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Category: architecture/interiorsMonday, Sep 19
Museums Are Really Hard To Build. So Imagine Having To Do It Twice.
We're going to come right out balls out and ensure that we never eat lunch in this town again. We didn't really like Peter Eisenman when we had him in school. We thought we were going to learn about architecture, capital-A, even, but we mostly ended up nursing our hangovers (which we hadn't planned on but something had to distract us) while listening to endless rounds of Of Grammatology with a little Thousand Plateaus thrown in. You wanted disclosure? We give you full. So we'll confess that our instinctual reaction was a swift "heh heh" as soon as we found this article about the "soup-to-nuts" redo of the Columbus Wexner Center. We remember looking at pictures of the building before and thinking that while some of his stuff is conceptually interesting (House VI, obvs) the Wexner Center was an example of theory gone horribly built-ly awry. Seems lots of other people agreed. From this weekend's NYT story (this one's still free):
OK, so what's nice about Peter is that he's--at least occasionally--willing to call bullshit on himself. Robin Pogrebin, who recently discovered that the Lower East Side is a neighborhood with both businesses and architects, asked the architect if he had any regrets about the building's having to be essentially entirely refurbished. "Could I have been a better father?" he responded. "Could I have been a better husband, friend, son, brother? These are the things I could have regrets about. But for a building? I don't think so." So at least he'll take responsibility for his personal failures, if not his professional ones. Something we have to have grudging respect for, having never taken responsibility for anything in our short little lives. "Architects expect buildings to have faults, like children" Mr. Eisenman mused. Maybe. But it'd be nice to have a higher bar. Tuesday, Sep 13
We Hope QT Stands For Quality Time Because We Could Really Use Some Around Here
We'll be crashing some unidentified event at the Hotel QT tonight. Fred Bernstein already wrote about it for the Times and we, back in the early days, mentioned it -- and the architect, Lindy Roy. Who taught us our first little sophomoric studio ever. To be honest, we never understood what she was talking about. Then again, there were probably about ten minutes of that entire two-year blackout that we really got. Post-structuralism R not us (although we do love us some semantics). So we'll see what she's come up with -- we're curious. Cameraphone pictures and high-profile architectural criticism tomorrow. Good Thing We Wouldn't Know How To Buy Real Estate If You Paid Us
First THOR, now Blue. We always thought the LES was kinda edgy -- that's why we technically hang our hand in the EV, but now Tschumi's getting involved? Doing a residential structure? Hasn't he never, um, done a building to live in? No, no he hasn't. As the Times points out today,
Only Tschumi we're closely acquainted with is Parc de la Villette which he has talked about in every single public speech we have ever seen him give (from intimate school settings to enormous League events). It's cool to have your favorite, we understand, but we're going to go on the record here and say we're a little skeptical about this building. Curbed's got a nice press release that they somehow managed to wrangle out of those coy kids, along with an image that shows exactly how cough well the structure's going to fit into the LES-scape. Tschumi, via Times: "I had always heard that doing it was a formula requiring no real architecture..." Um, yeah. That's bold. At least it's not like any of his peers have done really high-profile residential buildings in New York. Because that would be awkward. Thursday, Sep 08
Only In New York. Oh, Or the Desert.
Thanks to our boyz at Curbed for this, the micro compact home--a modern modular mobile minimal (alliteration is the new obscurity) housing unit. We want one. Anyone? Corporate? Wednesday, Sep 07
Well-Designed Locale Of The Week, Take Two
Last night we made our way over to one of seemingly-everywhere Sasha Petrasky's places, Pegu, the new bar/small plates place improbably on West Broadway and Houston St. NYU dead zone, yes, but surprisingly well-appointed. Highlight is the bar, a Masa-esque blonde wood slab. As far as the eye can see and the gullet can drink. Carpented by John Houshmand. Who makes "urban organic furniture." Sounds granola, but don't be fooled. It's stylin'. Yes, even on that corner. Tuesday, Sep 06
Santiago? I Hardly Knew Her
We're absolutely shocked that we missed this, mired as we were in mundane household replacements, but it seems that something of great urban import occurred today in New York. Downtown. Where these towers used to be and then some people flew into them and then for the last four years there's been a whole lot of discussion and Town Meetings and Pataki and Danny and lawsuits and all sorts of other extremely exciting stuff. During which Calatrava's just been drawing flying birds and children and turning them into a stegosaurus train station. Which started getting built today. You think we're joking about the birds. We're not. From NY1. Spanish designer Santiago Calatrava designed the building in the shape of a bird in flight. Calatrava was on hand today to help release two doves into the sky as a symbolic gesture. Because nothing says PATH train like a really confused dove. Thursday, Sep 01
Wait, Um, Should We Have Been Making Friends In College?
