Friday, April 30, 2004

Pardon my Rambling

Commented on briefly in an earlier post, Nikos Salingaros's eight-part essay on Bernard Tschumi wrapped up a couple days ago at 2Blowhards. The author concludes by asserting that architectural theory is necessary, but not the kind practiced by Tschumi or his contemporaries. Instead Salingaros contends that architectural theory should follow the model of other disciplines where, "recent knowledge about a topic builds upon existing knowledge, older knowledge is replaced only by a better explanation of the same phenomenon, never because a fashion has changed, [and] a theory in one discipline must transition sensibly to other disciplines." This literal definition applies to science, engineering and other "objective" disciplines, but ignores many aspects of architecture that make it open to theory as practiced by Tschumi and others.



Theory and Program



In part two, Salingaros focuses on Tschumi's early work, particularly The Manhattan Transcripts, an influential book originally published in 1981 and reprinted in 1994. Using his definition of theory, Salingaros cannot find anything in the text and images to support it as such. I would agree that the Transcripts doesn't do this, because it's questioning the knowledge that preceded it and, like architecture, embodies some elements of art that confuse matters while also providing for individual interpretation.



The Transcripts is a product of its time, when the Modern Movement was long considered dead, replaced by a pastiche of historical references in the form of Post-Modernism. Architecture was seen as merely surface treatment. Architects realized that architecture could not make things better in and of itself, so architects adopted a method that focuses on the intelligibility of architecture through the use of classical motifs like columns and capitals, friezes, pediments, etc. Not content with the diminished state this puts architecture in, Tschumi instead focuses on the area of architectures power: program.



Loosely defined as the uses and relationships of uses, Tschumi contends that architecture cannot allow for all the possible uses of a building, and that uses also change over time, further negating architecture's reliance upon program as a form-giver. In the Transcripts, he pushes the limits, proclaiming, "To really appreciate architecture, you may even need to commit a murder." Salingaros interprets this statement and others as a communication of violence and a presence of a psychological imbalance in the architect. I think Salingaros misses the point. Tschumi is merely using violence as an example of a disjunction between use and program. Murder is the most extreme example, but also the most illustrative: the act of murder as shown uses the architecture as a weapon, eliciting the greatest understanding of a place, albeit for macabre ends.



One of Tschumi's 'advertisements'



Now, I never focused on the images and references to violence in my reading of the Transcripts, instead looking beyond to the questioning of a long-held belief in architecture, that program drives architecture and its subsequent form. This definitely reverses Salingaros's definition of theory, while indicating a genuine concern at the time towards the state of architecture (Tschumi definitely was not alone either, as the Deconstructivist show at MOMA in the early 80s illustrates, but more on that later).



The Parc de la Villette embodies Tschumi's thinking at the time to full effect, his red follies without function dotting the park. Here form follows form. Through his winning competition entry, Tschumi created the ultimate case study for his ideas. Without any prescribed use for the follies, he deconstructed a cube and reassembled it in various ways, some eventually usable as gift shops, day care, and the like, others merely just there, to be seen or sometimes climbed upon. Parc de la Villette is an anomaly, a huge (the largest park in Paris) testing ground for ideas without precedent on such a scale, its existence perhaps due to the French intellect or Miterrand's overwhelming appreciation of contemporary architecture. Its current state of underuse surely does not help matters, though.



Theory and Technique



Salingaros's definition of theory quoted earlier is more attuned to engineering and other technical aspects of architecture than what we are usually referring to when we say architecture, mainly its aesthetics and spaces. Knowledge of structures and mechanics (flow of energy, air, water, waste, etc) has definitely grown over time, building upon previous experience, replacing older means and methods, and transferable to other disciplines through a grounding in physics and mathematics. There's not much to argue about here, though it sets up a discussion on the relationship between structure, mechanics and architecture.



Structure in architecture changed dramatically last century, moving away from heavy, load-bearing exteriors with punched openings to frame structures with hung exterior walls. This changed the relationship of the exterior wall to the structure, exploited by many architects of the Modern era like Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier and Walter Gropius. Further developments from the likes of Buckminster Fuller extended the possibilities of lightness in structure and the ability to span larger spaces. This minimizing of the structure helped to push an architecture of transparency, as larger areas of glass could enclose a building than ever before. But along with this alleged transparency came mechanical issues of heat gain, transference, etc. It's not until recently in many European buildings that architects are treating the exterior wall as a system that works with the mechanical systems of a building to achieve optimal performance and reduced energy consumption.



My point is that as structures and mechanics evolve, their gained knowledge affects architecture, the field that combines both with space and appearance to create the places where we work, live, play, etc. Architecture cannot be separated from these more scientific fields, and it shouldn't. But Salingaros goes one step further by implying that architecture should be considered theoretically the same as structures and mechanics. But architecture, at least in Tschumi's terms, is too subjective to be at the mercy of an all-encompassing theory, or even a common interest in its direction like engineering. Not to say that engineers don't disagree or have their own theories; they just have a more objective knowledge base from which to make decisions.



Theory and Deconstructivism



One aspect of Salingaros's essay that I don't quite understand is his reiteration of Deconstructivism as a practiced theory or method for architects today. He refers to the use of computers, particularly in academia, and the subsequent "alien forms", though I don't equate the trend in computer-aided "blobitecture" as Deconstructivism.



On a slight tangent, here's one way to approach some of these -isms, movements or styles, that I learned a professor in college: each movement in architecture reacts to the one that preceded it. Therefore the Modern Movement reacted against the Neoclassical and other Neo-styles. It looked forward instead of looking back, while Post-Modernism reacted to the Modern Movement, looking back instead of looking forward. So we have a teeter-totter effect of looking to the past and then looking to the future and then looking to the past...



