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Archive for Architecture

Design Loves a Depression

from 

read the article online at: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/04/weekinreview/04cannell.html?partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

January 4, 2009
Design Loves a Depression

By MICHAEL CANNELL
Few of the arts benefited from the late economic boom more than design. After all, when the wealth is flowing, people don’t covet the concerts you see or the books you read. They covet the couch you bought, and then they buy a cooler one.

 

Left, Tony Cenicola for The New York Times; right, Museum of Modern Art

MODERN COMFORTS The Eames chair, left, is an enduring classic; the Vermelha chair, by the Campana Brothers, right, is in MoMA.

 

In the recent giddy years, signature architects and designers came to be known by their first names — Rem, Philippe, Zaha — and they were photographed as prolifically as Bono in new design hotbeds like Miami and Dubai. Brooklyn designers became the apotheosis of indie cool (thin portfolios notwithstanding), and the British collective Established & Sons and other skilled maneuverers learned to breed their self-conscious furniture selectively into limited editions that sold for the kind of prices more often found in the art world. All of which was chronicled in self-celebratory books like “S, M, L, XL” by Rem Koolhaas, a 1,300-page monograph as lush as glazed fruit and weighty as firewood.

Looking back, those of us with front-row seats might have known that this design surge would not sustain itself. Two years ago, at the Milan furniture fair, Marcel Wanders, a Dutch designer known for arty provocations, held a thumping party to show off his 15-foot-high lamps and other furniture of distorted Alice-in-Wonderland scale. Never mind that his work was upstaged by his girlfriend, Nanine Linning, who hung upside down half-naked while mixing vodka drinks from bottles affixed to a chandelier. Form followed frivolity. Function was left off the guest list.

Now, given that all those slick Miami condos are sitting empty in the sky, designers like the Campana Brothers, with their $8,910 Corallo chair, and Hella Jongerius, with her $10,615 Ponder sofa, might have a harder time selling their wares. Already designers are biting their knuckles over the damage reports. The American Institute of Architects reported that last month’s billings index, a gauge of nonresidential construction, reached its lowest level since it began collecting data in 1995.

The pain of layoffs notwithstanding, the design world could stand to come down a notch or two — and might actually find a new sense of relevance in the process. That was the case during the Great Depression, when an early wave of modernism flourished in the United States, partly because it efficiently addressed the middle-class need for a pared-down life without servants and other Victorian trappings.

“American designers took the Depression as a call to arms,” said Kristina Wilson, author of “Livable Modernism: Interior Decorating and Design During the Great Depression” and an assistant professor of art history at Clark University. “It was a chance to make good on the Modernist promise to make affordable, intelligent design for a broad audience.”

The most popular American designer of that era was probably Russel Wright, who acted as the Depression’s Martha Stewart, turning out a warmed-up, affordable version of European modern furniture, tableware and linens for a new kind of informal home life. A bentwood armchair cost $19.95. “They were not just cheap, they were beautiful, and that was a powerful combination,” Ms. Wilson said.

Design tends to thrive in hard times. In the scarcity of the 1940s, Charles and Ray Eames produced furniture and other products of enduring appeal from cheap materials like plastic, resin and plywood, and Italian design flowered in the aftermath of World War II.

Will today’s designers rise to the occasion? “What designers do really well is work within constraints, work with what they have,” said Paola Antonelli, senior curator of architecture and design at the Museum of Modern Art. “This might be the time when designers can really do their job, and do it in a humanistic spirit.”

In the lean years ahead, “there will be less design, but much better design,” Ms. Antonelli predicted.

There is a reason she and others are optimistic: however dark the economic picture, it will most likely cause designers to shift their attention from consumer products to the more pressing needs of infrastructure, housing, city planning, transit and energy. Designers are good at coming up with new ways of looking at complex problems, and if President-elect Barack Obama delivers anything like a W.P.A, we could be “standing on the brink of one of the most productive periods of design ever,” said Reed Kroloff, director of Cranbrook Academy of Art.

On the other hand, the design community talked up its role in safeguarding the world after 9/11, with little result.

Modernism’s great ambition was to democratize design. Ikea and Target have shown that the battle for cheap design can be won. The emphasis will most likely shift to greater quality at affordable prices. This time around it will be the designer’s job to discourage consumers from regarding that $30 Ikea side table as a throwaway item.

