LA intricacy - Index of
Transcription
LA intricacy - Index of
März 2003 L.A. intricacy studienreise studio greg lynn universität für angewandte kunst,wien 08.03.2003 - 23.03.2003 1 Amerika-Exkursion content Impressum Architekturentwurf II Greg Lynn Universität für angewandte Kunst, Wien Oliver Bertram Christiane Feuerstein Nina Lorber Nathalie Rinne 2 Exkursionsteilnehmer: Benmoussa, Hicham Blaha, Reinfried Cavallar, Claudia Diederichs, Iris Diem, Alexander Diem, Eva Dreger, Günther Edthofer, Anna Faißt, Cornelia Galehr, Lukas Koller, Michaela Krainer, Andreas Ozvaldic, Maja Mücke, Johannes Pollhammer, Marlene Schendl, Katharina Schneider, Sarah Simma, Thimo Spacek, Mariela Spies, Martina Steirer, Cornelia Stöcklmayr, Nicole Wasshuber, Matthäus Wharton, Philip Zangerl, Martin März 2003 part I Itinerary Maps part II Text collection part III Building collection part IV Literature 3 Amerika-Exkursion PART I itinerary 4 März 2003 Itinerary Date City Time SA 08.03 Wien 08.00 Treffpunkt Schalter Austrian Airlines (kein Gruppen check in möglich!) LA 11.10 15.10 16.45 19.15 Comments Abflug Wien – Schwechat Ankunft Washington - Dulles Abflug Washington - Dulles Ankunft LA - LAX (LA International) Taxitransfer zum Hotel Nächtigung Cadillac Hotel 8 Dudley Avenue (at Ocean Front Walk) Venice, CA 90291 SO 09.03 LA 09.00 Treffpunkt Hotellobby Santa Monica Pier Malibu Lunch at Topanga Beach Cruising Sunset Blvd/ Hollywood Blvd Rodeo Drive (Prada Store, Rem Koolhaas) Sunset at Ghetty Center (optional) J.Paul Getty Center for the Fine Arts (Richard Meier, 1992-4) Sunset Blvd/ San Diego Freeway 5 Amerika-Exkursion Daytour La Pomona / Palm springs MO 10.03 LA 07.00 Treffpunkt Lobby Hotel 07.15 Abfahrt mit Bus 09.30 Besichtigung Pomona 12.30 Weiterfahrt nach Palm Springs 14.30 Ankunft Palm Springs und Besichtigungstour 20.00 Ende der Besichtigungstour PS Nächtigung Desert hot springs hotel, 67710 San Antonio Desert Hot Springs, CA 92240 Ramada Palm Springs Diamond Ranch High School (Morphosis) 100 Diamond Ranch Drive Pomona California State Polytechnic University (Antoine Predock) Classroom, Laboratory, Administration Building Pomona Frey House I (Albert Frey, 1940) 1150 Paseo El Mirador 6 März 2003 Daytour La Pomona / Palm springs Kaufmann House (Richard Neutra, 1947) 470 West Vista Chino Bob Hope House (Lautner, 1979) Southridge Dr, Palm Springs, CA 92264 Elrod House (Lautner, 1968) 2175 Southridge Dr, Palm Springs, CA 92264 Desert hot springs hotel (Lautner, 1947) 67710 San Antonio, Desert Hot Springs, CA 92240 7 Amerika-Exkursion Date City Time Comments DI 11.03 PS 05.00 Abfahrt Hotel Bus Busfahrt von Palm Springs nach Minden 16.00 Führung North Sails Minden, Nevada Tel: (775) 782 – 0 M Nächtigung Best Western Minden Inn 1795 Ironwood Drive Minden, NV 894 23 North Sails 3DL competition sails production facilities Minden, Nevada MI 12.03 M 05.00 Abfahrt Hotel Bus Busfahrt von Minden über: 1, 2 oder 3 nLA. Tour 1 Über Yosemite National Park LA Yosemite National Park Nächtigung Cadillac Hotel, LA Waterfalls, Meadows, forests, groves of giant Sequoias, world largest living things Sierra Nevada, CA 8 März 2003 Date City Time Comments DO 13.03 LA 08.00 Treffpunkt Lobby Hotel Daytour South Daytour South mit Mietauto Nächtigung Cadillac Hotel, LA Lovell Beach House (Rudolf M. Schindler, 1926) 1242 Ocean Avenue Newport Beach CTEK, LLC 1402 Morgan Circle, Tustin, CA 92710 714 566 0231 - 714 566 0234 fax CTEK is a design and development organization geared to serve and satisfy the needs of prime manufacturers. CTEK meets industries creative and technological standards of quality with a proven track record for successfully meeting very challenging deadlines. Major automakers trust its aesthetic sculpting expertise to render their 2D designs into clay models. This styling quality is carried through into finished show cars and limited production. CTEK integrates advanced automotive and aerospace technology for creating complex contoured forms with exacting dimensional control. Spectrum, 3D, HITECH Welding, Porsche Designdepartment 9 Amerika-Exkursion Daytour downtown Date City Time Comments FR 14.03 LA 08.00 Treffpunkt Lobby Hotel Daytour Downtown mit Mietauto Nächtigung Cadillac Hotel, LA SCI-Arc 960 E Third Street Disney Concert Hall (Frank O. Gehry and Associates, 1988-94) 111 South Grand Avenue MOCA (Arata Isozaki; Gruen Associates, 1986) Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art 205 South Grand Avenue, LA 90012 Cathedrale of our Lady of the Angels (Rafael Moneo, 2002) Grand Avenue / Temple Street 10 März 2003 Daytour downtown Bradbury Building (George H. Wyman, 1983) 304 S. Broadway California Aerospace Hall (Frank O. Gehry, 1984) California Museum of Science & Industry 700 State Drive in Exposition Park, Los Angeles 90037 Loyola Law School (Gehry) Loyola Marymount University 919 Albany Street Los Angeles, CA 90015 Tel (213) 736 - 1000 Chung King Road (China Town) Chinese food + galleries 11 Amerika-Exkursion Daytour Hollywood / Hills Date City Time Comments SA 15.03 LA 08.00 Treffpunkt Lobby Hotel Daytour Hollywood / Hills mit Mietauto Nächtigung Cadillac Hotel, LA Schindler Studio House/ MAK L.A. 833 N. Kings Road Barnsdall “Hollyhock” House (F. L. Wright 1917-20) Barnsdall Art Park 4808 Hollywood Bl. (optional, maybe closed for renovation) Ennis Brown (F.L. Wright, 1924) 2655 Glendower Avenue Philip Lovell House (Richard Neutra, 1929) 4616 Dundee Drive Pollari Somol House (Robert Somol and Linda Pollari) Olympic Boulevard / Highland Ave. 12 März 2003 Daytour Hollywood / Hills Case Study House 21 (Pierre Koenig, 1958) 9038 Wonderland Park Ave. Case Study House 22 (Pierre Koenig, 1959) 1635 Woods Drive Shulman House/ Studio (Raphael Soriano ) Hollywood Hills, 7875 Woodrow Wilson Leornard J. Malin House “Chemosphere” (John Lautner, 1960) Los Angeles, 776 Torreyson Drive Mullholland Drive Overview of Los Angeles from the Hills 13 Amerika-Exkursion Daytour Culver City / Santa Monica Date City Time Comments So 16.03 LA 08.00 Treffpunkt Lobby Hotel Daytour Culver City/ Santa Monica Visit Office Eric Owen Moss Architects Visit Office F.O. Gehry and Associates Visit Office GL Form Nächtigung Cadillac Hotel, LA Culver City Ince (Eric Owen Moss Architects, 1987-90) Paramount Laundry Building ()Eruc Owen Moss Architects, 1987) 3960 Ince Boulevard, Culver City 90232 Lindblade Tower (Eric Owen Moss Architects, 1989) 3958 Ince Boulevard, Culver City 90232 Gary Group Office Building (Eric Owen Moss Architects, 1990) 9046 Lindblade Street, Culver City 90232 National Building (Eric Owen Moss Architects, 1990) 8522 National Boulevard, Culver City 90232 14 März 2003 Daytour Culver City / Santa Monica Chiat/Day Building (Frank O. Gehry with Clay Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, 1991) 340 South Main Street, Venice 90291 Edgemar Development (Frank O. Gehry) 2415-2437 Main Street Gehry House Washington Ave. / 22nd St Case Study House 8 (Charles + Ray Eames) 203 Chautauqua Bl. Case Study House 9 (Charles Eames + Saarinen) 205 Chautauqua Bl. 15 Amerika-Exkursion Daytour Culver City / Santa Monica Ray Kappe House 715 Brooktree Road Beagles House (Pierre Koenig) 17446 Revello Drive Norton Residence (Frank O. Gehry, 1984) 2509 Ocean Front Walk, Venice 90291 16 März 2003 Date City Time Comments Mo 17.03 LA 08.00 Treffpunkt Lobby Hotel Daytour Pasadena / Silverlake Daytour Pasadena/ Silverlake mit Mietauto Nächtigung Cadillac Hotel, LA Silver Lake - „Colony“ of Neutra Houses Silverlake Blvd., Los Angeles VDL Research House II (Richard Neutra, Dion Neutra, 1966) 2300 Silverlake Blvd., Los Angeles The Gamble House (Charles and Henry Greene, 1908) Pasadena, 4 Westmoreland Place http://www.gamblehouse.org G.M. Milliard House “La Miniatura” (Frank L. Wright, 1923) Los Angeles, 645 Prospect Crescent Art Center College of Design (Craig Ellwood and Associates, 1977) Los Angeles, 1700 Lida Street Studio (Universal): Universal Studios Hollywood 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, CA. 91608 1-800-UNIVERSAL http://www.universalstudios.com 17 Amerika-Exkursion Los Angeles Date City DI 18.03 LA Time Comments ZBV (zur besonderen Verfügung) Nächtigung Cadillac Hotel, LA Places of Interest: Barnsdall House 4808 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles Frank Lloyd Wright, 1921 The Watts Towers (Simon Rodia) Watts Towers Art Center 1727 East 107th Streets LA, California 90002 Tel: 0213 - 847 46 46 Fax: 0213 - 564 70 30 Hollywood Bowl Designed: Frank Lloyd Wright Renovated: Frank Gehry Graumann´s chinese theatre (Mann´s Chinese Theatre) 6925 Hollywood Boulevard Meyer and Holler, 1927 Tischler House 175 Greenfield Avenue R.M. Schindler, 1949 Danziger Studio 7001 Melrose Avenue at Sycamore Avenue Frank O. Gehry, 1965 Bailey house (Neutra) 219 Chautauqua Bl. Sten - Frenke House (Neutra) 126 Mabery Road Ray Kappe House 715 Brooktree Road Beagles House (Pierre Koenig) 17446 Revello Drive Venice House (Antoine Predock, 1990) 2315 Ocean Front Walk (between 23rd and 24th Avenues) Border grill – restaurant (mexican food), Schweitzer BIM, 1989 1445 4th Street, Santa Monica Rebecca´s (Frank O. Gehry, 1985) 2025 Pacific Avenue, Venice 90291 18 März 2003 Office Ove Arup & Partners (Morphosis, 1993) 2440 South Sepulveda Boulevard, Suite 180, LA 90064 Los Angeles Contempo casuals – clothing store (Morphosis, 1987) 1801 Westwood Boulevard, LA 90024 Egyptian Theater (Meyer and Holler, 1922) 6712 Hollywood Boulevard Kingsroad Cafe Shulman House ( 7875 Woodrow Wilson Drive Storer House (Wright) 8161 Hollywood Bl Sturges House (Frank Lloyd Wright, 1939) 449 Skyewiay Road Beverly Hills Civic Center (Charles Moore and the Urban Innovations Group, 1990) Crescent Drive, Santa Monica Boulevard, Beverly Hills 90210 Kate Mantilini (Morphosis, 1987) 9101 Wilshire Boulevard, Beverly Hills 90210 Wosk Residence (Frank O. Gehry, 1984) 440 South Roxbury Drive at Doheny Drive, Beverly Hills 90210 Cedars-Sinai Comprehensive Cancer Center, Morphosis (Thom Mayne and Michael Rotundi), 1986 8700 Beverly Boulevard, West Hollywood 90048 Salick Health Care Corporate Headquarters (Morphosis, 1991) 8201 Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles 90048 Date City Time Comments MI 19.03 LA 05.00 Abfahrt Hotel mit Mietauto Rückgabe der Mietwagen durch die Fahrer bis spätestens (= Anmietzeit) am Flughafen 09.00 Abflug LA - LAX NY 17.15 Ankunft New York - JFK Mit Taxi zum Hotel West End Inn (850 West End Avenue ?) NY, 10025 19 Amerika-Exkursion New York DO 20.03 NY 09.00 Treffpunkt Tour Long Island City Fr 21.03 NY Sa 22.03 NY 09.00 Treffpunkt n. Vereinbarung Tag zur freien Verfügung 16.00 Treffpunkt Flughafen JFK 18.50 Abflug New York (JFK) So 23.3 W 09.20 Ankunft Wien - Schwechat Programm New York: a. Half Day Tour Long Island City / Queens mit: Korean Presbyterian Church, Queens Long Island City, NY 43 – 05 37th Ave. MOMA QNS Long Island City, 33 Street at Queens Blvd. by Subway: E or V to 23 St/Ely Ave. Exit onto 44th to Jackson Ave. Walk two blocks south on Jackson to 46th Ave. P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center Long Island City, 11101, 22-25 Jackson Ave at the intersection of 46th Ave b. Visit Columbia University c. Visit Cooper Union d. united architects e. Reiser- Umemoto f. Asymptote g. Places of interest: offices: Brooklyn Bridge Columbia University Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue 114. und 120.street Mainbuilding McKim, Mead&White, 1893-1913 Building Tschumi 20 März 2003 New York Flatiron Building (D.H. Burnham & Co., 1903) Schnittpunkt Broadway and Fifth Avenue (Nähe Madison Square) Metropolitan Life Tower and building (Napoleon Le Brun & Sons, 1893), Madison Square Chrysler Building William van Allen, 1930 Empire State Building (Shreve, Lamb & Harmon, 1931) 350 Fifth Avenue between 33. and 34.street Rockefeller Center (Associated architects, 1931-40) Fifth to Sixth Avenue between West 48 and West 51 Lever House (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (Gordon Bunshaft)), 1952 390 Park Avenue Seagram Building 375 Park Avenue Mies van der Rohe, 1958 Diller-Scofidio Bar Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum 1071 Fifth Avenue, between 88. and 89.street Frank Lloyd Wright, 1959 Whitney Museum of American Art 945 Madison Avenue (near 75.street) Marcel Breuer and Hamilton Smith, 1966 AT&T Building 550 Madison Avenue (between 55. and 56.street) Philip Johnson and John Burger, 1984 Times Square World Financial Center Battery Park City Cesar Pelli & Associates, 1982 – 1988 MOMA - The Museum of Modern art 11 Wets 53rd Street (currently closed) Carnegie Hall 156 West 57th street Statue of Liberty Liberty Island, 1886 Stock exchange (interieur Hani Rashid) Prada Store Soho(OMA) corner of Prince and Broadway 21 Amerika-Exkursion PART II 22 März 2003 THe Infinite game On warm evenings, the homeless men who live furtively in the wastelands of Crown Hill like to set up old car seats and broken chairs under the scorched palms to watch the spectacle of dusk over Downtown Los Angeles. They have ringside seats to enjoy the nightly illumination of 26 million square feet of prime corporate real estate, half of it built in the last decade. This incomparable light show and the plight of the homeless themselves are the chief legacies of a generation of urban redevelopment. Thanks to over a billion dollars of public subsidies and diverted tag revenues, the “suburbs in search of a city” have finally found what they were looking for. Despite Reyner Banham’s disparaging 1971 “note” (“because that is all Downtown Los Angeles deserves”) that it had become irrelevant, the center has held after all.1 Indeed, since the arrival of Pacific Rim capital in the early 1980s, Downtown Los Angeles has grown at warp speed. The stylized crown on the top of Maguire Thomas’s overweening new skyscraper, the 73-story First Interstate World Center, symbolizes the climax of redevelopment in the new financial core from Bunker Hill to South Park. Meanwhile, on every side of the existing corporate citadel, panzer divisions of bulldozers and wrecking cranes are clearing the way for a doubling or tripling of Downtown office space in the 1990s. The desolate flanks of Crown Hill itself (the Cinderella stepsister of Bunker Hill, across the Harbor Freeway) may become another glowing forest of office towers and high-rise apartments in a few years. And the homeless, their ranks swollen by the displaced from the redeveloped “West Bank,” will probably be watching the nighttime special effects from Elysian Park or beyond. The terrible beauty struggling to be born Downtown is usually called growth, but it is neither a purely natural metabolism (as neoliberals imagine the marketplace to be) nor an enlightened volition (as politicians and planners like to claim). Rather it is better conceptualized as a vast game - a relentless competition between privileged players (or alliances of players) in which the state intervenes much like a carddealer or croupier to referee the play. Urban design, embodied in different master plans and project visions, provides malleable rules for the key players as well as a set of boundaries to exclude unauthorized play. But unlike most games, there is no winning gambit or final move. Downtown redevelopment is an essentially infinite game, played not toward any conclusion or closure, but toward its own endless protraction. The Central City Association’s fairy-tale imagery of Downtown 2020 as a duster of “urban villages” offering Manhattanized lifestyles and pleasures is bunkum for the hicks.’ 