Tuesday, October 31, 2006

David Rockwell, an architect known as much for set design as for architecture and interiors, and whose work is self-described as a "quirky pluralism", has a new book.

Spectacle is "a visual essay documenting the notion and history of spectacle, those public performances and happenings that galvanize hordes of people and, if only for a brief moment, express the culture of our time in mass participation." Here's a taste. In its documentation of images influencing the author/architect it reminds me of John Pawson's popular book Minimum. Not coincidentially, both are published by Phaidon Press.

spectacle.jpg

To celebrate the publication of Rockwell's book, The Architectural League (with the Municipal Art Society’s Urban Center Books) is hosting a panel discussion on Wednesday, November 1 with David Rockwell and Bruce Mau, moderated by Chee Pearlman. It's at 6:30 p.m. at the Baruch Performing Arts Center, 55 Lexington Avenue.

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4 Comments:

At Wednesday, November 01, 2006 10:43:00 AM, Anonymous Andy Hadfield said...

Howsit - enjoying your blog! Thought I'd let you know that we're featuring a short review of your blog on SA's leading design industry and architectural site... www.profinder.co.za -- newsletter going out next monday - article should be up on the site by the end of monday as well.

 
At Thursday, November 02, 2006 2:50:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This book is like so 5 years ago--in the bad way.

 
At Friday, November 03, 2006 7:04:00 AM, Anonymous milo said...

Do you know if an when it will available in german bookstores?

 
At Sunday, November 05, 2006 10:48:00 PM, Blogger John said...

milo - Sorry, I have no idea.

 

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As an extension of this week's dose by Denmark's 3XN, here we feature the work of that office's former competition design managing architect Eve Harlou.

HD31a.jpg

The Z-House is a 700 sm (7,500 sf) single-family residence in Risskov, Denmark.

HD31b.jpg

The design is composed about an S-curve, visible in model above but also this elevation.

HD31c.jpg

This S-curve continues into the arrangement of rooms in the floor plan, whereby outdoor "rooms" are created, especially towards the back of the house.

HD31d.jpg

A feature wall abutting the stair creates an anchor for the house, a kind of eye of the swirling around it.

Links:
:: Eve Harlou
:: 3XN

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Monday, October 30, 2006

My weekly page update:
image03sm.jpg
Glass Museum in Ebeltoft, Denmark by 3XNielsen A/S.

The updated book feature is Wallpaper* City Guide: New York and New York's 50 Best Places to Find Peace and Quiet by the editors of Wallpaper* and Allan Ishac, respectively.

Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:
Eco Tecture
"Musings on Sustainable Urban Development & Design," from Chicago.(added to sidebar under blogs::sustainability)

vision42
"A citizens' initiative to re-imagine and upgrade surface transit in Midtown Manhattan, with a low-floor light rail line running river-to-river along 42nd Street within a landscaped pedestrian boulevard."

American Cities
Catherine Opie photographs at The Morning News.

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Sunday, October 29, 2006

Habitat '67
Habitat '67 by hyfen
Habitat '67 by Moshe Safdie.

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Saturday, October 28, 2006

Dwell on Design: Coming to Palm Springs December 1-3 2006
Exploring the past, present, and future of modern architecture and design.



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE...October 27, 2006...San Francisco, CA...Dwell has announced plans for Dwell on Design: Palm Springs to be held at the Hotel Zoso in Palm Springs December 1-3 2006.

Known as a Mecca of modern design and boasting one of the highest concentrations of important mid-century modern architecture in the United States, Palm Springs is the ideal location to address issues of preservation, sustainability, and the future of modern living. The weekend will be packed with information and activities including two very special cocktail receptions, a conference, an on-site modern showcase, a film premiere, and exclusive home tours.

A DAILY DOSE OF ARCHITECTURE DISCOUNT!
A Daily Dose of Architecture readers who register for Dwell on Design Palm Springs will receive a $75 discount off of the full conference ticket price. Use A Daily Dose of Architecture code DOSE when registering.

Register at www.dwell.com/dwellondesign

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Friday, October 27, 2006

ArcAm west
ArcAm west by mauOne
ArcAm in Amsterdam by Rene van Zuuk.