Deconstructivism looked forward, breaking up forms in a way that was radically different from Post-Modernism's assemblage of Classical elements. Its practitioners (Tschumi, Peter Eisenman, Zaha Hadid, Coop Himmelblau) tried to shake things up by simultaneously looking back at Russian Constructivist art from the early 20th century. Not much was built initially so as a movement it was more paper architecture than actual, though still exerting an influence on students and practicing architects. While these practitioners are now building actual structures, what they are doing now is removed from Deconstructivism, mainly due to the use of computer technology. What we have instead is something new entirely, less predicated on the philosophy of Jacques Derrida and others, rooted in the methods of design via computers.



As Salingaros points out, a lot of "blob" designs tend to look the same, many of them also seemingly inhospitable if translated into buildings. I attribute this to a "learning phase", with students and architects finding out what software can do and how far they can push the software. And with construction catching up to the imagination of architects, the curved and blobby shapes of these designs are becoming more and more realistic every day. But the relationship between "blobs" and function seems to be about as disjointed as it is in Tschumi's architecture.



Apart from a total abandonment of "blobitecture" (for lack of a better term - I'd love to hear suggestions) or a regression to neo-traditional design, architecture should be constantly reinventing itself, never pinned down by the type of theory that Salingaros promotes. The theory that Tschumi and his peers promote examines architecture and its effect upon people's lives, and vice-versa, to create awareness and possibly affect architectural design.



Merely "mixing novel forms with typologies that have undergone a competitive selection during historical time", as Salingaros recommends, does not solve anything. It's just another stylistic maneuver, slapping a contemporary facade on a traditional backbone. The architecture that Salingaros is rallying against is few and far between, at the moment too expensive for most clients, but it's definitely making for lively discussion, getting the general public excited about what's being built around us.

Thursday, April 29, 2004

Would you like People on your Piazza?

Early in my college career I wrote a paper on Charles Moore's Piazza d'Italia, constructed in 1978 for the World's Fair in New Orleans. An article in the May issue of Landscape Architecture, titled "That 70's Show" documents the recent $1 million rehab and the piazza's sorry history.



Moore created five hemispherical colonnades, each representing the five orders and growing in size and complexity as they radiate from an Italy-shaped pool in the center. A sixth order, dubbed the Delicatessen Order, bounds the piazza with adjacent buildings, featuring dual visages of the architect in an archway entrance. These last features give the whole design some kitsch and lightness, as the Deli Orders are capped with steel and neon lights.



View of Piazza d'Italia



All this was welcomed openly at the time by the architectural community and critics across the country. Unfortunately the project could not live up to its praise, since nearby development which would have surrounded the piazza and given it life never happened. As early as six months after its completion the paint was peeling, the fountains were clogged, and vagrants occupied the space most of the time. Until Loews, operator of an adjacent hotel, paid for the piazza's rehab, the space resembled a ruin more than a highly-praised, post-modern design.



With development encroaching on the piazza, perhaps its use will finally be exploited as it was originally intended. Devoted to Italian-Americans and their ancestry, the space will divide its time between public use, private functions, and special events of the American Italian Renaissance Foundation.

Wednesday, April 28, 2004

Book of the Moment

It's been twelve years, but finally the AIA Guide to Chicago has been updated, its second edition released on April 12.



AIA Guide to Chicago cover



From the book description:



More than a thousand individual buildings are featured in 574 pages, along with over 400 photos -- many taken expressly for this volume. Building descriptions focus on the illuminating but easily overlooked details that give the behind-the-scenes, often unexpected story of why a building took the shape it did. And in the best Chicago tradition, the book does not shy away from an opinion where an opinion is called for.


Tuesday, April 27, 2004

Trump's Tricks

With a recent piece at the Slatin Report, and a two-page spread in yesterday's pseudo-newspaper Red Eye, I'm becoming convinced that Donald Trump's motives behind his television show "The Apprentice" are to push his real estate rather than mine new profit areas, as I first surmised. Choosing a Chicago native and giving him the choice to stay in Chicago and manage his Trump Tower seems a bit more than a coincidence. Or as noted by Peter Slatin:



But the clincher came at the clinch, when Apprentice Bill was asked to choose from among two plum jobs...Live-broadcast images of Donald holding up a gleaming model of the Chicago development...will push up sales and prices [at Trump Tower]. If anyone was still wondering why Donald Trump wanted to do this television show, here was the answer.




Now, I'll admit that I never watched "The Apprentice" and don't have any desire to further promote Trump and his buildings, but it sounds like he's managed to pull one over on the public, stringing them along on his catch phrase like Bart Simpson. On second thought, at least Bart Simpson had more than one catch phrase.

Monday, April 26, 2004

Monday, Monday

This week's update:

King West Chapel in Kingston, Ontario, Canada by Mill & Ross Architects.



Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:

Grand Avenue Committee, responsible for implementing the plan for remaking Grand Avenue into a great new gathering place in Los Angeles. One of the four finalists is expected to be chosen this week.



Arcosanti, Paulo Soleri's "urban laboratory" outside Phoenix, Arizona.



Villa Savoye, interactive plans and views of Le Corbusier's seminal house in Poissy, France (thanks to Eric M. for the link).

Sunday, April 25, 2004

Shaping the City

Architects Shape the New Minneapolis, an ongoing program organized by the Weisman Art Museum with the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis Institute of the Arts, Children's Theatre Company, Guthrie Theater, American Institute of Architects-MN, and the Minneapolis Public Library, makes evident the changing face of the Midwestern city.