If household furnishings are to avoid landfills, says Julie Lasky, editor in chief of I.D. magazine, they must be capable of withstanding the vicissitudes of fashion — like the Aalto stool, but at a fifth of the price. “It will be about finding the sweet spot between affordability and durability,” Ms. Lasky said. This kind of innovation means rethinking the economy of production and distribution so that goods are made cheaply closer to home (or in the home, if the most radical ideas are to be taken seriously).

One way or another, design will focus less on styling consumer objects with laser-cut patterns and colored resin and more on the intelligent reworking of current conditions. Expect to hear a lot more about open-source design, and cradle-to-cradle, a concept developed by William McDonough and Michael Braungart that calls for cars, packaging and other everyday objects to be designed specifically for recycling so that their parts and materials are used and reused without waste.

The old paradigm — epitomized by shelter magazines like Architectural Digest and Dwell — that found romance in single-family homes, each with its own lawn, detached garage and septic system, may crumble under the weight of its wastefulness. One challenge will be for designers to coax us to a more efficient way of living, as the architect Lorcan O’Herlihy is doing with his light and airy schemes for multifamily dwellings in Los Angeles, a city where backyards and driveways are all but a birthright. Fewer buildings will go up, and the stock of mid-century buildings nearing the end of their lifespan will be thoughtfully reworked to make them efficient and in keeping with principles of sustainability.

If Ms. Linning’s dangling from the ceiling was a cultural moment now passed, we can look forward to others for an age in which beauty and austerity go together.

Michael Cannell is a former editor of the House & Home section of The Times and founder of thedesignvote.com.

6 pack and snow

About 30 years ago, the then mayor of Buffalo, Jimmy Griffin, said to the media, that when snow hits Buffalo, the best thing to do is get a six-pack and wait it out.  He was ridiculed in the national press for appearing incapable and unprepared.  He was ridiculed in the local press because everyone here knows a six-pack doesn’t last more than an hour on a snowy night.

Every winter, Buffalo gets socked with a winter storm or two, and truth be told, that’s about it, we rarely get much more snow than most of our Great Lakes sister and brother cities, but when we get it, we get it.  This seems to be that weekend, and Mayor Griffin’s advice has never been more helpful — especially considering that our new Mayor, Byron Brown can’t seem to keep the streets cleared.  We’ve had more than a foot of snow in three days, and as of this writing, my street, and many streets in my neighborhood still haven’t seen a plow.  Typical of the new Mayor, he instituted (to much fanfare) a 311 “one stop” line for Buffalo residents to call for questions and answers — and to complain about unplowed streets. However, in VERY typical Brownian fashion, the line is closed for the weekend, and closed early on Friday because of bad weather.  Calls to the Mayor’s office are forwarded to the 311 service.  Nice.  I’m glad to see that my tax money was used to pay for something that works, as clearly, the plows aren’t.

About a month ago, The New York Times ran an article about Buffalo and our rich architectural heritage.  Fine piece, that highlighted a few of the better-known architectural gems of the area (and ignored many more of the more gritty and less tourist-friendly.)  You can read the full text of the article at NYT.com, or click here.

As I was trudging through the unplowed streets and toward the curiously pristine and cleanly-plowed sidewalks on Elmwood Avenue this morning (thanks, Elmwood Village Association), I snapped a few images of my neighborhood — one to contrast some of the images shown in The New York Times article, two, to show Byron that our streets still aren’t plowed, and three, to celebrate one of the several days we get in Buffalo each year to kick back with a case or two, and just watch the snow fly.  Enjoy!

Honors Trip

dcp_0270.jpg

I just got back from a trip across Eastern Europe with the CIAS honors students. There were 10 of us (Assistant Dean, Deb Kingsbury, me, and 8 students) altogether, and it was a fantastic trip. I was consistently impressed with the maturity and intelligence of the students with which I was traveling.

The image above is the group at Heroes Square in Budapest.We visited 4 countries in 10 days: Czech Republic, Poland, Germany, and Hungary.

I think we slept about 10 hours cumulatively, but the lack of sleep was definitely compensated by the splendid trip.I took about 1,000 photos (!) so I’ll post some from time to time along with a little commentary about each.