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4 Comments:

At Saturday, October 28, 2006 2:51:00 PM, Anonymous Amanda said...

John-

Great blog! I've been a regular reader for a year or so. I've just started my own blog focusing on green architecture and development.
I've already listed you on my site, and if you like what you see, it would be great if you would add me to yours.

Best,
Amanda

 
At Monday, October 30, 2006 5:57:00 AM, Blogger Style Scout said...

A nice blog beautiful images as viewed from London by Robert

 
At Monday, October 30, 2006 5:12:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

A really great blog, I try to visit as often as I can :)

And I just love the ArcAm building in Amsterdam, much more beautiful in real life ;) (designed by Rene van Zuuk)

- Ola

 
At Monday, October 30, 2006 6:24:00 PM, Blogger John said...

Thanks Ola! I've changed the name of the architect.

 

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Wednesday, October 25, 2006

P.A.N. stands for [progressive architecture network], an exhibition opening tomorrow at the Frederieke Taylor Gallery in New York. Curated by Winka Dubbeldam and Helene Furjan, the exhibition includes:

Missing image - PAN.jpg

The exhibition will feature the work of five, young, international architecture firms that share an attitude toward architecture rather than a common style or formal doctrine...mobile and connected, operating on multiple continents simultaneously and moving in and out of collaborations and affiliations at a fast pace.
A reception will be held tomorrow from 6-8pm at the gallery's space at 535 West 22nd Street in Chelsea.

1 Comments:

At Wednesday, October 25, 2006 3:53:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hmm, sounds like open-source architecture...

 

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Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Urban Cactus is a housing project in the Vuurplaat section of Rotterdam by UCX Architects / Ben Huygen and Jasper Jaegers and done for Vestia Rotterdam Feijenoord/Estrade Projecten.

Missing image - HD30a.jpg

Due to its siting at the end of harbor, the architects chose to conceptualize the project as belonging to the "green nerve" rather than the surrounding urban structure.

Missing image - HD30b.jpg

They placed the 98 residential units on 19 floors, using the pattern of outdoor spaces to determine the overall appearance of the project.

Missing image - HD30c.jpg

The slightly irregular pattern alternates these outdoor spaces to create what are in effect double-height spaces. Each unit then receives more sunlight than a typical stacked composition.

Missing image - HD30d.jpg

Also the terrace area might be equivalent to a constant depth extended around the perimeter (say two meters), but their configuration creates larger "rooms" for gardening and for enjoying the outdoors and the city views.

Links:
:: UCX architects
:: Estrade

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6 Comments:

At Tuesday, October 24, 2006 12:15:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

That looks like fun.

 
At Wednesday, October 25, 2006 8:39:00 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Marina City with a twist . . .

 
At Friday, October 27, 2006 12:46:00 AM, Anonymous Lil'G said...

You know...on the surface the project looks brutal. But my guess to stand on one of those balconies would be a pretty nice experience.

 
At Thursday, November 30, 2006 4:35:00 PM, Anonymous T said...

Where does all the water go?

I would assume that each balcony would take on a considerable amount of rain water which would then need to be removed via a drainage system.

Although, more specifically, when a building like this will come to Seattle :-D

I think we could use some architects...but more specifically a builder with the means to create something like this project.

 
At Friday, December 01, 2006 10:51:00 AM, Blogger Speedmaster said...

Very cool, I like it! ;-)

 
At Tuesday, April 29, 2008 2:23:00 PM, Anonymous Kate C. said...

Wow, great shots. Do you know if these are available in high resolution (are they yours?) I am working on a textbook, and the author would like to include a shot of this amazing building. If so, can you email me at kateland_photo at hotmail dot com?

 

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Monday, October 23, 2006

My weekly page update:
missing image - image01sm.jpg
Juliana Curran Terian Design Center in Brooklyn, New York by hanrahanMeyers Architects.

The updated book feature is Hotel as Home: The Art of Living on the Road by Gary Chang.

Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:
ShantyWorld.com
"Observations & Commentary on all issues affecting Architecture, Urban Planning & Design...the Antidote to a world of McMansions, Starter Castles and other crimes against the Built Environment." (added to sidebar under blogs::architecture)

Archicad 10
Archicad 10 is free for students. Yes, free!

iMod
"A blog about Modern Home and Design." (added to sidebar under blogs::design)

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Sunday, October 22, 2006

DSCF2506
DSCF2506.JPG by schopaia
Handrail detail at the Figge Art Museum in Davenport, Iowa by David Chipperfield Architects.

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:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
:: Tag your photos archidose

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1 Comments:

At Monday, October 23, 2006 11:39:00 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

David Chipperfield makes me vomit in my mouth.

 

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Friday, October 20, 2006

Here's a couple recent projects that have landed in my inbox.

Vanke Center in Shenzhen, China by Steven Holl Architects:
Missing image - CN-holl11.jpg
A "progressive new sustainable mixed-use complex...on the South China Sea...the building, a horizontal skyscraper, will contain a conference center, hotel, serviced apartment and offices and the headquarters of China Vanke Co., Ltd....The floating horizontal bars of space loosen the connection between formal structure and function, giving vitality to the main ground level and surrounding landscape. The plan provides open space for the intricate multi-faceted daily life at this ground level to evolve and change."

Missing image - CN-holl2.jpg

O-14 Commercial Tower in Dubai by Reiser + Umemoto:

Missing image - RU-dubai1.jpg

"O-14, a twenty-two story tall commercial tower perched on a two-storey podium...comprises 300,000 square feet and...will be located along the extension of Dubai Creek, occupying a prominent location on the waterfront esplanade. The design for O-14 is for a tower sheathed in a forty centimeter-thick concrete shell perforated by over 1,000 openings that create a lace-like effect on the building’s façade. The shell is not only the structure of the building, it acts as a sunscreen open to light, air, and views."

Missing image - RU-dubai2.jpg

4 Comments:

At Friday, October 20, 2006 4:52:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

OMG thats Hot!

Edward Durell Stone would be pround.

 
At Monday, October 23, 2006 4:08:00 PM, Blogger Floyd Landis said...

I was just going to say that. That's the same crap Ed Stone was doing 50 years ago.

 
At Wednesday, October 25, 2006 6:05:00 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

just wondering... how did it land in your email??? can i be part of that email group as well, if ever its from an email group?

 
At Wednesday, October 25, 2006 8:39:00 AM, Blogger John said...

anon-Sorry it's not an e-mail group. I just receive stuff from offices and other people on occasion.

 

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Wednesday, October 18, 2006

This just landed in my inbox, and it looks very promising: World Changing: A User's Guide for the 21st Century.

Missing image - worldchanging.jpg

From consumer consciousness to a new vision for industry; non-toxic homes to refugee shelters; microfinance to effective philanthropy; socially responsible investing to starting a green business; citizen media to human rights; ecological economics to climate change, we think this is the most comprehensive, cutting-edge overview to date of what's possible in the near future -- if we decide to make it so.

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2 Comments:

At Thursday, October 19, 2006 8:51:00 AM, Blogger Frank said...

I read very few books, but this looks like one that I'll have to find and read. It seems to cover many topics that have been floating around in my head.

 
At Thursday, October 19, 2006 10:51:00 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

If Al Gore wrote the forward it must be good.

 

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Tuesday, October 17, 2006

turbine room
turbine room by MaLoL
Carsten Holler's installation in the Tate Modern's turbine hall.

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2 Comments:

At Thursday, October 19, 2006 5:14:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Does any one else thing that large slides are the ideal way to achieve fire eagress requirements?

 
At Thursday, October 19, 2006 11:14:00 PM, Blogger John said...

Apparently whoever filed this patent agrees.

 

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Monday, October 16, 2006

This afternoon we were treated to a lecture on Budapest, Hungary's House of Terror, "illustrating the grim decades of Nazi and Communist repression." Architecturally, the museum is basically a renovation of a much-renovated former headquarters for both the Nazi and Communist secret police, but the exhibition installations seem to overshadow the interiors. The exterior is another story.