2 Downtown’s only authentic deep vision is the same as any casino’s: to keep the roulette wheels turning. How the Game Started Certain primordial facts organize the playing of the game. Above all, there is the ghost of sunk capital: a large part of the spoils of the suburban speculations of the early twentieth century - the subdivision of Hollywood and the Valley were invested in Downtown high-rise real estate in the 1900-1925 period. But these investments (including the legendary patrimonies of the Chandlers, Lankershims, and Hellmans) were almost immediately imperiled by the revolutionary tendency of the automobile to disperse retail and office functions.‘ 3 The old-guard elite resisted this decentralization (represented in the 1920s by the rise of Wilshire Boulevard as a „linear Downtown“) by marshaling an ironic municipal socialism on behalf of the central business district. 4 The first priority of this „recentering“ crusade, led by the Los Angeles Times and the Central Business District Association (CBDA, later Downtown Businessmen‘s Association, then Central City Association Mike Davis aus: Dead Cities and other Tales, 2002 1 Reyner Banham, Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies, London 1971, p.201. 2 See Central City Association, Downtown 2000, Los Angeles, 1985. 3 Cf. Scott Bottles, Los Angeles and the Automobile: The Making of the Modern City, Los Angeles 1987,; and Robert Fogelson, The Fragmented Metropolis: Los Angeles 1850 - 1930, Cambridge, Mass. 1967. 4 For Downtown interests’ zealous but ultimately unsuccessful crusade to use zoning against centrifugal development, see Marc Weiss, “The Los Angeles Realty Board and Zoning,” chapt. 4 in The Rise of the Community Builders, New York 1987. 23 Amerika-Exkursion 5 Especially for the role of the Times, see Robert Gottlieb and Irene Wolt, Thinking Big, New York 1977, pp. 152-55, 306-17. Big public projects have been repeatedly used to revive or recycle real estate values in declining sectors of Downtown. Thus the construction of the Civic Center in the 1930s bolstered the value of Times properties in the older, circa1900 core area, which had been in decline after the westward migration of the Downtown center in the early 1920s. 6 Bottles, chapt. 4 and 5 of Los Angeles and the Automobile; Central Business District Association, A Quarter Century of Activities: 1924-1949, Los Angeles 1950; Mike Davis, “Tunnel Busters: The Strange Story of the Hollywood Subway” unpublished, 1988; and Steven Mikesell, “The Los Angeles River Bridges,” Southern California Quarterly (Winter 1988). 7 See Sy Adler, „Why BART But No LART? The Political Economy of Rail Rapid Transit Planning in the Los Angeles and San Francisco Metropolitan Areas, 1945-57,“ Planning Perspectives 2 (1987). B. See David Brodsly, L.A. Freeway, Berkeley Calif. 1981, p. 96. 9 Rodolfo Acuna, A Community Under Siege: A Chronicle of Chicanos East of the Los Angeles River 1945-1975, Los Angeles 1980. 10 Frank Wilkinson, ‚And Now the Bill Comes Due,“ Frontier (October 1965). 11In 1956, Los Angeles had one of the largest skid rows in the nation, with 15,000 residents „in everything from abandoned buildings to packing crates in alleys and from 306 hotels to eleven flop-houses.“ See Aubrey Haines, „Skid Row Los Angeles,“ Frontier (September 1956). 24 [CCA]), was to reinforce the concentration of civic life within the core. Thus the publicprivate initiatives that constructed the Biltmore Hotel and Memorial Coliseum in the 1920s were followed in successive decades by the creation of the Civic Center, Dodger Stadium, the Music Center, and the Convention Center.‘5 At the same time, the CBDA also mobilized to keep the region‘s major traffic flows centered on Downtown. Redistributing tag revenue from the periphery to the center, the city subsidized a heroic program of transportation improvements. The Los Angeles River was bridged by a series of magnificent viaducts (1920-40), Downtown streets were widened and tunneled through Bunker Hill, the centralizing Major Traffic Street Plan was adopted (1924), rail commuters were taken underground through Crown Hill in a „Hollywood Subway“ to the profit of the Chandlers and other investors in the Subway Terminal Building at Fourth and Hill (1925), and the main rail lines were finally persuaded to consolidate in a Union Station (1937-39).6 Repeated campaigns by Downtown business groups to recapitalize and grade-separate the electric railroad and streetcar system (as well as extend it via monorail into the San Fernando Valley) were successfully opposed between 1920 and 1970 by suburban commercial interests.7 With the support of city engineer Lloyd Aldrich and the Southern California Automobile Club, however, Downtown forces were successful in persuading the state highway department to accept a radial freeway grid that minimized „the destructive aspects of decentralization“ and eventually made Downtown the hub of eight freeways.8 The recentering of L.A. is even better envisioned, however, as a succession of social struggles between different interest groups, classes, and communities. If Downtown landowners have always been pitted against the developers of Wilshire Boulevard and suburban retail and, later, office centers (now veritable outer cities), there is also a bitter legacy of resentment among San Fernando Valley homeowners, who believe that their tag dollars have been confiscated to improve Downtown. But most of all, Downtown has been „defended“ at the expense of the working-class communities on its immediate periphery. An estimated 50,000 residents - Chinese, Mexican, and Black - were displaced to make way for such „improvements“ as Union Station, Dodger Stadium, the Civic Center, industrial expansion east of Alameda, central business district (CBD) redevelopment on Bunker Hill, city and county jails, and especially, the eight freeways (always carefully routed to remove homes, not industry). Chronicling the story of Downtown‘s land grabs and landuse dumping east of the river, Rodolfo Acuna talks about a „community under a thirty-year siege.“ 9 März 2003 For a few years in the early postwar period, however, Downtown boosters had to face the challenge of an ambitious housing program that aimed to reconstruct, rather than displace, the working-class neighborhoods next to Downtown. Mayor Fletcher Bowron, supported by the CIO and civil-rights organizations, signed a contract with the federal government under the Housing Act of 1949, to „make Los Angeles the first slum-free city in the nation“ by building ten thousand public housing units in areas like Chavez Ravine and, potentially, Bunker Hill. The Los Angeles Community Redevelopment Agency was established under state law to assist in the assemblage of land for this purpose. The vision of a stabilized, decently housed Downtown residential fringe roused vehement opposition, however, from CBD landowners. Bowron and public housing were defeated by hysterical red-baiting orchestrated by the Los Angeles Times and police chief William Parker in 1953.‘10 Anything that even smacked of a socialistic rehousing strategy was henceforth excluded from discussions of Downtown renewal. Early Game Plans Infrastructural improvement alone, however - even in tandem with Cold War politics - could not prevent the relative decline of Downtown. Postwar Los Angeles continued to trade its old huband-spoke form for a decentralized urban geometry. Although Downtown remained the financial as well as governmental center of Southern California through the early 1960s, it inexorably saw its retail customers migrate outward along Wilshire Boulevard and eventually toward dozens of suburban shopping centers. Moreover, by 1964, as plans were completed to create Century City - a „Downtown“ for Los Angeles‘s Westside - out of an old movie lot, the historic headquarters role of the central business district was suddenly put to question as well. Embattled Downtown landowners were virtually unanimous that the CBD’s great competitive disadvantage - even more than the age of its building stock (circa 1900-1930) - was the growing accumulation of so-called blight along Main Street (Skid Row) and in the old Victorian neighborhood of Bunker Hill.11 The Hill, in fact, was a double obstacle, physically cutting off the Pershing Square focus of the business district from the Civic Center as well as preventing the CBD from egpanding westward. Public discussion became riveted an images of dereliction, ignoring the simple fact that most of the Hill’s eleven thousand inhabitants were, in fact, productive Downtown employees: dishwashers, waiters, elevator operators, janitors, garment workers, and so on. The role of city government in the redevelopment of the Hill had already been egtensively debated before 1940. In 1925, Allied Architects, denouncing the Hill as “an unsightly landmark ... blocking business expansion to the west and north,” envisioned rebuilding it as a “civic acropolis” of parks and public buildings.12 In contrast, C. C. Bigelow simply wanted to obliterate the Hill by leveling it to the Hill Street grade, and engineer William Babcock in 1931 proposed a less drastic regrading to buckle the new Civic Center to Pershing Square. 13 Despite considerable political support, both the Allied Architects and Babcock schemes were defeated, and by 1938, the city council threw in the towel to let “the natural forces of economics do the job.”14 The Bunker Hill debate resumed after World War II with the advent of Greater Los Angeles Plans, Inc. (GLAPI), sponsored by an elite group that included Norman Chandler and Asa Call (often described by his contemporaries as L.A.’s “Mr. Big”). GLAPI actually bought land on Bunker Hill for a music center, but found its plans thwarted by the reluctance of voters to approve the necessary bond issue (even with a sports arena appended). In the meantime, market forces were given a chance to transform Bunker Hill. An early 1950s insurance-company scheme to build upscale apartment towers on the Hill (along the lines of Park LaBrea on Wilshire) never managed to get beyond its directors’ anxieties about investing in Downtown L.A. A few years later, GLAPI believed that it had convinced Union Oil to build its new headquarters on Bunker Hill, but at the last moment, the corporation instead chose Crown Hill.15 In light of these failures, piecemeal private-sector redevelopment of Bunker Hill was abandoned. Instead, the Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA) - in original intention a public housing agency - became simultaneously the largest developer Downtown and the collective instrument of all the developers. Classically, like other regulatory agencies, it was captured by the very interests it was supposed to regulate. Its mayoralIy appointed board of seven was ideally shielded from direct public scrutiny or electoral responsibility. Moreover, it possessed autonomous financial authority based on the use of diverted tag increments. After the failure of various private initiatives, the CRA wrested the entirety of Bunker Hill from its slumlords by invoking eminent domain. The city council approved the final plan for Bunker Hill in the spring of 1959, and within eighteen months bulldozers began demolishing the Hill‘s Gothic mansions and Queen Anne tenements. The Hill‘s population, meanwhile, was 12 See “Civic Center Plan” in Municipal League of Los Angeles, Bulletin 2 (March 1925),p. 13. 13 Cf. William Babcock, Regrading the Bunker Hill Area, Los Angeles 1931; and Pat Adler, The Bunker Hill Story, Glendale, Calif. 1965. 14 Cited in William Pugsley, BunkerHill: The Last of the Lofty Mansions, Corona del Mar, Calif. 1977, p. 27. 15 See Gene Marine, “Bunker Hill: Pep Pill for Downtown Los Angeles,” Frontier (August 1959). 16 Cf. John Brohman, „Urban Restructuring in Downtown Los Angeles“ (M.A. thesis, School of Architecture and Urban Platuvng, UCLA, 1983); and Joel Friedman, „The Political Economy of Urban Renewal: Changes in Land Ownership in Bunker Hill“ (M.A. thesis, School of Architecture and Urban Planning, UCLA, 1978). 17 Centropolis I Economic Survey, December 1960: Centropolis 2-General Development Plan, January 1962; Centropolis 3-Transportation Study, January 1963; and Centropolis 4-Master Plan, November 1964. The Central City Committee, appointed by Mayor Norris Poulson in 1958, was chaired by Walter Braunschweiger. 25 Amerika-Exkursion simply dumped into other Downtown areas. Although some ended up an Skid Row, most of the 10.000 ex- Bunker Hill residents were displaced to the west bank of the Harbor Freeway, driving a salient of „blight“ and rack renting across the Temple-Beaudry area well into the fashionable Westlake district. Twenty years passed before the CRA bothered to establish a fund to rebuild the quarter of Downtown housing units it had abolished in this single stroke.16 While the CRA was clearing, regrading, and assembling Bunker Hill into parcels suited for sale to developers, the major Downtown stakeholders (organized as the Central City Committee [CCC]) were helping CRA chairman William Sesnon and city planners create a master plan „to bring about the rebirth of [the entire] Central City.“ The 1964 plan, titled Centropolis, was the first comprehensive design for redevelopment: the product of a series of studies that had begun with an economic survey of Downtown in 1960. Its core vision was the linkage of new development on Bunker Hill with the revitalization of the fading financial district along Spring Street and the retail core along Broadway and Seventh Street. Pershing Square, still envisioned as the center of Downtown, was to be modernized with a large underground parking lot, the beginning of Wilshire Boulevard was to be anchored with a dramatic Wilshire Gateway and El Pueblo de Los Angeles historical park around Olvera Street was to be completed. 18 Los Angeles Times, 4 November 1965 and 24 December 1972. 19 By 1967, the Wilshire corridor had seventy financial headquarters versus forty-seven in the CBD. Only oil companies maintained their high headquarters concentration Downtown. (See Abraham Falick, „Transport Planning in Los Angeles: A Geo-Economic Analysis“ Ph.D. thesis, Department of Geography, UCLA, 1970, pp. 172-75.) Eugene Grisby and William Andrews, moreover, claim that the CBD lost 40,000 jobs between 1961 and 1967. (See „Mass Rapid Transportation as a Means of Changing Access to Employment Opportunities for Low-Income People“ [paper for the fifteenth Annual Meeting, Transportation Research Forum, San Francisco, October 1974].) 20 Gottlieb and Wolt, Thinking Big, p. 431. They argue that the shadowy „Committee of 25,“ organized by Asa Call and Neil Petree with the support of the Chandlers, was the ultimate invisible government behind the CCCP and other epiphenomenal forms of elite organization (pp. 457-58). 21 See Robert Meyers, „The Downtown Plan Faces Open Rebellion,“ Los Angeles (December 1975), p. 85. 22 Certainly the study played lip service to upgrading Broadway and Seventh Street retail as well as preserving Spring Street, but the greatest area of opportunity defined by the Silverbook was expansion southward, along the Figueroa axis, into the South Park area. 26 The outstanding innovation of the plan, however, was a proposal to link the major structures in the retail core by means of mid-block malls, with pedestrian circulation lifted above the street an „pedways.