Contemporary architectural practice often applauds the integration of biological elements, viewing substances like mycelium, algae, and living walls as signs of progress. Yet, this same field commonly categorizes mold as a mere imperfection. Both are organic; both react to environmental factors such as moisture, temperature, and the composition of materials. The disparity in perception stems not from scientific differences, but from architecture's selective acceptance of living forms. This essay argues that by dismissing mold, architecture overlooks critical insights into a building's true dynamic relationship with its surroundings, a reality that extends far beyond its initial design.
Mold's prevalence extends beyond derelict or poorly managed spaces, surfacing in diverse settings from residential homes to educational institutions, offices, historic landmarks, and even recent constructions, regardless of climate. Its consistent reappearance signals that it is more than just a superficial issue; it acts as a candid indicator of how buildings genuinely function and interact with their environments, revealing aspects that architectural theory often neglects.
David Gissen highlights environmental elements like smoke, fumes, dust, crowds, and mud as "under-theorized, under-discussed, and under-visualized" aspects of architecture. Mold fits squarely into this category. Despite its visual prominence, it is primarily addressed as a problem needing eradication rather than a source of information.
This perspective challenges a fundamental architectural tenet: the idea of buildings as distinct separators. Walls delineate inside from outside, roofs deflect water, and facades regulate temperature, air, and moisture. The building is envisioned as a barrier, safeguarding a controlled interior from the mutable external world.
However, buildings are not merely impermeable containers; they are influenced by elements that permeate them, even when these transformations are concealed. Mold emerges precisely where these interactions leave their mark: on cool walls, around window frames, behind furniture, or in poorly ventilated areas. A visible stain, though not comprehensive, serves as a significant clue, indicating where the building deviates from its intended sealed state.
Buildings undergo continuous transformation post-construction, shaped by weather, upkeep, occupation, and the passage of time. Air circulation varies, surfaces retain heat differently, and resource allocation for maintenance can fluctuate. Within these nuances, mold begins to articulate the building as an inhabited entity, rather than just a blueprint, reflecting its true lived experience.
The underlying tension lies not only in the inevitable changes buildings undergo but also in architecture's tendency to depict them in their initial, pristine state. Architectural renderings, blueprints, and photographs typically capture a building at its most controlled—immaculate, complete, and unblemished. Mold, however, manifests later, influenced by usage, maintenance routines, climatic conditions, and the march of time, reminding us that a building's architectural journey continues long after its construction concludes.
This dynamic is evident even in celebrated architectural projects. Le Corbusier's Convent of La Tourette, for example, reveals concrete surfaces that now bear stains and moisture marks. These are not merely structural expressions but telltale signs of the building's continuous engagement with climate and age. Similarly, Adjaye Associates' Mole House features facades that visually record the effects of use, maintenance, moisture, and time. The architecture endures, but its appearance is perpetually reshaped by the environmental forces it encounters.
The Old Chapel by O-office Architects further illustrates this relationship. Green growths and discolorations on its concrete surfaces highlight the interplay between materials, moisture, and biological processes. The wall transcends its role as a mere boundary, becoming a living document of the surrounding environment's influence.
Mold’s presence makes these conditions impossible to ignore. Unlike simple staining or weathering, it is a living, evolving process that thrives on specific environmental factors like moisture, temperature, material porosity, and air movement, rather than adhering to design specifications. This shifts the focus from the blemish itself to the environmental conditions that foster its existence.
This discomfort isn't solely technical; it's cultural. Architectural representation has historically favored imagery of perfect order and permanence. The pristine white wall, an enduring symbol of modernism, reinforced the notion that successful buildings master control over dirt, moisture, and biological growth.
This inherent contradiction becomes apparent in how contemporary architecture engages with organic matter. Innovations such as mycelium panels, algal systems, bio-based composites, green roofs, and living walls are frequently lauded as eco-friendly advancements, demonstrating architecture's capacity to collaborate with natural life. However, this acceptance comes with caveats: these biological elements are meticulously researched, fabricated, specified, and maintained, integrated only when they can be managed and controlled within the design framework.
Mold, in contrast, defies such control. It emerges organically from a building's inherent conditions, rather than from deliberate design intent. This fundamental difference explains why mold is seldom discussed with the same reverence given to biomaterials or living systems. One is lauded as innovation; the other is deemed contamination.
This distinction significantly influences architecture's understanding of responsibility. Mold is often externalized, viewed as an anomaly outside the design's purview. Yet, it typically results from a confluence of climatic factors, material properties, maintenance practices, human occupation, and the movement of air and moisture within a structure. Far from being separate, mold is an intrinsic outcome of the environments that architecture creates.
Consequently, mold provides valuable insights into building performance post-completion. A wall, meticulously designed, flawlessly photographed, and built to specification, may still function unpredictably once inhabited. Factors like furniture obstructing airflow, intense room usage, irregular maintenance, or persistent cold surfaces can all contribute. Mold illuminates these intricate relationships by manifesting where these conditions converge. The central question isn't whether life belongs in architecture, but rather which forms of life architecture chooses to embrace. Modern architecture frequently celebrates biological forms that can be cultivated and controlled, often rejecting those that expose the limitations of its dominion.
Mold transcends its identity as a mere organism within architecture; it functions as a potent source of information. It doesn't originate the conditions it highlights but rather responds to them. A stain can reveal accumulated moisture, inadequate ventilation, temperature differentials, patterns of occupancy, or insufficient upkeep. In this regard, mold generates a unique form of knowledge about a building, a narrative that architectural plans, sections, and renderings alone cannot convey.
This inherent informational quality is what renders mold architecturally significant. While drawings articulate a building's intended performance, mold unveils its actual performance over time. It is a document etched by the building itself, gradually inscribed through the interplay of moisture, materials, usage, and climate.
The uneasiness surrounding mold stems not merely from its biological nature, but from its capacity to communicate outside architecture's conventional representational frameworks. It produces knowledge that the discipline often dismisses as contamination, precisely because it challenges the idealized image of a building as pristine, complete, stable, and entirely under control. Mold, therefore, is more than a superficial defect; it signifies the re-emergence of everything architecture strives to exclude.