Good Stuff

rapid sketch

My buddy Sean just sent me a link about this new drafting/drawing program called RapidSketch. It’s very cool, kind of like a CAD program that works. Check it out here.

Next Stop | Arizona: Sipping From a Utopian Well in the Desert

NYT logo

MP sent this my way, and it is simply interesting.

By CHRIS COLIN
Published: September 16, 2007
An educated, diversely aged and surprisingly international collection of residents live in Arcosanti, the famously never-finished experimental city in the Arizona desert.

Check out the whole story at The New York Times

Richardson site up for historic study

From

bf logo

Business First of Buffalo – 12:34 PM EDT Wednesday, August 22, 2007
by James Fink

Calling it a major step in the redevelopment of the historic H.H. Richardson Towers complex, the Richardson Center Corp. has retained a nationally recognized architecture and engineering tandem to develop a “Historic Structures Report.”

The report could serve as the blueprint for the oft-discussed plans to renovate the vacant, late 1800s Richardson towers that dominate the Delaware District skyline.

Goody Clancy, a Boston-based firm that has overseen the restoration of several other Richardson-designed buildings including Boston’s fabled Trinity Church, and New York’s Simpson Gumpertz & Heger, the same firm that oversaw renovations of another Richardson project — the New York State Capitol Building in Albany, will jointly work on the report. The firms were selected from a competitive process run by the Richardson Center Corp. Financial terms of the contracts were not disclosed.

“We have a project of national significance and consequently we attracted firms from throughout the country,” said local architect Clinton Brown, head of the Richardson Center Corp. selection committee. “Buffalo’s historic architecture is well known and highly regarded throughout the preservation community. The opportunity to work on a H.H. Richardson-designed national historic landmark is a major draw, clearly.”

The Richardson Center Corp. was created last year by then-Gov. George Pataki to oversee and chart the future of the acclaimed, but long-vacant twin towers. Henry Hobson Richardson designed the towers in 1870 for the former Buffalo State Hospital.

Goody Clancy and Simpson Gumpertz & Heger will conduct a series of interviews and public sessions that will provide input for the report. The complex has the potential to serve as a major economic engine for the Delaware District and Elmwood District, once fully restored. The report is due back by late this year or early winter.

“The ‘Historic Structures Report’ is the foundation for all future work in the redevelopment of a historic building,” said Jean Carroon, Goody Clancy principal preservation architect.

Why I Like Heineken

From Vestal Design

Heineken Bottles

This 1950s design for stackable beer bottles was the brainchild of Alfred Heineken, of beer fame.

As the story goes, Heineken was strolling along by the sea in Jamaica, and was shocked at the number of beer bottles littering the beach. He was also concerned with the lack of cheap building materials, and at the resulting living conditions for the poor. Putting two and two together, he envisioned a “World Bottle” which would be imported for drinking but kept for construction.

A 10’ x 10’ shack would take approximately 1000 bottles to build, but the Jamaican tourist industry would likely supply plenty. In addition, glass (and air) are good insulators, though the humid and hot Jamaican climate may not require insulation per se. A unique feature was that the short bottle neck would fit into a depression in the bottom of each bottle. Ultimately though, the idea was either (according to different accounts) voted down by the Heineken board, or vetoed by the bottle companies and the customers. Not much information is available on the World Bottle today, but there have been other attempts to make interlocking “bottle bricks”, even of plastic.

Rochester Historical Biking Tour

Bike Tours

Wow.

I just learned of a really cool new series of bike tours that are being run by the Obediah Dogberry folks. There are four tours (one a month between now and autumn) that will cover historical sites around Rochester. A very cool idea, and I’m sure (knowing the folks that will be leading the tours) a very worthwhile experience.

You can find out more information at the tour site, http://www.tours.obediahdogberry.org/ or print out a list of rides here.

Property values higher near Metrorail stations

From the Buffalo News:

Christopher Michel – News Business Reporter
Updated: 06/08/07 10:20 AM

Houses located within a half-mile radius of Buffalo’s light rail stations are assessed to be valued between $1,300 and $3,000 more than houses not within walking distance to a station, according to University at Buffalo study.

