Merry-go-round
The architect Rem Koolhaas describes in his book ‘Delirious New York’ the architecture of congestion in Manhattan. A grid divides the soil of an economic center (a city, New York) and thus, surplus value. The only way out of the constraints of the grid is up. Skyscrapers arise and multiply soil - and capitalistic value - towards the atmosphere. This logic applies, of course, to territories where land is highly disputed and congestion is imperative: big cities. A skyscraper of shoes arises to optimize the display: the amount of shoes displayed increases the chance of sale, and therefore, living. The device spins in its own axis in an enchanting endless loop.