“ This superstructure would unify prime property, old and new, into a single vast Downtown mall. At the same time, it addressed department store concerns about an enhanced definition of social areas and the insulation of shoppers from „bums.“ Indeed, the „rollback‘ of Skid Row was one of the plan‘s major objectives. The idea was to deploy new or augmented land uses, including parking lots, a low-cost shopping precinct, and a light industrial strip along Main and Los Angeles Streets, to create an effective buffer zone between Skid Row and the born-again CBD.17 Just a year after the premiere of Centropolis, the Watts rebellion and the attendant white backlash almost completely vitiated the plan and the seven years of work that had gone into it. The flames of August 1965 had crept to within a few blocks of Downtown‘s southern perimeter, causing the establishment to lose its nerve. The McCone Commission predicted „that by 1990 the core of the Central City of Los Angeles will be inhabited almost exclusively by more than 1,200,000 Negroes,“ and the Los Angeles Police Department warned Downtown merchants against an „imminent gang invasion“ by Black youth („when encountered in groups of more than two they are very dangerous and armed“).18 Faced with such spectres, mortgage bankers and leasing agents started talking about a wholesale corporate defection to Century City and the Westside, even the „death of Downtown.“ 19 As a result, landowners and financiers jettisoned the central tenet of the Centropolis plan - the renovation of the historic core - and began to vote with their feet: leaving the Broadway-Spring Street corridor to decline and fall. In the midst of crisis and flight, the Central City Association rallied to save Downtown by reinventing it. Rejecting as inadequate the 1969 CBD plan prepared by city planning director Calvin Hamilton, the CCA established its own planning committee, the Committee for Central City Planning, Inc. (CCCP, „a who‘s who of business power“), in substantial continuity with the tradition and membership of both Greater Los Angeles Plans, Inc. and the Central City Committee.20 With the CCCP and the city contributing $250.000 each, an eminent planning firm, Wallace, McHarg, Roberts and Todd of Philadelphia, was hired to create a new urban design for the post-Watts reality. The firm‘s Central City L.A., 1972-1990 became universally known as the Silverbook because of its striking metallic cover. Replacing the dead letter of Centropolis, it adumbrated the political and design principles that have guided Downtown to the edge of the 1990s. For the purposes of analysis, these guidelines can be divided into two orders of importance: „dogmas“ and „gadgets.“ The dogmas, outlined below, gave new directions to the redevelopment process and established far-reaching goals for public-private cooperation. 1. First, the Silverbook categorically reasserted contra-Banham that Downtown was the center of the Los Angeles metropolitan area. As Robert Meyers pointed out at the time, this directly contradicted planning director Hamilton‘s laboriously constructed „Centers Concept“: the keystone of a city master plan emphasizing polycentric development and the equality of major growth poles. 21 2. The Silverbook also proposed a dramatic enlargement of the Community Redevelopment Agency‘s scale of planning and tax-increment authority to include März 2003 virtually all of Downtown between Alameda Street (on the east) and the Harbor (on the west), Hollywood (on the north), and Santa Monica (on the south) freeways. 3. The defense of the old office core was abandoned in favor of resiting Downtown a few blocks further west in the frontier being cleared by the CRA on Bunker Hill and along Figueroa between Fifth and Eighth streets. 22 This was in essence a disguised corporate bailout using diverted tax monies. The chief role of the CRA was envisioned as recycling land value from old to new, as discounts on greenfield parcels (together with rapid appreciation after building) compensated stakeholders for the depreciation of their obsolete properties in the old core. 4. The new growth axis (supplanting the Wilshire-Seventh Street-West direction of the last wave of prewar Downtown building) was established along Figueroa and Grand, integrated at one end with the Civic Center and pointing toward the University of Southern California at the other. The luxury apartment community on Bunker Hill was to be counteranchored at redevelopment‘s prospective southern frontier by a South Park Urban Village. This envisioned southward flow of Downtown fortuitously coincided with the personal strategy of CCA president and Occidental Insurance executive Earl Clark, who had erected a solitary skyscraper (today the Transamerica Center) at Olive and Twelfth Streets, almost a mile south of the center of new highrise construction. The Silverbook plan, if implemented, would bring Downtown and soaring land values to Clark‘s speculative outpost. 5. Even while rotating the axis of redevelopment ninety degrees from the west to the south, Silverbook premised its Downtown renaissance on the coordinated construction of a new rapid-transit infrastructure (Metro Rail) along the Wilshire corridor (with an ancillary line running toward South Central L.A.). At the same time, the neighborhoods immediately west of Downtown, across the Harbor Freeway, were reserved as a periphery for parking and CBD services. 6. Silverbook amended the corporate-renter vision of Centropolis to a post-Watts rebellion corporate-fortress strategy. Rather than creating a pedestrian superstructure to unify the old and new in a single mall-like configuration as in the Centropolis plan, new investment was now massively segregated from old. In the CRA´s actual practice - more drastic than the model - pedestrian access to Bunker Hill was deliberately removed, Angel‘s Flight (the Hill‘s picturesque funicular railroad) was dismantled, and Hill Street, once a vital boulevard, became a glacis separating the decaying traditional business district from the new construction zone. 7. Skid Row, circumscribed and buffered in Centropolis, was now scheduled for elimination, thus freeing up „Central City East“ for redevelopment as a „joint university communications center and extension school.“ In addition to these strategic dogmas, the Silverbook unveiled a number of gadgets to make the new Downtown cohere in an efficient working order. Most important was the proposed „people-mover“ to distribute office workers and shoppers from mass transit terminals across the broad spaces of Bunker Hill megastructures, to individual buildings, and then, southward, to „South Park Village.“ 23 Similarly, the elevated, grade-separated pedways of the Centropolis plan were reintroduced in Bunker Hill as a preferred option to street-level pedestrian circulation. A second-level plaza and pedway complex („Bunker Hill East“), again copied from the previous plan, was envisioned as a „five-way, ‚pivotal interface‘“ connecting Bunker Hill, above street level, with the Civic Center, Litde Tokyo, „Central City East“ (the reclaimed Skid Row), and a corner of North Broadway. Downzoning was proposed throughout the central commercial core (excluding Bunker Hill) to create a „development rights bank“ to be allotted or auctioned off according to priorities defined by a prospective Specific Plan. Finally, Silverbook had a whole toolchest of miscellaneous gadgets - ranging from a Downtown industrial freeway to an in-town industrial park - to stimulate new investment in the industrial salient between Los Angeles and Alameda Streets. The political translation of the Silverbook concepts into a legally valid blueprint for the CRA-Central Business District Redevelomment Plan 24 - encountered unexpected opposition. Although only the redoubtable Emani Bernardi opposed passage of the plan through the fifteen-member city council in July 1975, the dissident councilman was soon reinforced by powerful allies, including the county board of supervisors, the county assessor, and Sstate Senator Alan Robbins, a mayoral aspirant from the Valley.25 They joined Bernardi in suing the council to prevent the CRA from diverting billions of dollars of future tax increments (the increase in assessments due to redevelopment) from general fund uses. As the debate grew increasingly nasty, the CRA and its council supporters (backed by new mayor Tom Bradley) argued that the increments were essential to renewing growth and jobs Downtown, where as 23 The proposed circulation system corresponded entirely to the envisioned Figueroa corridor of the southward-moving office and apartment construction, completely ignoring the needs of tens of thousands of existing workers in the garment center-a bias reproduced in every subsequent phase of Downtown transportation planning. 24 Although all the different proposed „action areas“ of the Silverbook were combined into one overall plan and project area, Bunker Hill remained legally and administratively separate under its original 1959 plan. 25 Councilman Donald Lorenzen, who had briefly left the chambers to chat with an aide, later claimed that his vote had been faked by another member to support the plan. He subsequently endorsed the Bernardi suit. See Meyers, „The Downtown Plan Faces Open Rebellion,“ p. 82. 26 The Downtown leadership brazenly proposed to destroy the old library (now recognized as Downtown‘s most distinguished architectural landmark) in order to create a development greenfield while simultaneously using the new facility to roll back Latino „intrusions“ in the vicinity of the May Company and Broadway department stores. A study commissioned by Meyer and Helfeld in 1976 brilliantly rebuked the myth of Broadway blight. See Charles Kober Associates, BroadwaylCentral Library: Impact Analysis, Los Angeles 1976. 27 Amerika-Exkursion opponents insisted that a handful of large property owners - led by Security Pacific Bank, Prudential Life Insurance, and the Times Mirror Company - stood to reap a windfall at public expense. In the end, before the CBD plan was allowed to take effect, Bernardi and the county forced the CRA (in 1977) to accept a consent decree capping the tax-increment bond-issuing capacity of the project at $750 million. Meanwhile, the CRA bureaucracy itself, under commission chairman Kurt Meyer (a well-known L.A. architect) and administrator Edward Helfeld, balked at the CCA´s demand that the agency implement the Silverbook to the letter. Wallace, McHarg proposals for a large lake in South Park and the university complex on Skid Row were rejected as „unfeasible“ (privately, the CRA thought them „preposterous“), and Meyer and Helfeld took a principled stand against a Charles Luckman scheme to move the central public library to Broadway to serve as a buffer between Latino small businesses and the remnant upscale shopping precinct an Seventh Street. 26 Most of all, they railed against the CCCP‘s attempt to perpetuate itself as the CRA´s „shadow government.“ Although the CCA, under the urging of Franklin Murphy of Times Mirror, ultimately wound down its parallel planning arm, Downtown leaders did not forget, or forgive, the disobedience of Meyer and Helfeld. After Meyer resigned (officially to return to his busy architectural practice), he was replaced by a consummate wheeler-dealer and CCA ally, construction trades‘ spokesman Jim Wood. A few years later, the CCA combined forces with Helfeld foes on the planning commission and city council to purge the controversial CRA administrator. 27 See J. Gregory Payne and Scott Ratzan, Tom Bradley: The Impossible Dream, Santa Monica, Calif: 1986, pp. 142-43, 149-50. 28 See Dick Turpin in the Los Angeles Times, 21 September 1986-confirmed by the National Real Estate Investor (December 1986), p. 102: the higher estimate is from Howard Sadlowski in the Los Angeles Times, 17 June 1984. 29 Stephen Weiner of Bear Stearns quoted in National Real Estate Investor (December 1986), p. 132. 28 Japan Ups the Ante Having cleared the initial hurdle of political opposition, however, the central business district plan still had to prove that it could command the requisite levels of investment from private developers. The Silverbook had coincided with the epochal transition in city hall from Sam Yorty to Bradley, and the Downtown old guard was initially skeptical of what to expect from Los Angeles‘s first Black mayor with his coterie of South-Central ministers and wealthy Westside liberals. But Bradley, as his biographers emphasize, took great pains from the very beginning to conciliate the powerful Downtown interests. Moreover, in the latter part of his first term, a vice arrest - which most insiders believed was set up - led to the dismissal of Maury Weiner, his liberal chief deputy and bete noire of conservative critics. Weiner‘s replacement, to the chagrin of liberals, was a Pasadena Republican, Ray Remy (later head of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce). The new deputy mayor was instrumental in consolidating the rapprochement between the mayor and the Central City Association. Bradley supported by the powerful building trades wing of the local labor movement, became an aggressive proponent of the CBD plan and the strategy outlined in the CCA´s Silverbook. 27 With city hall (and a city council majority) routinely approving every request of the developers‘ lobby (or abdicating power to the CRA), new capital was encouraged to flow into Downtown‘s greenfields. If there were just five new high rises above the old earthquake limit of thirteen floors in 1975, there are now fifty. Moreover, as the game picked up pace, purely speculative trading also increased, with perhaps a third of Downtown changing hands between 1976 and 1982. Ironically, as the ante has risen, many of the original champions of Downtown renewal, including large regional banks and oil companies with troubled cash flows, have had to cash in their equity and withdraw to the sidelines. As Volckerism first created a superdollar and then destroyed it, the volatile US commercial real estate markets favored highly liquid investors and foreign capital. Downtown simply became too big for local interests to dominate. Thus in 1979 the Times reported that a quarter of Downtown‘s major properties were foreign-owned; six years later the figure was revised to 75 percent (one authority has even claimed 90 percent). 28 The first wave of foreign investment in the late 1970s, as in Manhattan, was led by Canadian real estate capital, epitomized by Toronto-based Olympia and York. The Reichmann clan, which owns Olympia and York, collects skyscrapers like the mere rich collect rare stamps or Louis XIV furniture. Yet since 1984, they, along with the New York insurance companies and British banks, have been swamped by a tsunami of Asian finance and flight capital. What the Japanese call zaitech, the strategy of using financial technologies to shift cash flow from production to speculation, has radically restructured Downtown‘s investment portfolios and given a new impetus to the realization of the CBD redesign (indeed, they have become its major motive force). As the superyen and foreign protectionism slowed domestic industrial reinvestment in Japan, giant corporations and trading companies shifted black ink abroad in search of lucrative foreign assets. The liquid resources of other investors have simply been dwarfed by the sheer mass of the Japanese trade surplus, which has rapidly found its way from US treasury bonds to prime real estate. In the particular case of Downtown Los Angeles, the superyen of the late 1980s put the skyscrapers along Figueroa‘s „gold coast“ at rummage-sale März 2003 discounts compared to Tokyo real estate. A virtually unknown condominium developer, Shuwa Company Ltd., stunned the Downtown establishment in 1986 by purchasing nearly $1 billion of L.A.