We really don't know where we'd be without the sharp social insights the House& Home section brings every week. Today, we're getting a little bit nostalgic with their article on new college dorms, and how they force kids to be--or at least make--friends. Gone are the concerns that they're not studying enough, replaced with concerns that they're not drinking enough beer. We had a blast at school. But we're not sure it was because of where we lived, except that we were obviously in the best residential college ever, duh. Turns out that dorm design is something even lofty administrators think about. The basic points, as written by Bradford McKee: single entrances, inaccessible elevators, open hallways, shared bathrooms, big common spaces. Can't really argue with that. Too bad it's too late. Noted Authors And Architects Think About Which Skyscraper They Like The Best And Tell Carol Willis
Carol Willis, iconic founder and director of the downtown Skyscraper Museum, asked a hundred of her friends and acquaintances to go through a list of twenty-five New York City skyscrapers and pick the ten they liked the best. Choices included the Chrysler Building (90 votes!) and the Flatiron (70 votes), and the Park Row building (1 vote). Critics included real estate developer Aby Rosen, former NYT public editor Dan Okrent, Architectural League director Rosalie Genevro, writer Karrie Jacobs, and F.O.U. Philip Nobel. David Dunlap discusses the selection process in today's Gray Lady, and a surprisingly interesting chart of building and looker is up at the Museum's site. That was all just very service-tastic of us. Tuesday, Aug 30
The Business Of Architecture Is Very Serious. So Is This Article.Archinect, oh archinect, what happened? You swervelessly stopped pimpin', starting making more connected, and now you've got features that even we, who are in some way nominally paid to read, can only skim the introductions of: UpStarts is a series of features on the foundations of contemporary practice. It will have a global reach in which practices from Europe, North America, Asia, and beyond will be asked to address the work behind getting the work, and the effect of cultural contexts. The focus will be on how a practice is initiated and maintained. In many ways, the critical years of a fledgling design partnership is within the initial five years, after the haze and daze of getting it off the ground. UpStarts will survey the first years of practice as a tool for tracking the tactics of the rapidly evolving methods for sustaining a practice. Don't. Stop. Can't. Stop. The interview, with Studio Sputnik, is actually interesting. Mostly the snooze hypothesis. Which looks cute and cartoony but is actually, like, in terms of the theoretical history of architecture thought, quite, well, adventurous in a way. Which is so typically cute and Dutch and Rem-y.
Then again, if Venturi's your only counterpoint... Friday, Aug 26
Maybe Zaha Should Stick To Weddings and Furniture
We cut a wide swath through the global culturescape here, and today is no different. We started out solipsistic and microcosmic, but it's time to get a little bigger. To look outside the LES, the OC, the USA. Kids, there's a world out there. And that world has buildings. Sometimes, buildings that we love. And sometimes, buildings that we haven't seen but that others--who correspond with us--have. A friend, high-profile, just wrote us from Denmark, purging his Pattern Recognition-esque reaction to Zaha's latest, the Ordrupgaard museum expansion. sucked so suckily: sloppy, ill-conceived, derivative of danny in osnabruck, and--as if i needed an and--just plain creepy and sinister. it's good to know my cayce pollard organ is intact: it made me physically sick how bad it was; i literally had to leave the building before i puked. Subtle. Just how we like it. PreviouslyMuseums Are Really Hard To Build. So Imagine Having To Do It Twice. We Hope QT Stands For Quality Time Because We Could Really Use Some Around Here Good Thing We Wouldn't Know How To Buy Real Estate If You Paid Us Only In New York. Oh, Or the Desert. Well-Designed Locale Of The Week, Take Two Wait, Um, Should We Have Been Making Friends In College? Noted Authors And Architects Think About Which Skyscraper They Like The Best And Tell Carol Willis The Business Of Architecture Is Very Serious. So Is This Article. Maybe Zaha Should Stick To Weddings and Furniture Cool Kids Only, Say The, Um, Really Cool Kids Well-Designed Locale Of The Week Get Your Shinebox, We'll Get Our Intellectualism So Much Plagiarism, So Little Respek You Want It, You Got It, If By It We Mean Meier Just How Cool Can A Tower Be, Really, When You Think About It? JetBlue to Reopen Saarinen Terminal Please, Sir, May I Have Another? The Walker Art Center: Insistently Hip? Signs That Your Decorating Jones Has Become an Obsession I Have it On Good Authority... Sunshine @ The Waverly (Courtesy IFC) Trump: Architectural Connoisseur Crime Against Urbanity: National Edition Why Does Cheap Have to Mean Ugly? Will a Cultivating That New Eccentric You Crimes Against Urbanity (This Time It's Personal) Exactly What Steichen Had in Mind! Home Sweet Dome (Inside Edition) Crimes Against Urbanity (Advertising Edition) More on Midcentury Preservation Paley Park: Private Public Space Done Right New York City's Privately Owned Public Spaces I've Got Your Real Estate Envy Right Here Crimes Against Urbanity (Preservation Edition) Crimes Against Urbanity (Bowery Edition) Jean Prouve's Tropical House @ Yale Crimes Against Urbanity (Correction) Crimes Against Urbanity (Hitting Close to Home) |
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