Small views of projects reshaping Minneapolis

Projects and architects include:

Walker Art Center expansion by Herzog & de Meuron,
new Guthrie Theater by Jean Nouvel,
Minneapolis Institute of the Arts and Children's Theatre Company expansions by Michael Graves,
Minneapolis Central Library by Cesar Pelli,
Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum by Frank Gehry.

The Minneapolis Public Library has a series of web pages with valuable links, books and resources, beginning with "The Artistic Dividend: The Hidden Contributions of Architecture and the Arts to the Regional Economy" and continuing to the individual architects.

As much as the word NEW, as in the New Minneapolis, seems like a marketing ploy, it indicates an overt attempt by the city to use bold architecture to not only bring attention to the area but change the lives of inhabitants. Using culture and other public facilities to reshape the city is becoming common, but the scale and simultaneity of these projects make Minneapolis a place to watch in the coming years.

Friday, April 23, 2004

Studio Gang's "Best Nest"

Jeanne Gang and Mark Schendel of Studio Gang Architects were named yesterday - Earth Day, appropriately enough - as the winner of a design competition for the Ford Calumet Environmental Center in south Chicago. From their proposal, titled "Best Nest":

Nest making is a metaphor for our approach to designing this sustainable building. Like a nest, the building re-uses discarded material for its structure, and like a nest, the building protects the birds that people are coming to see; the facade offers a woven defense against bird collisions with glass.

The Center is scheduled to open in 2006. I'll try to post some more images as they become available.

04.25 Update: A lively discussion of the Ford Calumet Environmental Center Competition and winning design can be found at ARCHINECT. Scroll down for latest posts.

Thursday, April 22, 2004

Christo and Jeanne-Claude in NYC

Sketch of The Gate

From Christo and Jeanne-Claude's web page:

On January 3, 2005, our professional workers will enter Central Park...they will place 15,000 steel weights bases at their specific positions on the edges of the walkways...On Monday, February 7, 2005, approximately 700 non-skilled workers...will elevate The Gates assemblies...The fabric panels will not initially be seen because they will be restrained in cocoons which will remain closed until Saturday, February 12, when all the cocoons will be opened, in one day...The Gates will remain in Central park for 16 days, then the removal will start.

In the meantime, photographs, drawings, maps and technical diagrams are on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art of what promises to be another controversial project by the duo who wrapped the Reichstag in Berlin and whose Umbrellas in California killed a viewer during a storm.

Great Idea

Over at ARCHINECT, I came across a link to Architecture Radio, a "non-profit educational project created to promote learning and discussion about the pressing issues of design and the built environment."

Links are provided to lectures, radio broadcasts and other snippets of audio available on the internet, such as the BBC Four interviews with great architects Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier, Walter Gropius and others, many I've never heard before with my own ears.

It's a great idea whose time has come.

Wednesday, April 21, 2004

Book of the Moment

With 824 large-scale (approx. 12x18") pages, with 5,000+ color illustrations and 2,000+ line drawings covering 1,000+ projects by 650+ architects on six continents (minus Antartica), and with a sticker price of $160.00, The Phaidon Atlas of Contemporary World Architecture earns its name.

Book cover

The wide range of buildings and types was chosen by an international panel of 150 leading individuals in the field of architecture, including critics, curators, journalists, academics and practicioners. Its moment will arrive in June.

Tschumi in Brief

Over at 2 Blowhards, a lengthy essay by Nikos Salingaros concerning the architecture of Bernard Tschumi is unfolding over eight parts, with part four posted today. Salingaros appears to be perplexed by Tschumi's writings and the appeal of his buildings and books to the greater architectural community as well as clients.



One of Tschumi's 'advertisements'

A Tschumi "Advertisement"



Like many people in architectural schools in the 1990's, I was influenced by Tschumi's words, even writing a piece on his design of Parc de la Villette for a contemporary architectural history and theory class. With five buildings constructed since this breakthrough commission, and six projects in the works according to his web page, it's no bother to see why he left his position as Dean at Columbia University to focus on his practice. But with this recent work, am I still influenced by Tschumi? Well, not really.



Le Fresnoy Art Center still strikes me as a strong design, mainly due to his decision to keep an existing building and focus on the interstitial spaces. I was not impressed by the Columbia Student Center, even though the tectonic ramp and curtain wall have a certain beauty in and of themselves. The Rouen Concert Hall may be the most beautiful building he ever designs, the closest he's come to a regular form (potentially to be similarly replicated in Limoges, France). But the recent school in Miami and his much-publicized design for the New Acropolis Museum don't make much sense to me. Perhaps I need to do more research on each, but for the time being they contribute to a more general and shared puzzlement of Tschumi and his position in the international scene.

Tuesday, April 20, 2004

High Line RFQ Update

According to a Friends of the High Line press release, seven teams have been selected from 52 Request for Qualifications submitted for the reuse design of the elevated railway, as follows:



Field Operations (James Corner); Diller + Scofidio + Renfro

Zaha Hadid Architects; Thomas Balsley Associates

Steven Holl Architects

Latz + Partner; The Saratoga Associates

Rogers Marvel Architects; Gustafson Guthrie Nichol

OpenMeshWork.ORG: OpenOffice (Lyn Rice); Mesh Architectures (Eric Liftin); Work Architecture Company (Amale Andraos, Dan Wood)

� TerraGRAM: Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates; D.I.R.T. Studio (Julie Bargmann); Beyer Blinder Belle (Neil Kittredge)


Two stages of proposals will follow, with the winner chosen sometime in the fall.