‘s new skyline, including the twin-towered ARCO Plaza, in a single two-and-a-half-month buying spree. As local real estate analysts complained at the time, „The major japanese companies are borrowing at very cheap rates, usually 5% or less. They borrow in Japan [in Shuwa‘s case, through ten L.A: branches of Tokyo banks], deduct it from their taxes in Japan, convert it to dollars, and invest in dollars in the United States.“ 29 In singing praise to the miracle of the Pacific Rim economy, Los Angeles boosters in the 1980s generally avoided reference to the specific mechanism of the Downtown boom. But, to the extent that Japanese capital was now the major player, the Downtown economy had become illicitly dependent an the continuation of the structural imbalance that recycled US deficits as foreign speculation in American assets. In a word, it had become addicted to US losses in the world trade war, and bank towers on Bunker Hill were rising almost in direct proportion to plant closings in East Los Angeles and elsewhere in the nation. The Downtown renaissance had become a perverse monument to deindustrialization. But the ironies of international geopolitics were scarcely noted by the Community Redevelopment Agency. Its concern was, rather, that the very success of Downtown redevelopment was imperiling the agency‘s raison d‘etre. By 1989-90, the CRA, working hand-in-glove with offshore capital, had reached the limits of the 1977 Bernardi cap, endangering its hegemony in the central business district and setting off a complex process of plan redesign and political negotiations. Before analyzing this new conjuncture, however, it is first necessary to draw a notional balance-sheet of redevelopment in the fifteen years since the creation of the CBD project. To what extent has the grand design, à la Silverbook, actually been realized, and how has it been further modified? First, there have been some strategic setbacks. Skid Row, slated for demolition (or deinstitutionalization, in the Orwellian language of the Silverbook), has survived, however infernally, largely as the result of council members‘ fear of the spillover of the homeless into their districts. This has led Little Tokyo to expand eastward, along First Street toward ehe Los Angeles River, rather than southward as expected. And despite the deliberate siting of the Jewelry Mart an its eastern margin, the redevelopment of Pershing Square (a subsidiary goal of the Silverbook) languishes two decades behind schedule, with street people in occupation of the park and the developers squabbling among themselves. As a result, the Biltmore Hotel, in designing its recent tower annex, rotated its main entrance 180 degrees to face the library - the new focal point of Downtown. (The library, in turn, was left in place, contra earlier plans, because its air rights were used to add density to the huge Maguire Thomas projects across the street.) More serious still are the transportation anomalies in the realized Downtown design. In the Silverbook, the viability of the new Downtown depended upon the articulation of Wilshire-axis mass transit with a pedestrian distribution system along the new Figueroa corridor. Although those in the CRA talk wistfully of reviving the scheme, federal funding for the people-mover - a proposed $250 million system of airportlike moving sidewalks - was vetoed by the Reagan administration after heavy lobbying by opponents from the San Fernando Valley. This has marooned pedestrians in the various megastructures Downtown and left a useless $30 million people-mover tunnel underneath Bunker Hill. 30 The fate of Metro Rail has been stranger still. After loud protests from Westside homeowners, Metro Rail was diverted from Wilshire, at Western, to run north through Downtown Hollywood and then under the mountains to North Hollywood. This suits some CRA leaders and their developer friends, since it links three major redevelopment projects and creates a continuous corridor of real estate speculation.31 The environmental impact report of the Southern California Rapid Transit District (SCRTD) forecasts a staggering 50 million square feet of new commercial development (virtually two new Downtowns) centered on eleven Metro Rail stations.32 But the current alignment also negates the original economic rationale for subway construction, since only the Wilshire corridor currently has the population density to generate an amortizing ridership for Metro Rail. As a result, Metro Rail faces a very likely danger of insolvency, while most Downtown commuters (coming from the Westside or, especially, the San Gabriel Valley to the east) will continue to rely an their cars. Metro Rail, at least in its current configuration, will act as an Archimedean lever to increase development densities in the CBD-Hollywood-North Hollywood corridor without mitigating current levels of congestion Downtown (but more on traffic in a moment). 33 In vindication, the CRA and its supporters 30 See Davis, “ Tunnel Busters,” pp. 34-38. In the summer of 1990, rumors began to fly that the CRA was considering a monorail system to link nodes of development Downtown. 31 The Southern California Rapid Transit District is proposing to impose $75 million in special taxes an the ninety-eight hundred commercial property owners who stand to profit most from proximity to eleven Metro Rail Phase II stations. In an ominous precedent for the plan, however, MCA Inc., which owns Universal City (an unincorporated enclave) in Cahuenga Pass between Hollywood and Burbank, seems to have found a technical loophole to avoid assessment, although the entertainment conglomerate is planning massive new development next to its Metro Rail station (see Los Angeles Business Journal, 15 January 1990). 32 SCRTD, Los Angeles Rail Rapid Transit Project SE/ S/ SE/ H, draft (November 1987),Table 3-21, p. 3-2-13. 33 In my view, Los Angeles‘s emerging transportation infrastructure will restructure land uses (and social groups) without necessarily alleviating gridlock. Thus Metro Rail will be a powerful link between development nodes (strengthening their sales value to offshore capital), whereas Light Rail (Downtown to Long Beach) will allow Downtown‘s low-wage workers to commute from a more dispersed labor-shed (opening up new development space in the CBD‘s periphery), It is unclear, however, whether any of this mass transit development will actually reduce freeway usage by Downtown office workers and professionals commuting from the valleys and the Westside. 34 On the internationalization of Downtownredevelopment and the newpolitical alliances created in its wake, see Mike Davis, „Chinatown, Part Two1 The ‚Internationalization‘ of Downtown Los Angeles,“ New Left Review 164 (July/August 1987). 35 There has been a double restructuring of power an the West Coast. On the one hand, San Francisco has been supplanted as a financial capital by Los Angeles. On the other hand, Los Angeles capital has increasingly been overshadowed by the arrival of the big Tokyo and New York banks, whose local headquarters are Downtown. Booster hyperbole about the ascendancy of Los Angeles typically focuses an the first of these phenomena and ignores the second. 36 As Edward Soja has pointed out, the Los Angeles case is a unique combination of industrial decline (unionized auto, tire, and steel plants) and revival (military aerospace and new sweatshop manufacturers). In local impact, however, the loss of high-wage branch-plant jobs has had a devastating and long-term impact an Chicano and Black communities uncompensated by the addition of new high-tech jobs in the Valley or minimum-wage garment-making jobs Downtown. See Soja, „L.A.‘s the Place: Economic Restructuring and the Internationalization of the Los Angeles Region,“ in Postmodern Geographies, London 1989. 37 Compare Brohman, „Urban Restructuring in Downtown Los Angeles,“ p. 111: and Friedman, „The Political Economy of Urban Renewal,“ p. 261. 29 Amerika-Exkursion can Claim that, whatever setbacks or anomalies may have occurred, the agency has triumphally achieved the central vision of the Silverbook. A new financial district has taken shape an the east bank of the Harbor Freeway, with its skyscraper pinnacle along Grand, focused on the library, and pointing southward toward the expanded Convention Center and USC. Because this successful recentering has been largely fueled by a land rush of Asian and Canadian capital, it has simultaneously transferred ownership to absentee foreign investors. 34 Yet there is little anxiety Downtown that the ultimate economic control panels are thousands of miles away. Although CBD Downtown office space remains a surprisingly small fraction of the total regional inventory, more power - in the form of financial headquarters and $400-per-hour firms is now concentrated Downtown than at any time since the 1940s. 35 Who Wins, Who Loses? Creating this physical infrastructure for international finance has been unquestionably the chief policy objective - and accomplishment - of the Bradley administration since 1973. More than mere „urban renewal,“ Downtown redevelopment has also been the city‘s major economic strategy for creating jobs and growth. In the face of deindustrialization of its older, nondefense, branch-plant economy, the City has gambled an creating office jobs.36 Has it worked? And who has benefited ? 38 My anonymous informant (interviewed in the fall of 1989 for the L.A. Weekly) was referring to give-aways and discounts, an one hand, and to „positive egternalities“ (public investments raising private equities) an the other. The total present value of post-1975 private investment in Downtown is probably around $8 billion. 39 Interviewed for the L.A. Weekiy in the fall of 1989. A survey of other public agencies revealed a similar ignorance of the economic impact of redevelopment. 40 See Glendale Redevelopment Agency‘s myriad brag-sheets and press releases. Glendale, just a few miles north of Downtown L.A., is also planning to dramatically „upscale“ its Galleria mall to „Rodeo Drive standards“-another move that will steal thunder (and customers) from CRA-backed retail development Downtown. 41 Again, CBD chief Spivak (in the interview noted in footnote 39) confessed that the CRA „had never considered or studied the question of ‚back-office‘ investment as an opportunity in its own right“. 42Downtown News, 16 November 1987. 30 Certainly the major private-sector players have exploited a real estate bonanza. Speculators and developers have consistently realized large windfalls from Community Redevelopment Agency writedowns and the equity-raising effects of public investment. For example, the CRA bought sixteen rundown parcels at Fourth and Flower streets in the early 1960s for $3 million; in the early 1970s, despite the explosion in property values, it discounted the combined parcel to Security Pacific Bank for a mere $5.4 million. By 1975, the land alone was worth more than $100 million. In another instance, Richard Riordan, a prominent local speculator and mortgage banker, bought property in 1969 at Ninth and Figueroa for $8 per square foot; within a decade, it had soared to $225 per square foot. (Riordan‘s successes have attracted unusual attention because he is a major contributor to Mayor Bradley and a member of two city commissions.)37 A veteran Downtown real estate and corporate-leasing expert has „guesstimated“ that the $1 billion that the CRA has invested in Bunker Hill and the central business district has helped generate „at least one billion, perhaps two billion dollars‘ worth of sheer profit for Downtown players, above and beyond their own outlays.“ 38 City hall - while in effect promoting Downtown redevelopment as „industrial policy“ - has never bothered to collect accurate figures an the new employment generated by the high-rise boom. As a result, conventional cost-benefit analysis is impossible. Don Spivak, the CRA´s manager for the entire CBD project during the 1980s, confessed in an interview that the agency had no idea how many jobs for women or minorities have been created, or what has been their per capita cost. 39 Likewise, while city hall has been throwing $90.000 topping-off parties for new skyscrapers, it has paid no attention to the success of outlying areas in capturing the „back office“ jobs („number crunching“ and data processing) that are such vital employment multipliers for entry-level clericals. Thus Glendale (a city that in the last census had 450 Black residents out of a population of nearly 130.000) has managed to snare 3 million square feet of secondary bank, insurance, and real estate investment - becoming as a result the third largest financial center in the state.40 Other major back office complexes have grown up in Chatsworth, Pasadena, City of Commerce, and Brea (the main base for Security First National). The CRA´s indifference to the new geography of service jobs is disturbing since these are precisely the kind of compensatory jobs that East and South Central Los Angeles - hard hit by plant closings - desperately need, and which presumably might have located there if the city had linked frontoffice development rights Downtown with back-office investment in the surrounding inner City. 41 The CRA´s record in Downtown housing has also been considerably obfuscated in agency propaganda. Planners maintain that the creation of a „jobs-housing balance“ Downtown - both to mitigate traffic congestion and to generate a residential base for a „24-hour Downtown“ - is one of their major priorities. Yet the CRA, which defines Downtown objectives almost exclusively in terms of middle-class populations and needs, ignores the jobshousing equilibrium that exists between the garment industry (Downtown‘s other major industry) and surrounding Latino neighborhoods. It is precisely this existent balance that is now threatened on every side by agency projects (for example, the removal of nearly four thousand people for the recent Convention Center extension) and other public-private initiatives (the potential 10,000 West Bank residents who may be forced out by the proposed specific plan in that area, for example). März 2003 The CRA was badly embarrassed in March 1989 when Legal Aid analysts proved that the agency had been deliberately misleading the public by counting cots in Skid Row shelters as „units of affordable family housing.