Berlin, destroyed by war, divided by architecture, where people SCUBA dive through an artificial sea at its broken center.
It felt like a mandala, a cosmic diagram, with this inverted Mt.
Meru at its heart, not an infinite mountain but a bottomless pit.
What was so interesting to me about Berlin at the time was that it felt like a triple-exposure photograph, the city’s future overlaid atop everything else in a Piranesian haze of unbuilt architecture, whole neighborhoods yet to be constructed, everything still possible, out of focus somehow.
It was incoherent in an exhilaratingly literal sense.
In Potsdamer Platz, what you thought was the surface of the Earth was actually a bridge; you were not standing on the Earth at all, or at least not on earth.
It was the Anthropocene in miniature, a kind of masquerade, architecture pretending to be geology.