Forecast: Sunny

Blair Kamin's piece in the Sunday Chicago Tribune, "Chicago's Bold Rebirth" (registration req'd), talks positively about the current state of architecture in Chicago, while bringing up a few good points:



Chicago still lacks a first-rate design journal that can disseminate the city's ideas to architects nationwide. It needs to work out better archetypal solutions for the building blocks of today's city -- the high-rise condo and the three-flat condo. And for all of Daley's efforts to push environmentally friendly "green architecture," the city's developers have yet to build any major examples of it.


Furthermore, he says,



From the late 1880s, when the first skyscrapers popped up in the Loop, to 1969, when Mies died, Chicago was the design equivalent of the Sears and Montgomery Ward catalogs. It worked out the prototypes for new kinds of structures and urban spaces, built them in the Loop, merchandised them with ringing aphorisms such as "form ever follows function," then shipped them to Des Moines, Kansas City and other dots on the hinterland map.


It sounds like Kamin wants to find a way for Chicago to return to this high state of influence, though I think the city has a lot to do before focusing on consciously exporting its ideas or archetypes. A journal for Chicago architects that simultaneously educated and informed them on local and international architectural developments would go a long way in helping the local architectural community, especially regarding Kamin's concern of local clients going beyond Chicago to find architects for commissions that should have gone to local architects.



The residential high-rise and three-flat condo are tricky matters, driven more by economics and a conservative taste favored by developers, marketers and buyers. Remedying this can only happen one by one, as individual structures break free from the mold and receive exposure to those three segments through publication and other means.



And in two days, the winner of the Ford Calumet Environmental Center competition will be announced (and featured on this page). Finalists include local architects Ross-Barney + Jankowski and Studio Gang, in what promises to be a boost to local efforts towards sustainability.

Monday, April 19, 2004

Monday, Monday

This week's update:

Symphony Space in New York City by Polshek Partnership, whose new entrance to the Brooklyn Museum opened this past weekend.



Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:

Team Twin Towers, a group promoting the reconstruction of the Twin Towers.



The World's Tallest Virtual Building, found at kegz.net.



Architecture of the Getty Center, 800 photos of Richard Meier's Getty Center and garden.

Sunday, April 18, 2004

TV, Advertising and Buses

Safety Neal's post from Friday about the 10th Annual TV-Turnoff Week seemed to coincide wonderfully with a mention in the Chicago Reader this week about buses in suburban Chicago being outfitted with televisions. In a test program, two Pace buses have been equipped with three 15" monitors each, airing "informational programming to make transit riding more enjoyable." Of course advertising will be have a large amount of "airtime" in order to pay for the costs of buying, installing and maintaining the monitors. If successful the televisions will be installed in an additional 387 buses.

This move is reminiscent of other recent installations, primarily in elevators and cabs throughout Chicago, indicating that television is infiltrating every part of our lives, outside of work and sleep, though even those can co-exist with television's presence. Also, it seems to indicate that people are so busy that they need to catch the news, weather and sports while riding a cab to and from a meeting, or riding up to their offices. Regardless of the reasons for their presence in these locations - most likely due to advertising's willingness to find additional ways and places to influence us and the willingness of people to make money from this - the addition of televisions in buses seems as unnecessary as elevators and cabs, at least in my mind.

Continuing with the premise that advertising is driving these decisions, print ads have popped up in many Chicago neighborhoods where none existed before. Instead of in the form of billboards or banners hung from street lights, they're part of the new bus stops littered about the city. French outdoor advertising company J.C. Decaux won a bid to outfit the city with more than 2,000 bus shelters, designed by architect Robert A.M. Stern. Decaux's success in securing the contract in Chicago - and many other cities including Los Angeles and Vancouver - is due to its methods: install the shelters free of charge in exchange for advertising space on each. Once again advertisers are finding a way to increase their exposure and subsequently influence our spending choices, unfortunately at the expense of residential neighborhoods once free from advertising's presence.

One of the many, many J.C. Decaux bus shelters in Chicago
A bus shelter two blocks from my apartment

My negative attitude towards the bus shelters would be different if the advertising was for local businesses, which it sometimes - though rarely - is, most likely due to high advertising rates. Instead we are subjected to ads for the latest prescription drugs or television programs, bringing right back around to television and its growing presence and negative effects (pdf link) on people.

Friday, April 16, 2004

Civil Disobedience

As I'm writing this a press conference is being held, whereby the Chancellor of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Nancy Cantor, is making public an agreement against the school's mascot Chief Illiniwek after 40+ protestors took over Swanlund Administration Building on campus yesterday. Among those was Zwichenzug, who gave lessons for the practical activist the day of the sit-in.

Spurred by the elimination of an April 15 board meeting that would have dealt with the addition of an anti-Chief resolution to the agenda, the protestors - including students, professors, alumni and Native Americans - successfully blocked the entrances to the administrative building at 7:30 in the morning yesterday. Afterwards the school locked the protestors in the building for safety reasons, Cantor meeting with protestors at about noon today.

Protestors at the entrance to Swanlund
Civil disobedience at its best

Statements from the press conference will be available at The Bellman when available.

Thursday, April 15, 2004

Bravo! Lincoln Center

On Tuesday, the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts unveiled its plans to reconfigure the "Street of the Arts", spanning 65th Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenues. Called Bravo Lincoln Center, the conceptual design by Diller Scofidio + Renfro, in collaboration with fellow New Yorkers Fox and Fowle, uses transparency and layering as a means to improve upon the public face of Lincoln Center and the relationship between the artists and the public.