“ Because neither the agency nor city hall has accurately monitored the destruction of housing by private action Downtown, it is virtually impossible to construct an overall Balance sheet of the housing record of redevelopment. A quarter-century after the clearance of 7310 units an Bunker Hill, the CRA claims to have finally constructed their replacements, although most are outside the Downtown area and only a quarter are „section 8,“ or „very low income,“ like those originally destroyed. Setting aside the rehabilitation of Skid Row hotel and shelter rooms, it would appear from the agency‘s tangled statistics that it has so far increased the city‘s net stock of „affordable“ housing (after deducting units demolished by agency action) by slightly more than 1000 units. Mach of this, however, is actually gentrification - that is, replacing lost „very low income“ units with more expensive „moderate income“ units (an income differential as great as $21,000). In conversations with CRA staff, it was apparent that they conceptualize „affordable housing“ as integrating legal secretaries and school teachers, not garment workers or janitors, into the „new Downtown community.“ 42 At the end of the day, and in lieu of any official cost-benefit assessment, the redevelopment game yields the following approximate scores: 1. A tripling of land values Downtown since 1975, thanks to public action. 2. Zero increment in property taxes available for general-fund purposes (schools, transportation, welfare). 3. Thirty-five to forty thousand commuter office jobs added to Downtown (presumably these jobs would have ended up somewhere in the region anyway - the CRA did not create them, but merely influenced their location). 4. A small net increment of „affordable“ housing scattered around the city, which would probably be canceled out if statistics on private demolition were available. 5. A series of ineffable and questionable „public benefits“ (for example, „Downtown culture,“ „being a World City,“ „having a center,“ and so on). 6. The yet uncalculated „negative externalities“ generated by redevelopment (that is, the additional traffic load, pollution, neglected investments in other parts of the city, negative tax impact an other services, and so on). In addition, a full balance sheet an redevelopment would have to estimate the corrupting impact of „centermania“ on city politics. City hall and the Downtown development community interpenetrate to such a profound extent that it has become literally impossible to tell where private capital ends and the Bradley administration begins. The resulting trade in influence is a miniature mirror of the military-industrial complex. Just like retired Air Force generals rushing off to fat sinecures on the boards of the aerospace industry, the illuminati of city hall Art Snyder (ex-councilman), Dan Garcia (former planning commissioner), Tom Houston (former deputy mayor), Fran Savitch (ex mayoral lieutenant), Maureen Kindel (ditto), and now Mike Gage (another ex-deputy mayor), to give an incomplete list inevitably seem to end up as lobbyists for Bulldozers. With such an extreme concentration of Los Angeles‘s best minds on moving dirt (and thus creating lucrative second careers for themselves) it is not surprising that lesser priorities - like jobs, safety, health, and welfare in South Central Los Angeles - have been so neglected. Disneyfying Downtown South The social costs of Downtown growth will rise steeply in the next decade. But before analyzing the destabilizing impact of emerging „countergames“ (the West Bank) and „side-moves“ (Central City North, South, and East), let us first consider how the Community Redevelopment Agency proposes to play out the rest of its central business district hand. With construction in the new core in the moppingup stages (including a controversial plan to demolish historic structures on Seventh Street), the focus of the CRA has shifted to the poles of CBD development: South Park and the Third Street corridor between Bunker Hill and Little Tokyo. South Park, as we have seen, was a coinage of the 1972 Silverbook. The idea was to create a mixed-income „urban village“ of clericals and professionals to „brighten“ the face of Downtown around the Convention Center and to extend redevelopment in the direction of the University of Southern California campus. 43 Although the CRA reaffirmed a South Park plan in a 1982 rewrite of development guidelines (eventually extending area boundaries south of Seventh and west of Main to the two freeways), speculators had plenty of time to bid up land values to as much as $300 per square foot before the agency finally acted to assemble parcels. 43 See Dick Turpin, “Downtown Expansion to Take Southerly Direction,” Los Angeles Times, 9 February 1986. 44 Developers fought like tigers to rezone South Park for offices. Ultimately an Urban Institute Panel had to be brought in to adjudicate whether, in light of land values, it was still possible to develop a residential community in the area. See Urban Land (September 1987), pp. 13-17; also Los Angeles Business Journal, 19 October 1987. 45 An internal CRA memo secured by the L.A. Weekly indicates that the agency wants to spend a further $372 million an developing South Park See Ron Curran, „The Agency at a Crossroads,“ L.A. Weekly, 28 March 1990. Curran has been the only Journalist in Los Angeles to doggedly follow the CRt1s footsteps over the last five years, and his many articles in the Weekly are essential reading for anyone interested in Downtown L.A. or the politics of redevelopment. 46 Los Angeles Times, 25 June 1989. See also, ibid., 10 January 1988. 47 Just as Glendale has waylaid back-offce jobs, so too is Long Beach preparing to hijack Downtown‘s convention trade. With nearly as much convention space as Downtown and a new oceanfront cityscape under construction an the site of the former „Pike“ (once the West Coast‘s Coney Island), as well as a potential Disneyland II next to the Queen Mary, Long Beach (like Anaheim in Orange County) is geared up for competition. 31 Amerika-Exkursion In the face of such land inflation, even luxury units in South Park now require large subsidies.“ South Park´s massive need for public financing is probably the major item an CRA´s hidden agenda in the struggle to remove the cap on tax increments in the central business district.45 The CRA sticks obdurately to the dogma that South Parks critical mass (a projected build-out population of 25,000) is absolutely necessary to transform Downtown into a „true community“ (poor people evidently do not count) and to shore up street-level leases and overall CBD property values into the twenty-first century. Not surprisingly, housing activists have attacked the premise that the „yuppification“ of South Park should be the city‘s top residential priority. Thus Michael Bodaken of Legal Aid (now Mayor Bradley‘s housing advisor), in a 1989 Times interview, denounced the $10 million subsidy that the CRA had furnished to Forest City Properties to build $1200-per-month apartments in South Park. „It is just unbelievable that the city is subsidizing developers with millions of dollars to lure yuppies Downtown. This city is the homeless capital of the nation. The money ought to be earmarked for homeless shelters and lowincome housing.“ 46 Housing advocates have also criticized the relocation of an entire residential community in order to expand the Convention Center, the other major component of the South Park plan. The $390 million expansion the single largest bond issue in Downtown history - is headed for troubled waters as Calmark Holding Co., the developer of an adjacent super-hotel, collapses under the weight of its junkbonds. Without Calmark´s $400 million Pacific Basin Hotel - the largest ever planned in Southern California - the expanded Convention Center would be left without a single hotel room within walking distance. 47 48 Quoted in Leon Whiteson, Los Angeles Times, 22 March 1990. 49 Cf. Miracle an Broadway-Annual Report 1989; Downtown News, 10 February 1990; Los Angeles Business Journal, 6 November 1989: Los Angeles Times, 10 and 27 February, 9 April, and 22 September 1989. 50 Cf. Los Angeles Times, 16 October; and Downtown News, 16 October 1989. 51 See CRA, „Memorandum: Historic Core Three-Year Work Program,“ 21 December 1988. 32 On the rim of South Park (Eighth Street and the Harbor Freeway), a jocularly named monstrosity called Metropolis is being designed by Michael Graves, current house architect for the Disney Corporation and tongue-in-cheek author of the Disney World Hotel, decorated with giant swans, and the Burbank Disney headquarters with its columnar figures of the Seven Dwarves. Impervious, like most architects, to the social impact of his multimillion-square-foot project on surrounding streets and neighborhoods, his concern is instead focused an making Metropolis a „total experience“ for its corporate users. As design critics have appreciated, the arrival of Graves marks a new era Downtown, a shift from stern skyscraper monoliths and fortresses to more „livable“ and playful environments. He plans colorful glazed bands, „party hat“ roof lines, and flashy octagonal pavilions atop some of his towers. A key decorative element will be a six-story base of turquoise terra cotta-intended, according to Graves, „to show where Daddy works.“48 Indeed. „Reaganizing“ the Historic Core Gentrification is also the municipal objective in the area between Bunker Hill and Little Tokyo. Back in Silverbook days, as we have seen, Third and Broadway figured as „Bunker Hill East,“ a kind of urban universal-gear meshing Bunker Hill, the Civic Center, and Little Tokyo. The fortification of Bunker Hill, however, preduded such interaction, and Broadway became instead the premier Spanish-language shopping street in North America. Now, with the Hill fully secured and almost completely redeveloped, the Community Redevelopment Agency is reviving the idea of a „pivotal interface“ (read: yuppie corridor) to allow the free circulation of white-collar workers and tourists in the northern part of the central business district. The anchor of this gentrification strategy is the new Ronald Reagan State Ofice Building. The CRA spent more than $20 million in direct subsidies to induce the state to bring three thousand office workers to Third and Spring as the shock troops of the area‘s „uplift.“ Both the Broadway Spring Center, across from the state building, and the new L.A. Times parking garage, on Broadway north of Third, have been ingeniously designed with CRA and LAPD expertise to provide high-security pedestrian passageways, with surveillance cameras, private guards, and steel-stake fencing, to allay the anxieties of white-collar workers. The direct beneficiaries of the „Reaganization“ of the area are two chief Bradley backers: Ira Yellin, owner of the Bradbury Building, the Grand Central Public Market, and the Million Dollar Theater Building (all at the corner of Third and Broadway), and his friend and associate, Bruce Corwin, proprietor of various Broadway theaters and largest contributor to the recent defense fund for the embattled mayor. Yellin and Corwin have for a long time been the principal players in the CRA-financed „Miracle an Broadway“ association. Now they plan to exploit the captive clientele from the Reagan Building (as well as from the Times and Bunker Hill) to create a „Grand Central Square“ with upscale restaurants, condos, and ofices. Restoration architect Brenda Levin has been hired to „weave together the historical fabric“ of the Million Dollar Building with the market and a new ten-story parking garage. The CRA has buttered the way by allowing Yellin to cash März 2003 in the air rights of the Bradbury and Million Dollar Theater buildings for $12 million (a complex subsidy that after sale to another developer will eventually be costed to the public as further traffic congestion). As Spivack of the CRA put it, the deal-making on Broadway was a „win-win situation,“ the real „miracle“ being the CRA´s extraordinary willingness to bankroll Yellin and Corwin. 49 Another component necessary to complete the corridor between Bunker Hill and Little Tokyo is the removal of the Union Rescue Mission - and its crowds of homeless men - from Second and Main, next door to Saint Vibiana‘s Cathedral. It is rumored that relocation of the mission is part of the deal the CRA made with the state to get the Reagan Building. Moreover, Archbishop Mahony was reported to have lobbied the CRA (whose chief, John Tuite, is an former priest) to shift the eyesore away from his doorstep. Even so, there was some consternation when the CRA suddenly announced in September 1989 that it was offering the Mission $6.5 million to move - nearly four times the appraised value of the property. Councilman Bernardi (still the hammer of the CRA) decried a new conspiracy of the „moneyed interests,“ and his Westside colleague, Zev Yaroslaysky, complained about public subsidies to a fundamentalist body (the Mission) that refuses to hire non-Christians. Nonetheless, the council majority (without any debate about the implied subsidy to the other sectarian institution, St. Vibiana‘s) approved the CRA maneuver. 50 As a result of the Reagan Building and the other CRA initiatives, land prices have skyrocketed in the Third Street corridor, but the revival of the rest of the Historic Core (as the area bounded by First, Los Angeles, Ninth, and Hill Streets is now officially called) remains in doubt. The flight of banks and department stores after the Watts rebellion left millions of square feet of upper-story office space in the core unoccupied. Much of it has sat vacant for twenty years (the city, of course, has never imagined conscripting it for housing for the homeless or other „radical“ uses). The CRA has planned to gradually bring this office desert back to life with infusions of restoration money improved security, the addition of „nightlife“ (for example, the old Pacific Stock Exchange transformed into a disco), and so on. 51 Now, however, the fate of the area appears inversely hinged upon the success of a plan to bootleg a second Downtown, west of the Harbor Freeway. The emergence of the so-called Central City West has suddenly put the CRA´s best-made plans in jeopardy. The Countergame Certainly, the possibility has always existed of a „countergame.“ The growing differential between land values in the growth core and its immediate periphery encouraged outlaw developers to gamble an attracting investment across the Harbor Freeway. Indeed, already by the mid 1960s, a diverse group of speculators, large and small, were staking positions west of the freeway (an area that the Silverbook had primarily designated for peripheral parking and services). While awaiting redevelopment to come their way, they were permitted, criminally, to demolish entire neighborhoods in the Crown Hill and Temple-Beaudry areas. It was to their advantage to „bank“ land in desolation rather than take the risk of tenant organization or future relocation costs. But the frustrated speculators had to wait nearly a generation before they could compete against the central business district. With the exception of Unocal (a major Downtown corporation stranded on the wrong side of the Harbor Freeway), they were either foreigners (overseas Chinese and Israelis) or minorleaguers outside the mainstream power-structures, opposed by an awesome combination of the old-elite Central City Association and the Community Redevelopment Agency. Moreover, the notional „West Bank“ was balkanized by several city council districts and had no clear „patron.