Less is so much more: the Parrish Art Museum
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January 22, 2013
Over the holidays I visited the new Parrish Art Museum, in Mill Creek on Long Island. The museum, which opened a couple months ago, has a mind-boggling history. In 2006, Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron unveiled their plans for a series of 30 angular, low-slung pavilions with over a dozen different roof angles. Projected construction cost came to $82 million, a good deal more than the…
On campus, student life is one big smash-up.
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December 20, 2012
For most of my career, I've been associated with a university in one way or another, much of it at the University of Texas at Austin. Over 35 years, I've observed major changes in the way students go about their routines, how they study, socialize, relax, gather information, and define their lives on campus. And so, with Sam Wilson, professor and former chair of UT's Anthropology Department…
As architects, what can we learn from historic Italian art and architecture? Plenty.
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November 27, 2012
I was in Italy recently, visiting one of my favorite cities, Volterra, in Tuscany. I can't go to Italy without admiring how art and architecture speak to each other there and often integrate beautifully. This is constantly evident in Volterra where the two have a potent and historic dialog. One particular example is the Duomo, a Romanesque church completed in 1120. The architecture is solid,…
High Performing Thermal Mass in New Mexico
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October 28, 2012
Increasingly, I’m more interested in what architecture does than just what it is. In a previous blog, I wrote about the new office building we designed for Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates (WJE), in Austin, and the use of thermal mass to control temperature. We’ve now employed those same sustainable principles for a residence in northern New Mexico. The rammed-earth structure, located outside…
LIVING Architecture
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September 26, 2012
I have made several pilgrimages to the de Young Museum in San Francisco by Herzog and de Meuron--always to stare at the building, wander around and take pictures. Last Saturday I was in SF to see a performance art piece by Sarah Wilson, Derrick Jones and Nehara Kalev that just happened to be at the de Young. It was wonderful to experience the building as part of everyday life and to be focusing…
Postmortem on Postmodern
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September 8, 2012
I am convinced that style has very little to do with the real success of buildings. Although we as architects spend a lot of time and energy screaming about “modernism” or “regionalism” or “post-structuralism,” in the end, design genre does not make any guarantee about design quality or the ability of a building to make a difference in its culture. This summer I had the opportunity to see two…
Conventional Wisdom
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August 21, 2012
I am a great believer in conventions. They are an incredibly efficient and effective way to gain knowledge, see new things, create and reinforce relationships, get creative batteries recharged and enjoy oneself all in a compact couple of days. Though I attend and generally enjoy the national AIA convention, my best such experience every year is at the Texas Architects convention in the fall. I…
Top Architectural Record Award for Guangzhou Opera House? Really?
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August 16, 2012
Architectural Record recently gave Zaha Hadid’s Guangzhou Opera House its Best Public Project: Honor Award in the Good Design Is Good Business: China competition and published it on the cover. http://archrecord.construction.com/ar_china/China_Awards/2012/Guangzhou-Opera-House/Guangzh...
Building With High Thermal Mass in Hot, Humid Climates
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August 6, 2012
It is hot and humid as hell in most of Texas at the moment. The current conditions call into question whether our normal way of dealing with summer heat (using primarily insulation and air conditioning for cooling) is the only economical and ecological approach to these climate extremes. I became interested using high thermal mass as an alternative while traveling in Turkey with my son Sloan…
Monument Valley in Dallas?
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June 18, 2012
While in Dallas last week, I took a few minutes to walk from my office to the new Arts District where there are buildings by five Pritzker-Prize-winning architects within sight of each other—Nasher Sculpture Center by Renzo Piano, Meyerson Symphony Center by I.M. Pei, Norman Foster’s Winspear Opera House, Wyly Theater by Rem Koolhaas and, nearby, Thom Mayne’s Museum of Nature and Science. All of…
The importance of “glue” in architecture
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May 29, 2012
I had an amazing experience during the AIA National Convention. It wasn’t at the convention itself, where people are running helter- skelter to their CEU sessions, but at a dinner hosted by Gilbert and Suzanne Mathews Friday night at the Folger-Shakespeare Library a few blocks from the Capitol Building. Gilbert owns Lucifer Lighting, one of the most enlightened (no pun intended) com...
Social media for architects: I’m a believer, and here’s why
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May 15, 2012
I am privileged to serve on the National Advisory Council at Cranbrook Academy of Art. Cranbrook is truly a place like no other—a stimulating, open environment where art, architecture, and design are taught and explored without boundaries. There's a rich dialogue and a consciousness about design that doesn't exist elsewhere.