Missing image - terrorhouse1.jpg

The existing building is painted a muted grey that stands out from its neighbors and supposedly recalls the outfits of the secret police.

Missing image - terrorhouse2.jpg

Wrapping the building's cornice is a new projecting "blade" with backward letters and figures cut out; the blade continues down the side of the building to sidewalk level.

Missing image - terrorhouse3.jpg

During the daytime hours the reverse letters spell out TERROR in the shadow case from the new projection. The blade intervention is strengthened at pedestrian level as visitors are forced to walk through it on the way to the entry.

What at first glance appears to be a silly PoMo device, seems to have a greater appeal over time. Both the font and figures recall Nazi and Soviet era displays, though the cut-out is like an inversion (backward=forward, dark=light) of those principles towards something of more humanitarian ends.

3 Comments:

At Tuesday, October 17, 2006 5:53:00 AM, Anonymous lewism said...

I think I visited it when it was a Cafe in '92. That was its selling point that you could have cake where they'd tortured all those people....although with the new museum I guess you can still do the same. Still its good that these events are memorialised and shown rather than hidden. I'd love to go back there by the way, Budapest was a fantastic city to explore.

 
At Tuesday, October 17, 2006 10:05:00 AM, Anonymous viki from budapest said...

I usually watch your page, and it's very good to see that today you show something from my country.
wow

anyway the museum inside is also good.I recommend everyone.

 
At Thursday, October 19, 2006 9:58:00 AM, Anonymous malnar said...

I always tell my design students shadows are free. Thanks for bringing this powerful use of shadows to my attention - I will be showing and discussing this building in future classes.

 

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Thursday, October 12, 2006

simon in the har
simon in the har by archaalto
This year's Ghost Lab project by students and Brian MacKay-Lyons. Many more photos of the project in archaalto's ghost lab 8 set.

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:: Tag your photos archidose

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1 Comments:

At Saturday, October 14, 2006 4:08:00 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

i love your blog! i'm an undergrad in architecture at berkeley. your entries give me great ideas for projects! keep up the good work! - laura

 

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Dear readers,

As you've noticed posts have been thin lately. This has been mainly due to battling a flu/cold thing (I won) and a studio deadline (today). Things won't improve just yet, though, as I'll be out town for a number of days and won't have access to a computer; as such my weekly page will take a week off. Posts on this page will resume early-mid next week.

john

2 Comments:

At Thursday, October 12, 2006 8:51:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks. I don't know how you find the time to do as much as you do on here. It is appreciated!

 
At Friday, October 13, 2006 9:47:00 AM, Blogger edemay said...

All good man, take your time. You deserve it. I've been very much enjoying what you have been posting on your site for a while now. And I'm always amazed of finding new stuff here, so regularly. Keep up the good work.

 

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Tuesday, October 10, 2006

One of the recipients of a 2006 Victoria, Australia's State of Design Award -- specifically The City of Melbourne Sustainability Design Award -- is Katrina Logan for her LUMI Illuminated Rainwater Storage.

Missing image - luminous.jpg

The satin acrylic container is targeted towards "the inner-city design community." Logan "envisages the balconies of high-rise developments as LUMI's ultimate destination." While the feasibility of collecting water on balconies typically located below other balconies may not work too well (making it perhaps more appropriate for backyards), it's nevertheless a great idea: making water conservation attractive by making something that's, well, attractive.

7 Comments:

At Thursday, October 12, 2006 10:11:00 AM, Anonymous Bob said...

Are you suggesting that even though it does not function as intended, still it is great? Interesting theory...

 
At Thursday, October 12, 2006 1:15:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

It would function as intended but John's right about the placement of it. I think it's a great way to make water conservation appealing.
On another note, I don't really understand how the lighting is working. is it placed inside the container? Is the lighting somehow contributing to the rainwater?

 
At Thursday, October 12, 2006 3:34:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Follow the links

'and is illuminated with internal lights at night.'

 
At Thursday, October 12, 2006 6:54:00 PM, Blogger Colin said...

It looks like the exterior shell is translucent (you can see this in the first pic), the lights must be between the exterior and interior shells.