“ This calculus of forces began to shift in the mid 1980s. As the Figueroa corridor started to top-out with new development and turn its face away from Pershing Square, the western shore of the freeway suddenly became inviting. Despite the notorious fiasco of the Chinese World Trust building (still half-empty today), structures like the new Pacific Stock Exchange (relocated from its magnificent home an Spring Street) seemingly proved the viability of the other bank. This led several major-league players - including Hillman Industries and Ray Watt - to migrate west with their awesome financial resources and political clout. Moreover, most of the West Bank was politically consolidated into a new district under Gloria Molina, who was eager to find a resource base for jobs and housing in her crushingly poor constituency. With Molina‘s forceful backing, the area‘s largest stakeholders (organized since 1985 as the Central City West Association [CCWA]), germinated a plan to literally create a second Downtown. Despite the dire warnings of former CRA chief Ed Helfand that West Bank competition would undermine the entire logic of Downtown renewal, Molina accepted the offer of the CCWA in 1987 to privately fund a „specific 52 I have been fascinated to learn that even the CRA study team assigned to evaluate the draft specific plan (for in-house purposes only) regarded the housing element as a „crock ... not proposing to do anything at all.“ L. A. Times architecture ccitic Sam Hall Kaplan has repeatedly questioned the adequacy of its housing provision as well as condemned its „segregation of uses ... and offce tower ghetto in the southeastern portion of the community, and the isolation elsewhere of schools, housing and streets.“ 53 „In 1979 a parcel of land was sold to Unocal for $11 a square foot. Towards the end of 1988, an adjacent parcel was sold to Unocal for $270 a square foot. And just last spring, Hillman Properties reportedly purchased the entire contiguous site for $370 a square foot,“ Los Angeles BusinessJournal, 29 January 1990. As land prices rise an the West Bank, it nonetheless retains the important comparative advantage, vis-ä-vis the CBD, of being „parking rich“-that is, of having more generous onsite parking allowances-an increasingly important variable for developers and their tenants in Los Angeles. 33 Amerika-Exkursion plan“ for the area. This partnership deliberately excluded the CRA (seen as the custodian of CBD interests) and greatly reduced the role of the city planning commission. In July 1989, after two years of study, the urban design firm headed by ex-CRA commission president Kurt Meyer submitted a first draft of the plan, detailing transportation and land use for a maximum build-out of 25 to 30 million square feet of commercial space (that is, roughly equal to all new construction Downtown since 1975, or to two-and-a-half Century Citys). The transportation requirements of such a scale of development are stupefying, especially in the wake of Downtown‘ s past policy of „starving“ the West Bank of transport links in order to make it undevelopable. In the CCWAs conception, the Harbor Freeway, rather than Figueroa, would become the new „Main Street“ of a bipolar Downtown. Although Caltrans officials staunchly maintain that the freeway - „double-decked“ or not - will simply not be able to absorb the new traffic volume from the proposed Central City West, the draft plan provides for four new off-ramps, as well as an additional Metro Rail station at Bixel and Wilshire, a $300 million „transit tunnel“ under Crown Hill, and a funneling of traffic down Glendale Boulevard that could have nightmarish consequences for the already congested Echo Park area. (Some of the transport planners involved also argue for the conversion of Alvarado into a high-speed freeway connector.) Another breathtaking dimension of the plan is the proposal for 12,000 units of new housing gathered in a predominantly affluent „urban village“ similar to the South Park plan, but with a marginally greater inclusion of low- and very-low-income units (25 percent). Housing advocates, however, like Father Philip Lance of the United Neighbors of City West, point out that there is already a housing emergency in the area as the arrival of the big guns accelerated scorched-earth land-banking: 2100 units have been demolished in the last decade. 54 Councilmember Gloria Molina illustrates the classic dilemma of an inner-city politician negotiating with international capital without the clout of an activist community movement backing her up. Although a tireless advocate of housing for her low-income community, she has accepted developer ground rules (and campaign contributions) as a strategy for generating at least a modicum of decent replacement units. Friendly critics have suggested that she would have saved more housing-or at least wrestled a better deal-by mobilizing the largely Central American community of the West Bank in opposition to the CCWAs redevelopment strategy. For an interesting profile of Molina, see Ron Curran, „Gloria Molina-A Perennial Outsider Comes to Power and Now Plans to Run for Mayor,“ L.A. Weekly, 13-19 October 1989. 55 For Union Station redevelopment in the context of the restructuring of railroad land holdings, see Mike Davis, „The Los Angeles River: Lost and Found,“ L.A. Weekly, 1-7 September 1989. 34 Moreover, the draft specific plan provides for the replacement of only threequarters of the low-income units it proposes to remove for development.52 Other critics, pointing to the twenty-year timeline of development, have demanded immediate rehousing of the existing tenants and restitution for the housing destroyed in recent years. While the larval Central City West plan gestates through a labyrinthine process of political negotiation, a land rush of Klondike proportions has broken out on the West Bank. In some cases, land values have increased nearly 4000 percent in a single decade. 53 Speculators, reinforced by new arrivals from offshore, are now concentrating on an „underdeveloped“ mile-long strip of Wilshire Boulevard between the freeway and the new Metro Rail station at MacArthur Park. As CRA planners recognize with some trepidation, this flow of investment threatens to revive Wilshire Boulevard - westward as the major axis of Downtown growth - in competition to the Figueroa-southward target of the Silverbook strategy. Meanwhile, with stakes rapidly increasing, developer Ray Watt has bumrushed his way ahead of the CCWA pack to break ground. Although the city planning department‘s chief hearing examiner opposed the plan for a 1-millionsquare-foot „Watt City Center“ tower an the west side of the Harbor Freeway at Eighth Street, Watt -in one of the most impressive power-plays in recent city history - ramrodded it through the city council with the help of lobbyist Art Snyder (former East L.A. councilmember) and Molina, chair of the Planning and Landuse Committee. Molina, in Liaison with the United Neighbors of TempleBeaudry, cut a consciously Faustian deal: accepting the Watt Center‘s additional traffic load in exchange for eighty units of immediate low-income housing.54 Downtown Every-Which-Way? To many Downtowners, the Watt City Center is a massive symbol that crime (in this case, skyscraper hijacking) does pay after all. And to make matters worse, the West Bank example seems to be spurring other landowners on the central Business district‘s periphery to package megaprojects for sale to interested members of the city council. Venting the Community Redevelopment Agency‘ s anxiety at the dissipation of a Downtown focus, the agency‘ s chief, John Tuite, recently outlined the competing vectors of development: „There is the Convention Center (South Park), Union Station, [councilmember] Bob Farrell‘s ideas for a strategic plan to link USC and the surrounding area to Downtown, as well as other CRA areas, City West and City North.“ Union Station, especially, is a variable of unknown, perhaps huge, dimension in Downtown‘s future. When Caltrans tried to purchase the station under eminent domain in the early 1980s, its owners (the three transcontinental railroads: Southern Pacific, Union Pacific, and Santa Fe) brought to court a Charles Luckman model showing the site built out to the proportions of Century City. In Luckman‘s conception, the elegant old station was reduced to minor detail in an overscaled nightmare that included two skyscrapers, two mansard-roof Vegastype hotels, a vast shopping concourse, acres of parking, and a fantastic thirtystory glass März 2003 „Arc de Triomphe“ smiling over 20,000 office workers and shoppers. Overawed by the model, the judge ruled in favor of the station owners, tripling the value of the site and forcing Caltrans to abandon its purchase attempt. In following years, as Santa Fe (whose largest shareholder is Olympia and York - the world‘s largest commercial developers) laboriously negotiated to buy out its partners, the megadevelopment potential of the station became the focus of Councilman Richard Alatorre‘s attentions. Alatorre, chairing the redistricting of the city council in 1987, allocated to himself the cusp of Union Station and Olvera Street with the specific purpose of making station redevelopment a „financial motor“ to drive economic development in his Eastside district‘s „enterprise zone.“ Although his idea of linking community development to a rich redevelopment project mimics Molina‘s strategy on the West Bank, he has collaborated with, rather than excluded, the CRA, in the evident hope of integrating Union Station into the CBD game plan. Accordingly, in the spring of 1988, the CRA, on behalf of Alatorre and the station owners, completed an in-depth study of the site‘s development potential (including the vast, nearly empty shell of the neighboring Terminal Annex Post Office). In essence, the CRA analysts endorsed Luckman‘s 1983 vision of a „new urban center,“ proposing at least 3 million square feet of mixed-use office, hotel, retail, and residential development, as well as architectural unification with La Placita/ Olvera Street across the street. But the study continues to raise as many questions as it answers.55 First, it is not clear whether the office potential of the station site can be fully realized in the face of the growing competition of Central City West. Second, Olvera Street merchants and East Los Angeles political foes of Alatorre fear that station redevelopment will inundate and destroy the popular character of the old Plaza area - a crucial public space for Spanish-speaking Los Angeles. And, finally, Union Station is the fulcrum of competing claims between Little Tokyo (core of an emergent Central City East) and Chinatown (center of a hypothetical City North). It has become the passion of planning commission chairman William Luddy to unify the area north of the Civic Center - including Chinatown, El Pueblo, and Union Station - as a single planning unit designed to reinforce CBD redevelopment by adding a dynamic, nighttime tourist quarter. Moreover, as the planning department‘s December 1989 City North charette emphasized, „If Los Angeles is to compete favorably with Vancouver and San Francisco as a market for real estate development by Hong Kong and Singapore dollars, for investment from Chinese-Asian money, it must bolster that part of its city which represents its strong Chinese heritage .... „56 But this concept of packaging City North, including Union Station, for sale to the Chinese diaspora ignores the competing interest of japanese capital in establishing a strong link between Little Tokyo and the station. Little Tokyo‘s Main Street-like function for Los Angeles‘s Japanese-American community has been eclipsed by its new role as a luxury hotel and shopping precinct for Japanese businessmen. Now, however, its developers (in the words of the Downtown News) „are making a bold play to capture the tourist windfall expected from the Convention Center expansion.“ Over a million square feet of hotel, retail, and residential construction is under way near First and Alameda (extending Litlle Tokyo to the edge of the Los Angeles River), and developers are pushing for a mixed-use, high-rise rezoning of the industrial corridor east of Alameda. Union Station, revived by Metro Rail as Downtown‘s transit hub, is hungrily envisioned as an integral part of Little Tokyo‘s expanded sphere of influence. As different forces contend for the future of Union Station, another major eruption of development may be ready to occur an the CBD‘s southern flank. Since Silverbook days, most observers have believed that the CRA´s ultimate goal is to extend the corridor of high-rise redevelopment along Figueroa to the Jefferson or Exposition Street edges of the University of Southern California campus. With utter conviction in its inevitability, one landowner (an auto dealer) has spent twenty years patiently assembling most of the long, low-rise stretch between Jefferson and Adams for conversion into office and hotel-block developments. USC, on the other hand, has been preoccupied since the Watts rebellion with fortifying its borders (an impressive Maginot Line of shopping centers and parking lots) and promoting the gentrification of its Hoover Street fringe. Few doubt, however, that the university is nurturing a far more ambitious vision, linking its housing strategy to the commercial development of Figueroa under joint auspices with the CRA. The 1988 appointment of Gerald Trimble, high-powered former redevelopment director for Pasadena and San Diego, as USC‘s development director has fueled endless speculation about the university‘s game plan as well as stimulated local councilmember Robert Farrell to agitate for a link - à la Molina‘s West Bank and Alatorre‘s Union Station cash cows - between commercial and community 56 Los Angeles Design Action Planning Team, A Plan for City North, 5 December 1989. 57 On “Bradleygate,” see Mike Davis, “Heavyweight Contenders,” Interview, August 1989. 58 The vote took place along a pork barrel divide. Historically council attitudes toward the CRA have been shaped less by ideology than by whether or not the councilmember has a significant CRA project in his or her district. Even Ruth Galanter, the recent “environmentalist” addition to the council from Venice Beach, has had a change of heart about the agency after working with it to renovate the aged Crenshaw Shopping Center. 59 The mayormeanwhile has tried to mollify the county Board of Supervisors-Bernardi‘s major ally-by deregulating development rights for county properties Downtown and increasing their share of the tax flow from Hollywood redevelopment. This leaves only Bernardi and Valley homeowners‘ groups as intransigent opponents of lifting the cap. 35 Amerika-Exkursion development in the south Downtown-USC nexus. Perestroika or End Game? In summary, the West Bank countergame, together with the emerging moves on the north, east, and south faces of Downtown, is beginning to disorganize the Community Redevelopment Agency‘s CBD game plan. The casino is in chaos, the developers are seen shooting craps with politicians in every alley. Existential questions are raised: Can Downtown grow in every compass direction at once? Who will supply the demand for one, two, three, or many Downtowns? For the CRA, the problem is even more complicated, since it must confront these centrifugal tendencies while simultaneously surmounting the 1977 Bernardi cap and renewing its mandate to orchestrate Downtown‘s expansion. Moreover, Mayor Bradley‘s position as the agency‘s patron has been made more delicate by a highly publicized ethics scandal as well as by charges of benign neglect from his own Black political base. 57 An atmosphere of quiet crisis has served to concentrate minds in the CRAs Spring Street headquarters. 