Aerial diagram of Lincoln Center
Present Lincoln Center Site Plan above, Design Views below


View 1 View 2

View 3 View 4


According to the press release the project includes, "Dramatic Renovation and Expansion of The Juilliard School, Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center Theater and The Film Society of Lincoln Center, Bold New Campus Green, Signature Restaurant and Store." No doubt, Lincoln Center deserves a better public face and I'm pleased that Diller + Scofidio, with new partner Charles Renfro, were unanimously chosen to work on the northern portion of the campus. Perhaps it is the firm's varied portfolio which includes many set designs that successfully merge performance and architecture that influenced the decision, as well as the firm's appreciation for Lincoln Center's architecture, evident in their sensitive proposal.

The 65th Street portion is the first in a series of building projects that will take place over the next ten years. To see some before pictures in comparison to the new design views, with commentary, visit The Slatin Report.

Wednesday, April 14, 2004

Cookie Cutter Retro

Via kegz.net, I found an article by Sports Illustrated columnist John Donovan on the death of "cookie-cutter" stadiums, in other words sky-high, circular multi-purpose stadiums with artificial turf. The article definitely jibes with the rise in popularity of retro stadiums like Camden Yards in Baltimore, the first and possibly best of these. Donovan slams the cookie-cutter stadiums, taking a down-with-Modernist-architecture stance with help from Joe Spear of HOK Sport + Venue + Event, the hand behind many of the recent retro stadium designs.

Many reasons exist for the demolition of these cookie-cutter parks in the last few years, including the desire of fans to be closer to the field (difficult with stadiums designed to accommodate both baseball and football), a dislike for the insensitive Modernist aesthetics and a preference for parks that hark back to the old days of baseball. As much as I don't like many of the retro designs favored today (Camden Yards is definitely an exception with its intelligent reuse of an adjacent warehouse) or the idea of historical pastiche for this or any use, I don't have any fondness for Three Rivers (Pittsburgh), Riverfront (Cincinnati) or Veterans (Philadelphia) Stadiums, three stadiums demolished in the last four years, or even Busch Stadium in St. Louis that is slated for demolition. While the fans' experience and aesthetics are of concern, I propose that winning is another factor that weighs heavily on a ball club's decision to raze a stadium, at least in the case of the cities mentioned.

Fish-eye view of Three Rivers Stadium
Three Rivers Stadium

Looking at this page, it appears that the most recent division championship by either the Pirates, the Reds or the Phillies is 1995, when the Reds won the division but were unable to move beyond that. The same team holds the most recent World Series win, in 1990, while the Pennsylvania teams have to reach back to 1979 and 1980 respectively for their titles. In other words, all the statistics on that page point to the fact that none of these teams is performing very well, or has performed well for nearly a decade. If this is the case, why not tear down the stadium and build anew (or a-old as the retro stadiums indicate)?

If a ball team is doing well, are they going to mess with something that works? Probably not. It could be argued that these cookie-cutter stadiums contribute to the home teams' bad performance, but I doubt the argument would be sound. Most likely the success of the team and the related revenue, or lack thereof, contributes the greatest to a decision that these teams have faced recently regarding their homes. There might be other examples that refute my argument but I'm simply looking at the three teams and their stadiums noted above.

Roy Designs

Last night, in a lecture sponsored by the Chicago Women in Architecture at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, Lindy Roy of Roy Design presented about twelve projects spanning about five years. These projects included a proposal for fashion designer Issay Miyake's flagship store in Tribeca (eventually built to a Frank Gehry design), a bar for a space in Manhattan's Meat Packing District, a project for a safari company in Botswana, the P.S.1 Young Architects competition she won in 2001, unbuilt houses in Houston, a house on Long Island soon to start construction, Cancer Alley (a project with photographer Richard Misrach), Mobile Graceland, book cradles for a photography exhibit at the Canadian Centre for Architecture, the new Vitra store in the Meat Packing District, a hypothetical residential project for the West Side Highway in downtown Manhattan, and an extreme heli-ski hotel in Alaska.

Heli-ski hotel in Alaska
Wind River Lodge in Alaska

While the P.S.1 courtyard, the CCA exhibition, and the Vitra store have been built, the last is the only permanent construction to Roy's name. Regardless, she informed the audience that at least four projects are on the boards for construction, though they could not be presented last night.

As she described the wide variety of projects, a consistency could be found in their flowing, organic forms, as much inspired by natural processes and forms as made possible by computers. Responding to questions after her talk, she gave the P.S.1 competition a high place in her portfolio, not so much for the design - a wall of oscillating fans combined with mist and areas of rest shaded by scrims to cool off people during the hot summer months in the museum's courtyard - but for the exposure her first built project gave her. It enabled her to publish more projects, even ones originating before P.S.1, eventually leading to more commissions from this exposure. She admits to luck in getting jobs, since in projects like the heli-ski, the client approached her after seeing - and liking - the project in Botswana. It appears that Roy is able to do her own thing, her clients finding something they like in what she's done, enabling her to become successful in a rather unconventional way.

Tuesday, April 13, 2004

A DASH of this, a DASH of that

A recent article at CNN.com about the Design and Architecture Senior High School (DASH) in Miami, Florida enlightened me to the fact that a magnet high school devoted to architecture and design exists. Vocational high schools, geared towards automotive, building and "hands-on" trades, are common, as are math, science and language academies or magnet schools. But this is the first instance, that I know of, where a school allows, "future fashion designers and architects to start focusing on [their] prospective careers while still in their teens."



Here are some facts:



- Programs include Architecture, Entertainment Technology, Fashion Design, Industrial Design and Visual Communications, as well as Fine Arts and the Apple Web Design Academy.



- 462 students are enrolled; last year 110 of 538 applicants were accepted.



- Approximately one teacher for every twelve students.



- Students have eight classes per day, as opposed to the typical six, and graduate with 32 credits, instead of 24.



- Students are given college credit by local colleges for design classes.