The study, “Impact of Proximity to Light Rail Rapid Transit on Station-area Property Values in Buffalo, New York” by Daniel Hess, assistant professor of urban and regional planning in the UB School of Architecture, found property values were increased in neighborhoods close to stations at the UB South Campus, LaSalle Street, Amherst Street, Humboldt Avenue-Sisters Hospital, Delavan Avenue-Canisus, Allen Street-Buffalo-Niagara Medical Campus and Fountain Plaza.

“The gain in property value around rail stations suggests that lower property values in the City of Buffalo, compared to its suburbs and other U.S. metropolitan areas, offer a distinct advantage for economic development,” Hess said in a press release.

Story at: http://www.buffalonews.com/258/story/94205.html

Architects Have to See The Light

Business Week Logo

From Business Week:

The U.S is on the verge of a low-vision epidemic among baby boomers. Architects and designers need to help

by David Sokol

It was a kitchen caper enough to give most people nightmares. A woman in her mid-70s, who recently suffered vision loss, would enter her kitchen and each time emerge with black-and-blue marks. Diminished eyesight had stolen her ability to discern contrast between cabinets and the surrounding wall surfaces, explains Michael Honan, a clinical rehabilitation manager at Lighthouse International. In the glare of two bright windows, she continually bumped into doors that she was unable to see.

With the aging of the baby boom generation, this senior’s experience may soon be commonplace. Tara Cortes, president and CEO of Lighthouse, a vision services agency, points to several figures that suggest the U.S. is on the verge of a low-vision epidemic: Six million Americans are already affected with age-related macular degeneration, the primary cause of vision loss in the U.S, and as many as 15 million more are pre-symptomatic. In addition to age-related sight loss, 5.3 million adults suffer impaired vision caused by diabetic retinopathy–approximately one quarter of diagnosed diabetics–and the obesity epidemic promises to boost that showing.

Low vision, coupled with boomers’ propensity toward independent living, suggests a different set of easy design solutions from complete blindness, which affects only 8 percent of all visually impaired people. For now, the challenge is educating architects and planners about how the approaches differ–and ending a bias to design solely for blindness.

Danise Levine, assistant director of the IDEA Center at University at Buffalo, says that while universal design principles take low vision into account, existing standards are prejudiced against low-vision building occupants. “Most accessibility codes are geared toward people with mobility issues, which is not what most low-vision people grapple with,” she explains. In cities such as Atlanta, residential “visitability” regulations, which guarantee entry and bathroom access for disabled visitors in new homes, also emphasize physical impairment. Even the best intentions, including mandatory curb cuts for wheelchair access, put low-vision pedestrians at a disadvantage, since these people are unable to discern the dip in a sidewalk’s surface.

Architects are slowly waking up to the low-vision epidemic. According to Eunice Noell-Waggoner, president of the Center of Design for an Aging Society, they are “becoming more curious” about accommodating low-vision users. The American Institute of Architects now includes information about lighting techniques in its guidelines for healthcare facilities.

Remedies are easily at hand. Simple choices about materials, lighting direction, and color contrasts can ease low-vision users’ assimilation to new construction. And an array of affordable modification devices, from talking calculators to non-glare light bulbs, allow homeowners and office workers to confidently maneuver daily life in existing spaces. Sustainability is also conducive to the phenomenon, since visual impairment-friendly task lighting usually gobbles less energy than an all-out wash, the glare from which diminishes the ability to perceive contrast.

Further, systematic efforts to improve environmental conditions for the visually impaired are underway. Leslie Moldow, AIA, a principal at Perkins Eastman who specializes in design for aging, points out that in healthcare development, better, non-glare illumination standards are being adopted one state at a time. The Center of Design for an Aging Society recently published a booklet about lighting for low vision. And Cortes reports that Lighthouse International is lobbying Congress to approve reimbursement of vision modification devices currently not covered by Medicare.

Honan, the Lighthouse clinical rehabilitation manager at who encountered the elderly bruise victim, helped improve her situation swiftly. Applying a border of electrical tape created contrast on her kitchen cabinets, and darker curtains reduced solar glare. Although solutions for low-vision environments are within reach, Noell-Waggoner says that awareness and education still has a way to go. Contractors, eye doctors, and architects all need to see the light.

Provided by Architectural Record—The Resource for Architecture and Architects

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