What does the AIA Twenty-five Year Award say about our values as architects?
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April 24, 2012
Reflecting on the past two winners of the AIA Twenty-five Year Award, I am moved to ask what this award says about our values as architects. This is supposed to be the quintessential award that says a building is cool and has stood the test of time as an embodiment of architectural excellence. The winner must demonstrate excellence “in function, in execution of original program, and in…
Forbidden City in Beijing
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October 4, 2010
The incredible scale of the Forbidden City is daunting. The central spine contains vast open spaces defined by grand halls and endless arcades. But the Eastern Palaces and Western Palaces on either side are a world apart. There are intimate courtyards and lovely rooms where most of the court actually lived. It is impressive that this has been the center of power in China more than 500 years.…
`Environmental Science Building (SIEEB) at Tsinghua University
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September 19, 2010
Designed by the Italian architect, Mario Cucinella, SIEEB is supposed to be one of the "greenest" buildings in China. It incorporates extensive sunshading, natural ventilation, generous daylighting, solar power, rainwater harvesting, wastewater recycling, ecological materials and intelligent controls. The energy saving is supposed to be 30% compared to similar buildings.
Beijing International Airport
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September 19, 2010
This is massive--supposed to be the largest airport in the world. Oddly, however, it is not monumental, just big. It is relatively easy to navigate given its size, but architecturally it is disappointing. There is not the variation in spaces that is so memorable at Kansai Airport in a facility of similarly program. This is just one big statement that keeps going on and on and on. The…
Linked Hybrid by Stephen Holl
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September 12, 2010
This is a whole chunk of the city housing 2500 people in over 700 apartments. It is incredibly ambitious in its notions about public space in residential environments. The complex is essentially a gated community with its back to the surrounding city and its focus on a central garden. Though there are "public" venues in the central space, they are oriented to the same exclusive crowd as the…
National Grand Theatre by Paul Andreu
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September 12, 2010
A stone's throw from Tiananmen Square, this huge abstract intervention seems to have landed awkwardly in the middle of a bustling city. It defies interaction either with neighboring buildings or pedestrians passing by. The building sets the arts housed inside clearly apart from the life of the city. Though bold and striking in form from the exterior, it is cold and vacuous in much of the…
Opposite House by Kengo Kuma
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September 12, 2010
The bright green exterior of Opposite House actually seems right at home in the tree-lined Beijing neighborhood where it is located. The jaw-dropping part of the building is the interior which has dramatic spaces, dazzling light and rich, tactile materials
CCTV–Incredible Shape Shifter
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September 12, 2010
CCTV's daring shape definitely grabs attention from anywhere nearby. But the best quality of its shape is the way it morphs and changes as you move around it in the city. In that regard, it reminds me of the Pennzoil Building in Houston by Philip Johnson when it was first completed in the mid-1970s. It, too, was minimalist urban sculpture that employed simple geometries to create dynamic…
Bird’s Nest and Water Cube
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September 12, 2010
Beijing's Olympic Green was an amazing accomplishment for which the people of the city still feel a great deal of pride. Especially at night in the summer, the place is mobbed with locals just walking around with their families, taking photos, flying kites and watching little demonstrations. For western eyes it is very strange to just have these two big objects set in a sea of undifferentiated…
The Commune by the Great Wall
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August 14, 2010
Nestled in the valleys of a beautiful site on the outskirts of Beijing is a group of contemporary houses and a clubhouse designed by 12 outstanding Asian architects. Each house is an individualistic object and they bear little relationship to each other. Although there are some nice moments in many of the houses, this project seems to be symptomatic of something wrong with architecture today.…
Traveling with Sloan and Kate
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August 14, 2010
One of the best parts of the trip to China was the opportunity to see these things with my son, Sloan and his girlfriend, Kate. Sloan's background in history and law and Kate's background in anthropology complemented my own background in architecture. They are really smart, perceptive people who could absorb the places we visited with great depth. They are also full of positive energy and lots…
And, of course, The Great Wall
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August 14, 2010
We visited the Mutianyu section of the Great Wall which is more remote and less visited than the Badaling section near Beijing. It was renovated in the 1950s and 1960s and is in an area of magnificent natural beauty.
Datong–A Tough Industrial City
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August 14, 2010
Although Datong is a very old city and was a dynastic capital of China two different times, it is now dominated by coal mining and power production. It is not a charming city as a whole, but it is interesting as an example of an "ordinary" Chinese city. There is a transformation happening that is common across the country where cities are tearing out their old city fabric and replacing it with…