- DASH is ranked third in Florida, based on FCAT scores and student/teacher ratio.



- Eight Internships with local design companies are available to seniors every year.


When I read about this type of school I can't help but compare it to my experiences. I was fortunate to have both drafting and architecture classes in high school, but these fell under electives, to be used by students however they saw fit. But I did not know by my sophomore year, when I took drafting class, if I wanted to go to college for an architecture degree. Rather the class suited my interests at the time: drawing, working with my hands, appreciation for technical "things", etc.



Needless to say, DASH is both unique and successful, but I wonder if it's appropriate to locate a student in a profession or industry as early as thirteen? Is the growth in the popularity of these and other specialized high schools, witnessed by the high number of applications, a concomitant spread of specialization in general? Their presence seems to have positive and negative implications: increasing the exposure and education of design is definitely positive, while creating a situation where students are learning what's now being taught in universities, possibly affecting university curricula in the future, would be unfair to students of "traditional" high schools, who would be at a significantly lower level. But maybe this will all balance itself out, as specialized, magnet schools replace traditional high schools, at least to those with the right grades and parent's salaries.



All this is tied to the larger problems of public education in the United States. The President seems to favor private schools and the means to make those an option for more people, thereby ignoring the problems and possible solutions of the majority. Schools like DASH fall somewhere between private schools and struggling public schools, but they do raise questions about specialization and the right to equal, primary education in this country.

Monday, April 12, 2004

Monday, Monday

This week's update:

Sports Hall in Ingolstadt, Germany by Munich's Finz + Jocher.



Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:

jakobboeskov dot com, homepage of Danish artist Jacob S. Boeskov, creator of the...



Doomsday Weapon, a "daredevil prank with a message." (thanks to Karen for these links)



|:ni9e:|:destruction:|:production:|, typographic illustration with musical accompaniment. (thanks to dmorison)



Book of a moment ago:

As promised, you can find a review of Content, OMA's sequel to S,M,L,XL, on my weekly site.

Sunday, April 11, 2004

Northbrook Easter Eggs

The holiday weekend found me spending my time with my family in Northbrook. Saturday I drove around town taking photos of what I might call "easter eggs", well-designed buildings in the otherwise conservative surroundings of the suburban context. Click on the strips below for the full, color views.

Crate and Barrell Headquarters by Perkins and Will. . . . . . .Divine Word Missionary Chapel by David Woodhouse Architects. . . . . . .Lipson Alport Glass by Valerio Dewalt Train

Crate and Barrell Headquarters by Perkins & Will
. . . . . .
Divine Word Missionary Chapel by David Woodhouse Architects
. . . . . .
Lipson Alport Glass & Associates Headquarters by Valerio Dewalt Train

Friday, April 9, 2004

Chicago 2004

On this, the 45th anniversary of Frank Lloyd Wright's passing, I read Lynn Becker's article "Lofty Goals" in this week's Chicago Reader on the train ride into work. Concerning itself with tall buildings and their measure, the article (here in slightly different form) reiterates a few facts that put Chicago back into focus for architects, harking back to the days of Wright.



First, Chicago is the new home for the Congress for New Urbanism (CNU), a non-profit organization devoted to the implementation of the principles of New Urbanism, an urban reform movement. Coming from San Francisco last year, so far CNU's presence in Chicago is almost non-existent, but that's sure to change when their 12th Congress will be held in Chicago June 24-27. "Blocks, Streets, and Buildings Today: The New City Beautiful" will focus on the smallest part of New Urbanist principles: buildings, attempting to reconcile what's seen as the weakest part of New Urbanist developments. The fact the Congress is being held in the "City Beautiful" also indicates a questioning of the impact the Modernist movement had on the urban fabric of Chicago, and the ways New Urbanism can aid in the city's transformation through a reevaluation and analysis of the original tenets of the City Beautiful Movement over a century ago.



Also mentioned in Becker's article is the relocation of the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat from Lehigh University in Pennsylvania to the Illinois Institute of Illinois (IIT) in Chicago. With IIT's high-rise design program and engineering experience the move makes perfect sense. Taking advantage of its location, the Council is hosting a conference, "Transparency, the Art and Science in Building Design" on April 15 and 16.



Not mentioned in the article, but extremely important in this year of Chicago architecture, is the American Institute of Architect's National Convention and Design Exposition being held at McCormick Place in Chicago June 10-12. Architects from all over the country will flock to the city to earn their continuing education learning units at seminars and workshops, and take tours of downtown and other neighborhoods over the brief three days.



While in town for any of these events, people can visit the Art Institute of Chicago and see the exhibit, "Unbuilt Chicago", on display until January of next year. The presented designs span almost 100 years, over 90 drawings and models crammed into the architecture department's horseshoe-shaped gallery.



Lest I sound like a tourist guide, all the attention that Chicago seems to be getting in 2004 by the architecture community differs from the attention it received during - and since - the days of Frank Lloyd Wright, as I briefly mentioned earlier. The biggest difference now is the focus on groups and organizations instead of personalities like Wright. Chicago's biggest architectural personality, Helmut Jahn, works mainly in Germany, so his presence in the city is minimal, even though the construction of a dormitory by him at IIT last year is his first building in Chicago since he was "blacklisted" after the State of Illinois Center in the late 1980's. Many of the high-profile buildings under construction or completed recently are done by outsiders: Frank Gehry's bandshell in Millennium Park, Renzo Piano's addition to the Art Institute across the street, Rafael Vinoly's Business School at the University of Chicago, and Cesar Pelli's gymnasium on the same campus.



