Coverbild Servermanifest
A table of contents in German, titled Inhalt. The entries list articles and interviews on topics including digital sovereignty, the role of data centers as political machines, the challenges of the data-center boom in cities, and student designs from the Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main.
A two-page spread from a German publication. The left page is a title page for a section called Servermanifest Architektur der Aufklärung: Data Center als Politikmaschinen. The right page, titled I. Die Wolke brennt, features a large color photograph showing the OVH data center in Strasbourg engulfed in flames at night, with thick smoke billowing into the sky. German text from the article is above the photo.
A wide evening shot of the large Google data center in Georgia, USA. The long, multi-story industrial building is brightly illuminated from within, set against a dark landscape and a dramatic sky filled with deep blue clouds.
A page from a publication with German text on the left and four black and white photographs on the right. The photos, from the Deutsches Rechenzentrum in Darmstadt in 1961, show the modern exterior of the building, a close-up of a mainframe computer console, and two views of the large computer room with technicians working at the machines.
An architectural cross-section drawing of a complex, multi-level building set against a desert landscape with sand dunes. The bottom of the image shows heavy concrete foundations. The main level is a long, glass-walled hall containing a cafe with red chairs. Above this, a futuristic, industrial superstructure features escalators in transparent tubes and an intricate, open-air stair tower.
A two-page magazine spread in German showing architectural renderings of a massive, futuristic building. The structure has a colorful, textured facade and is elevated on numerous thin yellow stilts and wider purple patterned supports over a dense, monochromatic cityscape.
A two-page magazine spread in German about micro server farms, featuring two images of conceptual architecture. The larger image shows a multi-story building with its facade covered in a dense collage of electronic waste and circuit boards. The smaller image shows a cube-shaped building with an e-waste base and a purple greenhouse top, set in a rural landscape with a person walking by.
An architectural illustration on a book page showing a conceptual public space. The main, colorful sketch depicts a multi-level structure integrated into a hilly landscape with stylized trees. The building's sections are illuminated in bright yellow and are filled with silhouettes of people who are also seen on ramps, terraces, and relaxing by a body of water at the base. To the left is a column of German text and two smaller black-and-white concept sketches.
A surreal, colorful architectural rendering of a futuristic city on an alien planet with an orange landscape and a black, starry sky. Sprawling, wireframe buildings and a large, floating wireframe sphere dominate the scene. A crowd of stylized red figures walks up a bright green ramp, while others stand near a blue body of water in the foreground, where a yellow pipe runs along the shore.
The cover of the book Servermanifest by Niklas Maak, featuring black text on a red-orange vertical band against a black background.
The red-orange cover of the book Servermanifest by Niklas Maak, with the title and author name in black serif text in the upper left corner.
Servermanifest
Architektur der Aufklärung: Data Center als Politikmaschinen
€ 18.00
VAT included. Shipping costs will be calculated at checkout
Graphic Design: Neil Holt
Author: Niklas Maak
Illustrated by: Niklas Maak, Studierende der Harvard Graduate School of Design, Studierende der Städelschule Frankfurt
Texts by: Francesca Bria
Contributions by: Karsten Spengler
German
June 2022, 112 Pages, 60 Photos
Paperback with Flaps
142mm x 210mm
ISBN: 978-3-7757-5069-1

HATJE CANTZ VERLAG
Mommsenstr. 27
10629 Berlin
Germany
E-Mail: contact@hatjecantz.de


According to Article 9(7) of the GPSR Regulation, no additional security information is required for books without supplements or special functions.

Press download
| Server Farms as Sites of Participatory Power
Server farms are to the digital world what castles used to be: the seat of power. If data is the greatest collective treasure of a digital society, basic material for business and politics: Why are the places where it is stored still so invisible?

Together with students from the Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main, Niklas Maak shows what the future of the most important new building typology of the twenty-first century might look like—and what new collective places a city needs in the age of digitalization.

"This is a historic moment. Data has become the most valuable commodity in the world. We can't leave it to a handful of tech giants. We must conceive of it as a public good and a critical public infrastructure, alongside roads, electricity, water, and clean air. To that end, we need what Niklas Maak calls a 'Centre Pompidou for the digital age.'"

— Francesca Bria

This book is also available in English.

NIKLAS MAAK (*1972) was born in Hamburg, Germany. He is the architecture critic of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung and a guest professor of architecture at the Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main. From 2014 to 2020, he taught architecture at Harvard Graduate School of Design. He has received numerous awards for his work, including the George F. Kennan Award, the Henri Nannen Award, and the Architectural Critic Award by the Association of German Architects (BDA). Maak was a cocurator of the 2020 show Countryside, The Future at the Guggenheim Museum in New York and is the author of many books, among them Living Complex: From Zombie City to the New Communal and the novel Technophoria.
Recommendations for you