Showing posts with label Thorne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thorne. Show all posts

Friday, 5 December 2008

David Chipperfield at the IE University


Great Sunday. Having Chipperfield in our University has been a quite rewarding event.

Last Friday, at my studio, we were discussing what I've named architectural "didactism". Didactism is the pathology of architecture determined by explanations of the design process . It comes from design competitions: as the juries are normally neophyte in architecture (politicians, bureaucrats, managers) the proposals have to be easily explained, so much so that design teams tend to propose mainly what is easy to explain. Nevertheless, good architecture can't never be totally explained because it is done to be experienced, not to be understood.

Chipperfield, the best British architect at the moment, has perfectly demonstrated with his outstanding work since 1985 that he believes in architecture to be lived. He explicitly agrees with this point of view in the interview below (specially when he talks about recent architecture as "victim of methodological descriptions"). However, one might say that his own CAT Master Plan is sort of didactic (video). Anyway, I'm a sure that at the end the British-Spanish Dream Team (Chipperfield-Perea-Junquera-Sancho) will convert the Segovia CAT in the public paradise they (and we all) want it to be.

I told Mr. Chipperfield that on Friday we were studying his gorgeous Gallery in Berlin at my studio at the IE School of Architecture: that building is, as the majority of his work, one example of authentic architecture to be experienced. He was glad to hear that.

Wednesday, 26 November 2008

Segovia Contemporary Architecture


"Techné"
David Chipperfield


"XXI"
Andrés Perea (courtesy of Estudio Malla
)


The title of this post is quite an accomplishment in itself, as Segovia is usually associated to the history of architecture and not to modernity at all. Well, things are changing.

The reasons for the changes are various: political, cultural, educational and economic. One of the main changes comes form the initiatives taken by the IE School of Architecture. As an example: next Sunday there will be a conference on the CAT design competition won by David Chipperfield, and he and the authors of the three awarded proposals will explain their work at the Aula Magna.

The participants will be the Major of Segovia, Martha Thorne (Executive Director of The Pritzker Architecture Prize), David Chipperfield, Andrés Perea, Juan Carlos Sancho y Sol Madridejos and Jerónimo Junquera. The report of the jury of the competition is in Spanish.