What does all this mean? A few years ago, a symposium, "Where in the World is Chicago?" questioned the direction of architecture in the city, the general attitude being that the city was languishing in traditional designs and bland high-rise developments. Change has occurred since the symposium, especially with the construction of high-rise residential developments that break from the painted concrete extrusions that are the norm, though these few can be attributed to the need to stand out in an otherwise saturated residential market. Local architects like Studio Gang, John Ronan and Doug Garofolo create architecture of interest in the city, but not necessarily enough to generate a local movement in line with the symposium's concerns.



My problem with the symposium, and its aims, was its reliance upon Mies and mid-20th-century Modernism as the gauge for Chicago progressive architecture. Given that the architectural climate in Chicago is so different today, that clients aren't as willing to experiment, that a movement like Modernism would not be able to exist in today's pluralistic and skeptical world (though sustainability is as close as anything today, appropriately so), it's not surprising that Chicago experienced a creative hiccup in the latter part of last century.



Buy why the sudden attention? Most likely because there are lessons to be learned. Everything talked about in the symposium, liked by CNU, documented by the Council on Tall Buildings, and so forth is on display across the gridded panoply that is Chicago. The city has grown a lot since the days of World Fairs, Wright and Mies, especially in the last ten years, as downtown has evolved from a 9-5 business district to a theater and residential area as well. While there are good and bad lessons to be learned, Chicago is as good a place as any to learn from.



Update 042604: In addition to all the events listed above, from May 21-23 the City of Chicago is presenting "Great Chicago Places & Spaces", lectures, programs and tours focusing on the city's architecture and spaces. Similar in vein to previous weekends held in London and New York, the program attempts to attract people to the wealth of new and old architecture, while educating them on the city's history. Visit the City of Chicago's web page for information on the 175 free tours and other events.

Thursday, April 8, 2004

Trump Times

My bank's "Neighborhood News and Events" flyer that I got in the mail yesterday contains a brief mention of the design for Trump Tower in Chicago, to be located on the site of the current Sun Times building. While old news, the mention is a sign of things moving ahead for Mr. Trump and his inevitable presence in the Chicago skyline.

Certainly, the Sun Times building is no architectural beauty, but the seven-story building's presence on the north side of the river is a relief in the otherwise towering surroundings. A small park just north of the building is a pleasant place to have lunch, unobstructed sunlight pouring in over the small building. Trump Tower would definitely have an impact on the space, perhaps making it more dark and claustrophobic. The impact of the 90-story tower must be a concern of the architect, SOM, or maybe this criticism was levied against them, since Trump Tower's web page only features pedestrian views in the Building Perspectives of the Architectural Design section.

Two views of Trump Tower Chicago

Personally, I like the Sun Times building, both for the reasons above and the way Wabash Avenue bends around the building, breaking up the city grid in a logical place, next to the river. But the Sun Times prints its newspaper off-site and doesn't have any need for the building and its extremely valuable land. SOM's design appears graceful in its curving form and tapered massing, but its contribution to its context still remains to be seen.

Wednesday, April 7, 2004

M.C. Escher, in built form

Perusing the internet today I came across artdaily.com, billing itself as The First Art Newspaper on the Net. While its architecture section merely links to other pages on the web, that's even a little more than could be expected of a site devoted to art. But what I found interesting on the page, aside from the daily news and extensive listings of galleries, museums and artists, is their library.

View of ArtDaily's Escher-esque library
Photo by Erasto Carranza

With more than 10,000 volumes at ArtDaily since its 1996 inception, it was obvious a library would be required to house them all and any future acquisitions. Not knowing exactly how to catalog or arrange them in what type of space, they started from an image in art: Escher's stairs to nowhere. Stating that the stairs, "take one to the limit of the possibility to take you to the impossible," they turned to young architect Betty Ayala, working with stair designer Ignacio Villarreal, to design what you see here.

While the stairs enliven the space, I'm also struck by the old-fashioned layout, placing the books at the periphery instead of in the middle, as is the norm today. But perhaps this decision is due to its existence as a private library and not a public library, and the desire to make the stairs the focus instead of the books.

Tuesday, April 6, 2004

Pierre Koenig

Pierre Koenig, architect of the subject of what's arguably the most famous photograph of Modernist architecture, died of leukemia at his home in Brentwood, California on Sunday, April 4 at the age of 78. Survived by his wife, two sons and two stepsons, the architect moved with his family to Southern California in 1939 at the age of fourteen, Pierre returning after the war to attend architecture school at USC. After graduation he fit well into the area's tradition of modernist single-family houses suited to the climate and aesthetic of Southern California.

Case Study House 22, photographed by Julius Shulman
Julius Shulman's photo of Case Study House 22

In the late 1950's, Koenig was approached to design two Case Study Houses, numbers 21 and 22, the latter perched on the Hollywood Hills and immortalized in Julius Shulman's photograph. The architect taught at his alma mater until a few months before his death.

Monday, April 5, 2004

Ride the Velodrome!

Growing up in Northbrook, a town of about 30,000 people 25 miles north of downtown Chicago, I spent a lot of time at the town's Park District facilities, be it their athletic fields, ice rinks or swimming pools. But the most distinctive, and memorable, amenity was the velodrome in Meadowhill Park, right next to my junior high school. I remember sneaking in with my friends and our bikes to ride the sharp turns, pretending we were in a race. The Ed Rudolph Northbrook Velodrome also hosted soccer and football games and the annual Fourth of July celebration with marching bands and fireworks. Needless to say, it was a unique part of growing up in the suburb.

Fish-eye view of Ed Rudolph Northbrook Velodrome

So when I read in the Chicago Tribune today that the Velodrome will most likely be saved from destruction, I was relieved but also a bit confused. How could something like the Velodrome ever be in danger? Land values have risen dramatically over three decades, but Meadowhill has expanded as outdoor recreation and sports have increased in popularity, so it must not be threatened by development.