60 See Morris Newman, “Old Buildings Square Off Against New in Los Angeles Office Battle,” Los Angeles BusinessJournal, 23 October 1989: also ibid., 29 January 1990. 61 See interview in Los Angeles Business Journal, 16 October 1989. The Downtown News (22 January 1990) reported the growing dissatisfaction of japanese owners with the advice they had been receiving from asset managers and brokers about the quality of the Downtown market. 62 See Chip Jacobs, “Braude, Saying Downtown Growth ‘Out of Control,”’ Los Angeles BusinessJournal, 9 October 1989. 63 Ibid. 64 Is it conceivable that some Downtown visionaries are actually counting an gridlock to make their Manhattanized urban villages work? As CRA chairman jim Wood explained in an interview last year, „We planned for there to be lots of traffic Downtown; we wanted traflic because that would make Metro Rail work.“ For a preface to a „Green „ counterplan for Downtown, see Mike Davis, „Deconstructing Downtown,“ L.A. Weekly, 1-7 December 1989, as well as Davis, „The Los Angeles River: Lost and Found,“ previously cited. 36 The „solution“ hammered out from above necessarily proposed both a political realignment and a new design for Downtown. In 1989, the CRA survived a dose call when its opponents on the city council almost achieved a majority for a takeover of the agency. 58 In the aftermath, Mayor Bradley urged a sweeping concordant between the CRA and its most trenchant community critics. In return for supporting a huge increase of the CBD‘s tax-increment capacity to $5 billion, the mayor offered to split the addition evenly between CBD redevelopment and citywide housing needs. He also dramatically co-opted two of the CRA´s leading housing critics into his administration (one as his housing advisor, the other as CRA commissioner). Simultaneously, city hall instituted new housing linkage fees, taxing high-rise development to support affordable home construction. Unsurprisingly the Former united front of CRA foes-community groups, public-interest lawyers, progressive planners, and so forth has disintegrated. 59 The mayor has appointed a Downtown Strategic Plan Advisory Committee to wrestle with the challenge of Central City West in the framework of a new, twenty-year master plan for Downtown. Chaired by two veterans of the Silverbook taskforce, CRA commissioners Frank Kuwahara and Edwin Steidle, the committee is dominated by a two-thirds majority of developers and corporate lawyers, including such familiar suspects as Ira Yellin, Chris Stewart (former secretary of the CCA), and the irrepressible Art Snyder. Although the CRA´s authority ends at the Harbor Freeway, the committee has been specifically encouraged to visualize the CBD‘s future in the „broadest context - that is, to work out some reconciliation of developer interests on both sides of the freeway (taking into account USC, Litde Tokyo, Central City North, and possibly Hollywood as well). In the meantime, the mayor and the CRA are readying a proposal to drastically expand the CRAs domain Downtown: taking in City North, the USC area, part of the West Bank, and perhaps the area in transition east of Alameda. If adopted, the expanded project areas would allow the agency to deal with two problems at once: reconciliation of growth poles and the linkage of community and commercial redevelopment. The CRA has encouraged the view that these various initiatives are the beginning of an authentic Downtown perestroika that will eventually transform redevelopment to please everybody, from japanese developers to the homeless on Skid Row. Despite the „encouragement,“ however, a hard core of doubt remains. Indeed, in the view of many insiders, the end game has already begun, as Downtown plays against the clock - perhaps time bomb - of two insurmountable contradictions: overbuilding and the coming traffic apocalypse. The smart money an both sides of the Harbor Freeway has ceased to believe in the Downtown-Pacific Rim perpetual motion machine, and, like Ray Watt, is racing to bring their projects in and stuff them with high-dass tenants before the market crashes. Even before the official arrival of recession in summer 1990, the torrent of incoming Manhattan law firms and japanese banks had slowed to a trickle. In Japan itself, where convulsed stock markets registered the overaccumulation of fictional capital, high interest rates were beckoning capital to stay home. The 1980s fantasy of an infinite supply of offshore capital to sustain Southern California‘s real estate boom seems increasingly like a psychedelic aberration. If the trophy-dass Downtown office market still purred sweetly at the end of 1990, it was only because existing Downtown tenants (like First Interstate and Unocal) have been vigorously „trading up.“ As they have bailed out of their old offices (usually circa 1960s-1970s structures like the First Interstate Tower), vacancies have soared in the corporate schlock, or „dass two“ market. New development, in other words, is devaluing old. This is slowing job creation, and potentially undermining the März 2003 CRKs putative tax base as well.60 But, as happens in all business cydes, production drastically overshoots demand in the final, fervid phase of the boom. In a situation where even redevelopment‘s eminence grise, CRA commission president Jim Wood, is admitting that Downtown is overdeveloped and the japanese are acting nervous,61 science-fiction-like quantities of office space are scheduled for delivery over the next decade. In the flush conditions of the 1980s, the Downtown market absorbed about 1.4 million square feet of new space per year. With more than 12 million square feet already approved and in the construction pipeline and with the financial-services expansion ending, supply should easily meet demand through to the millennium. Yet a further 20-30 million square feet of projects are an drawing boards, chasing investors and mortgage bankers around the city. (Altogether, councilinember Marvin Braude estimates that sixty-four new projects creating 37 million square feet of office space.)62 With Southern California diving into deeper recession, who will occupy this embarrassment of space? (And why should tax dollars subsidize its construction?) Even in Los Angeles, speculators cannot go an endlessly building space for other speculators. But a Downtown depression may be the lesser of potential evils. Worse still is the specter of hyper-gridlock paralyzing Downtown and a large part of Los Angeles County. The traffic nightmare of the 199os-regardless of an economic slowdown-will be the simple addition of current planning exemptions and special cases. For example, two recently approved megaprojects-the Watt City Center and, directly across the Harbor Freeway, the Metropolis-will each add fifteen thousand trips per day to overloaded Downtown streets. Total new development will generate an additional 420,000 trips per day, making „the existing Harbor Freeway [according to councilmember Braude] a parking lot and paralyzing the movement of traffic in the Downtown area.“ 63 Lest Metro Rail and Downtown „village living“ be immediately wheeled in as a deus ex machina, it is sobering to observe that a recent survey discovered that only a tiny fraction of Downtown office commuters (just 5.4 percent) have both the means and the desire to live in Bunker Hill or South Park. Certainly the nightmare of perpetual gridlock will persuade a larger percentage of commutexs to reluctantly abandon Pasadena or Studio City,64 but these same horrors may also persuade Mitsui and CitiCorp to look afresh at Wilshire Boulevard, Long Beach, or Orange County‘s Golden Triangle. They may even convince shaken Los Angeles voters to reexamine the premises of the city‘s pharaonic and socially irresponsible redevelopment strategy. 1990 Postscript: Play Resumed The 1990-94 recession, which send CBD vacancies soaring into the double digits, accompanied by the 1992 riot that engulfed most of the MacArthur Park district, forced a humiliating retreat of speculative capital from the West Bank. Simulaneously, the meltdown of the superyen led to the panic-striken evacuation of Japanese investment from downtown trophy properties, while a wave of mergers and buyouts producted a rapid demotion of Los Angeles‘s rank as an international financial center. Amid so much carnage, the old rules of the game dramatically asserted themselves. Although a new Downtown Strategic Plan alloted some „new urbanist“ trinkets to the natives an the periphery, the Figueroa corridor was definitively reestablished as the axis of Downtown growth. Corporate nerves, badly rattled by recession and riot, were soothed by the 1994 election of Richard Riordan as mayor. He quickly began to rebuild the CBD growth coalition, incorporating for the first time the Catholic Church (anxious to build a huge new cathedral in the civic center) and the Latino leaderships of the Downtown service and hotel unions (who were rewarded with Riordan‘s tolerance of their organizing campaigns). Moreover, a dubious messiah appeared in the person of Denver billionaire Philip Anschutz, the eleventh or twelfth richest man in the United States, depending on the flucuating fortunes of his myriad oil, railroad, telecommunications, and sports subsidiaries (including the Lakers). Although even Anschutz isn‘t rich or stupid enough to attempt to fill the void left by the flight of the japanese and the downsizing of LA-based banks, he is big enough to have his shoes shined by most of the city council. In partnership with media mogul Rupert Murdoch (who owns the Dodgers) and real estate wheelerdealer Ed Roski (who grew his fortune in the corrupt topsoil of the City of Industry), he extracted $12 million from the CRA in 1997/98 to help assemble the site for the trio‘s new Staples Center sports complex that brought the Lakers and Clippers downtown (and across the street from red-ink-gushing Convention Center). Despite fervent support from the Riordan administration, the $350 million Staples scheme suffered some minor wing damage as it flew into a cloud of suburban flak. An original proposal, for example, for a long-term city subsidy of $70 million 37 Amerika-Exkursion was defeated by public outrage whose epicenter was the Downtown-hating San Fernando Valley. In 1999, moreover, revelations about a secret profit-sharing arrangement between Staples Center and the Los Angeles Times Magazine led to a shareholder revolt orchestrated by retired published Otis Chandler that resulted in sale of Times-Mirror - Downtown‘s oldest and most influential stakeholder - to the Chicago Tribune Company The Downtown Old Guard (except for USC at the CBD‘s south pole) now is extinct, but the new elites continue to play the redevelopment game by the old Silverbook rules. Indeed, the Anschutz-Roski camp (which also includes billionaire Ron Burkle and Casey Wassweman, who owns the LA Avengers) seems to have decided to go for the South Park/Convention Center hat trick. With Downtown booster James Hahn in Riordan‘s old office, they muscled a new 38 $2.4 billion in tax-increment redevelopment authority through a pliant city council in the Winter of 2002. Nothing could have been more ingeniously designed to incite neighborhood anger or to bolster the cause of secession in the San Fernando Valley. But city hall, as usual, could see little further than the end of its nose. In the meantime, the new CRA masterplan is truly Viagra for a wilting Downtown boom, and much of the stimulus is targeted at hotel and high-income residential development to support the Staples complex and, possibly, a new stadium for an Anschutz-owned NFL franchise. County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky who counts as one of his less palatable responsibilities the closing of bankrupt county healthcare facilities, characterized the entire boondogle as „taking money out of the mouths of poor people.“ So what else is new? 2002 März 2003 Von Architektur zu Environment Richard Neutra und das Einfamilienhaus der Nachkriegszeit Welchen Einfluss übte die amerikanische Kultur der Nachkriegszeit auf Entwicklung und Popularisierung des Glashauses aus? Vor allem Neutras Werk zeigt, dass die biologisch-ökologischen Verhältnisse des Atomzeitalters das Interesse der modernen Architektur am Raum in eine ängstliche Sorge um die Umwelt verwandelten. von Sylvia Lavin Die amerikanische Architektur der fünfziger und frühen sechziger Jahre ist in den letzten Jahren zum Gegenstand intensiver Forschung geworden, und ganz besonderes Interesse fand dabei die häusliche Landschaft dieser Zeit. In diesem nostalgischen Rückblick spiegelt sich ein komplexes Geflecht von Wünschen, doch am ehesten lässt er sich als Ausdruck einer Sehnsucht nach Häuslichkeit begreifen. Die amerikanische Nachkriegszeit erhob das Bild der Kernfamilie vollends zur Norm, idealisierte die Mutterschaft und verbannte durch den Drang in die Suburbs die Probleme der Arbeit in einen immer ferneren Stadtkern. Vor allem für die Jüngeren, die selbst nicht mehr die fünfziger Jahre erlebt haben, steht diese Zeit für ein perfektes Familien leben, wie es tatsächlich allenfalls die Cleavers in der Fernsehserie Leave it to Beaver führten. Trotz immer zahlreicherer Bilder häuslichen Glücks war die Epoche des Kalten Kriegs zugleich auch eine Zeit unterdrückter Ängste, in der die häusliche Sphäre sich mit den wuchernden Phobien der Zeit füllte. Während die „rote Gefahr” den Kommunismus zu einem Virus stilisierte, der still und heimlich den politischen Körper infizierte, drang die erschreckend allgegenwärtige, aber stets unsichtbare atomare Strahlung in den häuslichen Körper ein. Das Leben im atomaren Zeitalter wurde nicht als Katastrophe empfunden, sondern als „new frontier”, an der das robuste amerikanische Individuum in einer wohlgefüllten Speisekammer überleben würde: Aus dem Blockhaus in aus: Diadalos, Juni 1998 Konstruktionen von Atmosphären einer Wildnis, die alles bot, was man zum Leben brauchte, war ein strahlensicherer Atomschutzbunker geworden. Diese paradoxe Verknüpfung zwischen häuslicher Sicherheit und Angst lässt sich an einem wichtigen Merkmal des Nachkriegshauses studieren, an der Öffnung seiner Haut gegenüber der Außenwelt. Teils aufgrund von Fortschritten in der Kontrolle von Umwelteinflüssen und in den mechanischen Systemen war der Glaskasten, von dem man vor dem Krieg nur geträumt hatte, nun in Formen realisierbar, die von stilistisch hochwertiger Architektur bis hin zum Zuckerbäckerhäuschen mit übergroßen Fenstern reichten. Vor allem aber demonstriert die wachsende Zahl gläserner Häuser die Unfähigkeit von Bauwerken wie dem Dymaxion-Haus, das sowohl real als auch metaphorisch Schutz vor konventionellen Bomben geboten hatte, mit den diffusen Bedrohungen des Kalten Krieges fertig zuwerden. Da man nicht länger auf reale Barrieren zur Kontrolle der Temperatur wie auch der Sicherheit angewiesen war und sich auch nicht mehr mit festen Wänden zufrieden geben mochte, die nicht einmal mehr einen symbolischen Schutz vor Gefahren boten, die durch alle bekannten Materialien hindurchdringen konnten, begann die amerikanische Kultur Sicherheit nach der Aufrechterhaltung der Versorgung durch den Supermarkt zu bemessen. Das Glashaus markiert den Prozess, in dem die traditionelle Funktion der Architektur, nämlich die Unterscheidung von „innen“ Sylvia Lavin ist Professorin am Institut für Architektur und Stadtplanung an der University of California. Sie publiziert zu moderner Architektur und arbeitet derzeit an einem Buch über die Nachkriegsarbeiten Neutras. Buff, Straub und Hensman, Case Study House#20 Altadena, 1958. 