 
At Thursday, October 12, 2006 8:14:00 PM, Blogger John said...

bob and anon - Yes, it should function as intended just not in the ideal place the designer mentions, unless it's one of those Harry Seidler projects where the balcony alternates every other floor.

And it does appear that there is an inner tank and the outer resin wall. The interstitial space may contain lighting, though it also looks like that base on the right-hand image might house lighting.

 
At Friday, October 13, 2006 12:50:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Harry Seidler is delicious.

 
At Saturday, October 14, 2006 12:34:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

but how do you buy one? none of the links offer this type of info.

 

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IMG_2716_1.JPG
IMG_2716_1.JPG by andrewpaulcarr
The Casa da Musica in Porto, Portugal by Rem Koolhaas and OMA.

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2 Comments:

At Tuesday, October 10, 2006 1:44:00 PM, Anonymous minhato said...

There is an error: Porto is in Portugal, not in Spain.
Congratulations for your blog, I see it every day from Galiza (Spain)

 
At Tuesday, October 10, 2006 5:09:00 PM, Blogger John said...

Thanks, minhato. It's been corrected.

 

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Monday, October 09, 2006

My weekly page update:
missing image - image01sm.jpg
Wuhan French-Chinese Art Centre in Wuhan, China by standardarchitecture.

The updated book feature is Our Ecological Footprint: Reducing Human Impact on the Earth by Mathis Wackernagel and William Rees.

Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:
ArkiBlog
An "English and Turkish blog on Architecture, Design, Urban Life and all related fields. ArkiBlog aims to form a rich intellectual platform for interested people in the above mentioned areas." (added to sidebar under blogs::architecture)

Bricoleurbanism
"An ongoing series of reflections on the city, the landscape and the fields that manipulate them from the perspective of urban design, landscape architecture, Toronto and Canada." (added to sidebar under blogs::urban)

architypes.net
"A library of architectural design issues, solutions and ideas." (added to sidebar under Architectural Links::online journals)

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Sunday, October 08, 2006

This was too irresistible not to pass along, a video by Swiss crew Liricas Analas performing a song in the Thermal Baths in Vals, posted over at Gravestmor.



Previously

5 Comments:

At Sunday, October 08, 2006 2:47:00 PM, Blogger Kick Ass Chicks said...

What a great find!
Thanks for sharing!
x_X

 
At Sunday, October 08, 2006 8:16:00 PM, Anonymous Carsten said...

The past few years in Germany have seen a growing (albeit odd) trend toward native-language rap. It's one thing to hear a German rap song, and another whole experience to hear full-on Swiss dialect rap! Something so contextual so out of context...

 
At Sunday, October 08, 2006 9:35:00 PM, Blogger tozmervo said...

Thank you, this has made my week!

 
At Wednesday, October 11, 2006 11:05:00 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

For your understanding, this is not swiss-german dialect, but the much more exotical romansh (spell also rumantsch) which is di per se an own language and not a dialect. The roots of this language lie in the vulgar latin.

 
At Thursday, October 12, 2006 10:21:00 AM, Anonymous rob a. said...

If, like myself, you don't go for hippity hoppery, dub your own Vals-made soundtrack:

Artist: HAUSER AND MICHAEL ASKILL, FRITZ
Title: Space: Music For Bells, Cymbals and Gong
Label: CELESTIAL HARMONIES
Format: CD
"Recorded at Therme Vals, in Switzerland, over the course of two predawn mornings in June, 2005, there was a kind of sound alchemy that took place as Fritz Hauser and Michael Askill played the simple bells normally worn by cows, sheep and goats in the beautifully reverberant space of the thermal spas. Write the performers: 'The music on this CD has been created through improvisation. Based on the instrumental material -- about 40 cow, sheep and goatbells, various cymbals and a small gong from China -- we developed playing concepts, and in dialogue with the room and the unusual sound environment we recorded the takes. In the studio some of the pieces have been used for multi-track arrangements, but most of them have been left untouched. We have put them in an order that now carries the title Space: Music for Bells, Cymbals and Gong.'"

 

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untitled by rutger spoelstra
Mecanoo's library at the TU Delft.