It turns out that the Park District would not wholly pay the estimated $325,000 to repair the crumbling track, whose asphalt topping is patched annually to maintain its usability. They thought the users of the Velodrome should pay for half of the construction cost, since the track itself is used for racing, not recreation.

A group, headed by the Northbrook Cycling Committee was able to raise $225,000 before the eight-month deadline given them by the Park District, going over the halfway mark in anticipation of a construction bid above the estimate. Given that the first bid came in at $416,000, that extra paid off.

Even though Northbrook turned 100 a few years ago (the town began as Shermerville, also known as the fictional town in John Hughes' films of the 1980's), it doesn't have a historic downtown like Lake Forest or Highland Park, so unique pieces like the 40-year-plus Velodrome help to give the town its own unique character.

Monday, Monday

This week's update:

Lisbon Harbor Control Tower by Gon�alo Sousa Byrne in Lisbon, Portugal.



Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:

Winners of the Graham Foundation's competition for the extension of Lincoln Park, currently on display at the Chicago Architecture Foundation.



Picturing Chicago, A Visual Record of Everyday Life and the Social Order.



Phyllotaxis, An interactive site for the mathematical study of plant pattern formation.

Saturday, April 3, 2004

A House for Verticality

Yesterday the Skyscraper Museum opened the doors of its new home at 39 Battery Place in New York City. According to the private, non-profit, educational corporation's web page, the Skyscraper Museum,

"The museum celebrates the city's rich architectural heritage and examines the historical forces and individuals that have shaped its successive skylines. Through exhibitions, programs and publications, the museum explores tall buildings as objects of design, products of technology, sites of construction, investments in real estate, and places of work and residence."

Exhibitions have included the Viewing Wall at Ground Zero, WTC: Monument, Big Buildings, and Building the Empire State, among others. The first two seem to indicate the importance of its permanent home in the Ritz-Carlton Downtown by the Polshek Partnership, situated at the tip of Battery Park City a few blocks from the World Trade Center site. Designed by SOM, the Skyscraper Museum contains two main galleries, one for the main exhibition of New York's high-rise history and another for temporary exhibits.

Interior View of Skyscraper Museum
Interior by SOM

The Skyscraper Museum's Founding Director is Carol Willis, author of the great book Form Follows Finance, a history of high-rise construction in Chicago and New York.

Friday, April 2, 2004

Book of the Moment

Today I received in the mail a copy of Content, a "boogazine" by Rem Koolhaas and Brendan McGetrick, published by Taschen that I first noticed at spa.uk. From the crazy cover (by Kenneth Tin-Kin Hung), to the presence of advertisements, the small format, the magazine-quality paper, the 544 super-saturated pages, the seeming lack of consistency in format, its low price,... it's an odd creature. The only continuity appears to be a red bar at the top of most pages with the words, "Go East", most likely indicating the focus of Koolhaas and OMA, as they eye more and more jobs in China.

Cover of Content

Look for a write-up on my weekly page in a few weeks.

The Credits Please

My New York Times weekly film update this week included an article on film credits, or title sequences, focusing primarily on Randal Balsmeyer of New York's Big Film Design, responsible for all of Spike Lee's films, among many, many others (pdf link). Design of title sequences, introducing the actors, writer(s), director(s) and other important players, is an artform only about 50 years old, beginning with the innovative Saul Bass. My friend Jim wrote an online essay, Just the Beginning: The Art of Film Titles, which traces the evolution of main-title sequences by focusing on Bass's pioneering work for Hitchcock and the contemporary designs of Kyle Cooper for the movies Se7en and Mimic. This essay is definitely worth reading and features some clips of Bass and Cooper's credits.

Through the eye in the Chicago credits
Chicago credits, from NYT

As the Times article mentions, sometimes credits can outshine the movie they precede. Although no specific movie comes to mind, I don't doubt this assertion. On the other hand the titles may be an afterthought or repetitious, as is the case with Woody Allen's films (although his simple, traditional credits fit his low budgets and his own brand of neo-realism).

Here's some of my favorite sequences, or at least ones that I remember, more difficult than it sounds:

Fight Club
"The camera tracking all the way from DNA out through Edward Norton's nose, a la Powers of Ten" (Thanks to Behrnt).

Panic Room
Names follow the perspective of office buildings, a contemporary update of another favorite, North by Northwest.

The Royal Tenenbaums
Using books to act as credits and help tell the story of the Tenenbaum family, influenced by Orson Welles' The Magnificent Ambersons.

Run Lola Run
A huge watch and cartoon Lola setting up the plot for the next 80 minutes. Also the end credits run backward with a slightly odd "Ende-ing".

Now it's your turn...any favorites?

And yes, I realize this isn't a post directly related to architecture, but, hey, it's Friday and I love films, too.

Thursday, April 1, 2004

April Fool

Resembling The Onion more than its usual self, the Project for Public Spaces, a non-profit group formed in 1975 to help communities improve their public spaces, released its Making Places newsletter today as Faking Places. While not as funny as The Onion, the brief articles use humor to focus on bad spaces and their causes, such as empty parking lots and Wal-Mart.

View of new Greenwich Village WalMart
Image taken from PPS

For those not familiar with PPS, I would recommend looking around their site, a great resource for those interested in place making and public spaces in general. I'm particularly fond of the Great Public Spaces section, examples and case studies of parks, markets, streets and buildings that contribute to the public realm.
 
Copyright 2010 Camera Dashboard. All rights reserved.
Themes by Ex Templates Blogger Templates l Home Recordings l Studio Rekaman