In the Parc de la Villette, Tshumi and Eisenman proposed an architecture of disjunction whose primary purpose was to upset the architectural
assumptions regarding systems.
In other words, Tshumi attempted to demonstrate that complex architecture can be organized without
reference to the traditional rules of composition, hierarchy, and order (Wigley, 1993).
The Parc is designed as a series three specific systems. Tschumi creates what he called lines, points
and surfaces and uses these elements as
the architectural vernacular to create his deconstructive program.
However, instead of attempting to integrate these three systems together as a cohesive and unified architecture, he instead superimposes each one of
them so that they distort and clash with one another.