housing crisis, the realities of global economies, the disruptive techno-infrastructure supporting it, and the profoundly ecological precarity of contemporary housing policies influencing dwelling practices worldwide. This issue welcomes contributions that address localised practices and examples, combining theoretical reflection and speculation with design positions.