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Friday, October 06, 2006

World Architecture News profiles perhaps the three biggest celebrity architects within the last few days, featuring new projects by Frank Gehry and Zaha Hadid and a completed museum by Daniel Libeskind. With last night's lecture by James Wine of SITE still fresh in my mind, let's take a look at these projects in relation to some of his ideas presented.

Missing image - starchitecture1.jpg
Gehry's Louis Vuitton Foundation for Creation -- a fancy title for what's basically an art museum -- is planned for western Paris. The design is most notable for its lack of resemblance to Gehry's recent buildings, like the Walt Disney Concert Hall or the Millennium Park bandshell. Instead of titanium or stainless steel we see glass, with dashes of color here and there. It's like a deconstructed greenhouse or Crystal Palace, much different than Gehry's other Parisian building, the American Center (now La Cinemathatheque Francaise).

Does this change in material signal a change in Gehry's career? Wines quoted Marcel Duchamp's contention that one must "clean off one's desk" at least three times in one's life. This entails throwing out what came before and basically starting from scratch. Wines did this in his move from art to architecture and then formal architecture to green architecture. Gehry has done this in lesser degrees in the span of his career, from using affordable materials in relatively simple compositions to deconstructed and fragmented designs to curving and complex forms. Here we see a continuation of the complex forms but glass doesn't want to necessarily curve like thin steel, so a different form arises. As Gehry indicated in a press conference for the project, "We'’ve built 30 or 40 models, and the design is still evolving. It's not going to look exactly like this, so forgive me," indicating an attempt to resolve the form with the skin. But if this signals a shift in the career of the 77-year old architect, we'll have to wait and see.

Missing image - starchitecture2.jpg
Daniel Libeskind's extension of the Denver Art Museum opens to the public tomorrow, making the controversial project the architect's first completed building in the United States. According to WAN, "Visitors will enter the building through a 120-foot high sky lit atrium that features dramatically sloping walls and a grand stairway that provides access to the galleries. An additional two-story atrium is located in the 17,000 square foot bi-level modern and contemporary galleries."

This -- and most of Libeskind's buildings -- falls into what Wines calls "architecture as sculpture." Influenced by the Russian Constructivist movement of the early 20th-century, this highly formal and structural architecture is anachronistic to Wines, looking for expression in the last century as opposed to the now, where ideas of environmentalism and communication should take precedence over sculptural expression. He also refers to Libeskind's designs as particularly wasteful, requiring extra steel and other materials to achieve the complex forms that don't necessarily have a greater impact than a simpler design might have.

Missing image - starchitecture3.jpg
Lastly, Zaha Hadid unveiled her final design for Pierre Vives, "a unique combination of three civic institutions - the archives, the library and the sports department" for the French Department of Herault on the edge of Montpellier, France. What looks relatively sedate or small for Hadid is actually a massive structure with the architect's signature flourishes, such as curving, continuous surfaces and a linear composition (see the image gallery here).

One must wonder where do these forms come from? What is the justification for the continuous surfaces, for example? Wines separates this sort of arbitrary formalism from a conceptual approach that is influenced by its context. This distinction is clearly illustrated by comparing Hadid's design to this unbuilt project from the 1970s by Wines:

Missing image - starchitecture4.jpg
Here we appear to see the asphalt parking lot rippling over the building (some sort of big box retail, I think). As Wines said in his lecture this project has more to say about asphalt, parking, and driving (making the visitor or passer-by think about these things in some way) than the building itself, wheras Hadid's design is all about the architecture itself.

While I appreciate the ideas of Wines more than the projects themselves, some application of his ideas to starchitecture, especially in terms of environmental concerns that I really didn't get into here, might help ground their admittedly innovative designs. Designing and building elaborate forms because they can be done (via computers and such) is not a strong justification. If the forms are inflected by concepts taken from their context at all levels (environmental, social, cultural, economical, etc.) they may or may not change dramatically, but they'll have a better chance of saying more over a longer period of time.

5 Comments:

At Friday, October 06, 2006 11:02:00 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

If Daniel Libeskind is a starchitect, then I am a vermicious knid.

 
At Friday, October 06, 2006 11:21:00 AM,