39 Amerika-Exkursion Trotz Glasfassade ist die Familie gegen Strahlung, aber auch gegen althergebrachte Gefahren (Räuber) geschützt. Sat.Evening Post, 4.26.1958. Links: Abgeschmirte Flitterwochen. Life Magazine, 10.8.1959. Rechts: Richard Neutra, Haus Moore, Ojai, 1952.Foto: Julius Schulman. 40 und „außen“ oder die Markierung einer Der erste Entwurf für das Moore-Haus Grenze, die den Körper vor der Atmosphäre besteht aus einem rechteckigen Block, der schützt, obsolet wurde.1 als Grundriss sogleich wieder verworfen wurde. Als Diagramm jedoch spielten Die Auseinandersetzung mit dem mehrere Momente auch weiterhin eine komplizierten Problem der schützenden bedeutende Rolle. So wurden sämtliche Hülle sorgte dafür, dass aus dem Ecken des Blocks in dramatischer Weise Bestreben, nicht die Grenzen der Gebäude, bearbeitet. Das Bestreben, die Ecken zu sondern die eines neugeschaffenen entmaterialisieren, ist für weite Teile der Umweltbegriffs zu ziehen, zu verschieben modernen Architektur durch aus typisch, oder zu beseitigen, ein vorrangiges Projekt doch der Einsatz der Ecke als primäres der Nachkriegsarchitektur wurde. Richard Element zur Erzeugung architektonischer war selbst für Neutra Neutra beteiligte sich an diesem Projekt, als Effekte er 1949 bis 195 z das Moore-Haus entwarf außergewöhnlich, bis er die elaborierte, vielfältig variierte Gestaltung der Ecke zum und es als Lebensraum bezeichnete.2 höchstentwickelten und einflussreichsten Die Auffassung, wonach Architektur ein Thema seiner Nachkriegsarbeit machte. Ökosystem darstellt, das es mit den wechselseitigen Einflüssen zwischen Zwei Hauptelemente unterscheiden die Lebewesen und Umwelt zu tun hat, zweite Phase der Entwicklung seines bezeichnete Neutra als Biorealismus, und Entwurfs von der ersten: Die strenge, die Aufgabe des Architekten sah er in der blockähnliche Geometrie des Hauses Choreographie eines biochemischen und ist einer intern komplexeren, auf zwei Stockwerke verteilten Struktur gewichen. biophysikalischen Balletts.3 Außerdem ist die Behandlung der Weniger bekannt als Neutras umgrenzenden Flächen komplexer und Vorkriegsarbeit, die sich am strengsten an diffuser geworden. Der Pavillon mit dem die rationalistischen, der Maschinenwelt Haupteingang und das Stockwerk darüber verhafteten Dogmen des Internationalen besitzen an den Ecken „Spinnenbeine“, Stils hielt, gehört das Moore-Haus zu einer wie Neutra dies nannte: Elemente der Serie von Nachkriegsbauten, in denen er Dachkonstruktion, die sowohl über den die Transformation der Wohnarchitektur Baukörper als auch über die Dachkante vom statischen Schutzbau zum hinaus in die umgebende Landschaft dynamischen Lebensraum erkundete, ragen. Die Verdopplung dieser Elemente mit der zugehörigen Verschiebung im sorgt dafür, dass die Ecken sowohl Verständnis des menschlichen Subjekts betont als auch eliminiert werden, und osmotische von einem maschinenartigen Gebilde zum schafftgewissermaßen Verhältnisse: biologischen Organismus. Das Design des Moore-Hauses wiederholt in einem einzigen Projekt Neutras gesamte Entwicklung, von der kompakten Geometrie zu einer entschiedenen Horizontalität; von Fenstern und Türen, die Integrität des Blocks betonen, hin zu weiten Öffnungen, die eine Umwelt mit fließenden Grenzen beleben; von der Maschine in einem Garten hin zum Lebenserhaltungssystem. März 2003 Das Innere scheint in die umgebende Landschaft auszufließen, während die Wölbung des Hangs sich ins Innere hinein fortsetzt. Der ursprüngliche Block ist nun nahezu unsichtbar innerhalb eines langen balkenförmigen Gebildes, das sich entlang der Nordsüdachse an den Boden duckt. Ein nach Westen gerichteter Vorbau am südlichen Ende und eine nach Osten gerichtete Verdickung des Balkens am nördlichen Ende lassen an ein Windrad denken und erinnern an die Häuser Frank Lloyd Wrights, für den Neutra einst gearbeitet hatte. Ein schotenförmiger Hundeauslauf, ein um 45° gedrehter Vorbau an der Garage und ein diagonaler Einschnitt im Frühstücksbereich bildeten drei nicht orthogonale Elemente, die Neutra schon früh in dieser letzten Phase eliminierte. In seinen Grundzügen blieb der Grundriss nun stabil, mit den Wohnräumen im Norden, den Versorgungsräumen im Westen und den Schlafzimmern im Südosten. Das Moore-Haus zeigt nichts Ungewöhnliches in der Verteilung der häuslichen Funktionen, nichts Innovatives in seiner Konstruktionsmethode und nichts Radikales in den Grundelementen seines Formenrepertoires. Dennoch führte die Akkumulation geringfügiger Abweichungen von der modernen Tradition zu beträchtlich veränderten Effekten. So entwickelte Neutra die im ersten Entwurf zu erkennenden Einbauschränke und Kammern weiter. Diese Elemente knüpfen an die Bemühungen der Modernisten um häusliche Hygiene an. Sie befreien das Innere nicht nur von Staub, sondern auch von „dunklen, unzugänglichen, geheimnisvollen“ und zugleich unnützen Räumen hinter freistehenden Möbeln.4 In ihrer Anordnung zeigt sich jedoch auch Neutras Interesse am wachsenden Einfluss der Konsumkultur, die in seinen Augen auch die Architektur des Besitzens von einer viktorianischen Zurschaustellung der Besitztümer hin zur Assimilation prothetischer Elemente verschob. Da die Ware kein Objekt war, das man kontrollieren musste wie ein Körperteil, wurde die Anordnung der Stauräume durch Phänomene wie die Reichweite des menschlichen Arms oder die Geruchsempfindlichkeit des Bewohners bestimmt.5 Betten etwa gestaltete er so, dass starke Raucher Zigaretten und Aschenbecher in Reichweite finden konnten; dadurch ließ sich verhindern, dass sich als erste Empfindung am Morgen Nervosität einstellte. Die Küchenschränke waren geschlossen, damit sie den, wie Neutra sagte, architektonischen „Geschmackstest“ bestanden; er war der Ansicht, dass eine gleichmäßige Verteilung von Reizen dem „rast- und Gesichtsinn die Möglichkeit bot, sich ohne abrupte Veränderungen der Innervation zu bewegen“, so dass sie die Funktion der Drüsen und die Bildung der Verdauungssekrete nicht negativ beeinflusste oder den Stoffwechsel beeinträchtigte.6 Das Ergebnis dieser Analyse war eine Innenarchitektur, die Verbindungen zwischen Räumen und Funktionen „etwa nach Art einer Synapse“ herstellte, wobei dieser „physiologische Vergleich ein dynamisch bedeutsames Verbindungselement bezeichnen soll. Verbindungen und Verknüpfungen, absorbierende und der Entladung dienende Oberflächen, nicht Grenzen oder Hüllen sind die wichtigsten Phänomene in der gesamten Physiologie organischen Lebens.“7 Wenn wir Neutras Spätwerk im Kontext organischen Lebens betrachten, zeigt sich, dass er das Haus in einen Lebensraum verwandelt hatte, der sich in einer dynamischen Wechselwirkung mit einem als Ansammlung von Sinnesrezeptoren verstandenen menschlichen Subjekt befindet. Die Leistung der Architektur bemisst sich dann nicht mehr nach Richard Neutra, Haus Moore, 1958, Grundriß und Ansicht. Richard Neutra, Haus Moore, 1958. Skizzen. 41 Amerika-Exkursion Die Entmaterialisierung der Gebäudeecken. Richard Neutra, Haus Moore, 1958. Foto: Julius Schulman der ästhetischen Wertschätzung, sondern nach „der Stimulation des Nervensystems“.8 Von großer Bedeutung waren für Neutra im Zusammenhang des, wie er sagte, physiologisch verstandenen, durch nichtgeometrische Vektoreigenschaften charakterisierten Raumes der „Feuchtigkeitsgehalt der im architektonischen Raum eingeschlossenen Luft und die Bewegung dieser Luft“.9 Er schrieb über die „Hautrezeptoren“ und andere Elemente der menschlichen Stereognosis, die solche Umweltbedingungen registrieren, und in seiner Arbeit am Moore-Haus ließ er sich in vielerlei Hinsicht von Überlegungen zur Bewegung und zum Feuchtigkeitsgehalt der Luft wie auch zur Wirkung harter oder weicher Materialien leiten.10 Neutras besondere Aufmerksamkeit für frische Luft erinnert an seine Vorliebe für Emile Zola, in dem er einen Vorfahren seines eigenen Interesses am Biorealismus erblickte; er war überzeugt, Zola sei gestorben, weil er in einem hermetisch verschlossenen Schlafzimmer geschlafen habe. „Sein Naturalismus war eine Sache; seine Wohnung eine andere. Er lebte und starb unter den Fittichen der energischen Innenausstatter seiner Zeit.“11 Überraschend der Kontrast zwischen seiner Angst, in einem fensterlosen Raum zu sterben, und seiner Beschreibung eines Fensters in einem seiner Häuser: „Eine große Schiebetür öffnet sich freundlich zum Garten hin... (Sie vermag), durchs Jahr hindurch` mit der Regelmäßigkeit einer treusorgenden Mutter Befriedigung zu schenken, oder auch augenblicklich, im Bruchteil einer Sekunde, mit dem erregenden Reiz einer Liebhaberin.”12 Tatsächlich liegt der am stärksten „stimulierende” und libidinöseste Aspekt des Moore-Hauses und überhaupt das einflussreichste Moment der von Neutra 42 Richard Neutra, Haus Moore, 1958 Ansicht nach dem Krieg entworfenen Häuser - in der konzentrierten Auflösung der Grenzen und Fassaden. Obwohl Neutras Entwürfe in einer langen Tradition von Glashäusern stehen, zeichnen sie sich durch das Bemühen aus, das Haus zu einem architektonischen Ökosystem zu machen. So lassen im dritten und letzten Entwurf des Moore-Hauses unmittelbar aneinanderstoßende Glaswände eine der Ecken des Baukörpers kaum noch hervortreten; sie scheint statt dessen nach außen verlagert, wo der I-Träger eines „Spinnenbeins“ in der Tiefe eines Seerosenteiches verschwindet, der den Fußboden des Hauses gleichsam erodieren lässt. Eine abgeschirmte, diagonal verlaufende Terrasse, Innenwände aus Glas und andere Details sorgen dafür, dass dieser Teil des Hauses als architektonischer Raum äußerst unbestimmt bleibt. Der auffälligste Aspekt in Neutras Einsatz der Transparenz ist jedoch die Tatsache, dass er Glasflächen stets entweder neben undurchsichtige Flächen stellt oder mit den vertikalen Streifen der Spinnenbeine konfrontiert. Dieses komplexe Gleichgewicht zwischen Offenheit und Abschließung stimuliert nach Neutra die psychophysiologischen Überlebensreflexe: den Wunsch nach einem ungehinderten Ausblick auf Fluchtwege und Angriffslinien wie auch das Bedürfnis nach dem Schutz vor Feinden, die im Rücken angreifen.13 Die Ecke, an der die Grundelemente des Designs die größte Wirkung erzielen - und Offenheit, Raumfluss und Orientierung das schaffen, was Neutra als neuronales Drama empfand - die Ecke wird der Ort, an dem der Schutzbau der Vorkriegszeit der Sorge der Nachkriegszeit um das Überleben des Menschen wie der Umwelt weicht Das Verständnis des Hauses als ein interaktives System, das Umwelteinflüsse mit organischen Prozessen verknüpft, bildete eine deutliche Abweichung von den Traditionen der frühen Moderne. Nach Nagasaki schien eine bedrohliche Natur angesichts der Angst vor der unsichtbaren Strahlung in Luft, Wasser und Boden den häuslichen Bereich zu infiltrieren. Zugleich wurden die natürlichen Ressourcen ihrerseits domestiziert, so dass man sie eher mit Freizeit und Konsum als mit der Produktion assoziierte. Wie Autokinos und Autokirchen das Häusliche in ein mobiles Terrain zerstreuten, so domestizierte die ökologische Bewegung den Planeten insgesamt und verwandelte die Welt in ein Objekt, das eines gründlichen „Hausputzes” bedurfte.14 Der Raum der modernen Architektur löste sich auf diese Weise in eine verdünnte Umwelt auf, die weder Grenzen zwischen ,Innen’ und ,Außen’ noch die Grenzen des häuslichen Bereichs kannte, sondern eine neue Form von Ökosystem hervorbrachte: Der von einer perfekt funktionierenden Maschine besetzte Raum des modernen Hauses war zur Umwelt und zum Lebensraum eines libidinös strukturierten, von der Auslöschung bedrohten Lebewesens geworden. März 2003 Richard Neutra, Haus Moore, 1958. Foto: Julius Schulman. 1: For related arguments, see Reyner Banham, The Architecture of the Well-Tempered Environment, London 1969; Lynn Spigel, Make Room for TV: Television and the Family Ideal in PostwarAmerica, Chicago 1997; David Nye, Electrifying America: Social Meanings of a New Technology, Cambridge, MA, 1990. 2: This essay forms part of a larger study of Neutra’s post-war domestic architecture examined in relation to the historical impact of psychoanalytic, psycho-physiological and environmental practices an American culture to be published by the MIT Press. See my “The Avant-Garde Is Not at Home: Richard Neutra and the American Psychologizing of Modernity”, in: Autonomy and Ideology, (R.E. Somol ed.), New York 1997, p. 180-198. 3: Richard and Dion Neutra, Bauen und die Sinneswelt, Berlin and Hamburg, 1980. English translation: California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, School of Environmental Design Journal, 1983-84, 7. 4: Richard Neutra, Survival Through Design, New York, 1954, 26. This little studied text is the fullest presentation of Neutra’s theory of Biological Realism. 5: Discussions of Neutra’s concern for the neurological response of human subjects to stimuli in the environment permeates Survival Through Design. On interior design and ownership, see pages 260-263. 6: Survival Through Design, 92-93. 7: Survival Through Design, 364, Neutra’s emphasis. 8: Survival Through Design, 214. 9: Survival Through Design, 157. 10: Instead of simple walls or complex mechanical systems, Neutra used an elaborate choreography of air-vents, elevated roof spines that provide clerestory windows, the lily pond’s water for lowering external temperature and adding humidity. 11: Survival Through Design, 36-40. 12: Survival Through Design, 229. 13: Survival Through Design, 218-223: 14: In 1962 Neutra completed a drive-in Community church in Garden Grove, Ca. On the history of the environmental movement, see Samuel P. Hays, Beauty, Health and Permanence: Environmenial Politics in the United States, 1955-1985, Cambridge, 1987; Lester Milbrath, Environmentalists: Vanguard of a New Society, Al bany, 1984. 43 Amerika-Exkursion 44 März 2003 Los Angeles:City of the Immediate future “Streets.Streets.Streets.Streets. There is such a confusion, life there is so intense, so diverse, so outlandish, it resembles nothing known.” Blaise Cendrars, 1936 1 The republication of Reyner Banham’s enduringly popular LosAngeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies not only ensures the continuation of a thirtyyear print run, but affords a welcome opportunity to reflect an its place both in the literature an Los Angeles and in the development of new approaches to architectural history.2 For while the book was immediately embraced as a new and fresh look at a city that had for many decades defied the attempts of visitors and residents to characterize it in any unified sense, it was also a book written by a British architectural historian with a declared mission to revise the way in which the history of buildings and cities had traditionally been written. To publish a book “in praise (!) of Los Angeles” (the exclamation mark was added by the reviewer in the New York Times) in 1971 was, in the first instance, to go against a long-term trend of LA critique, given canonical form with Nathanael West’s 1939 indictment of Hollywood in The Day of the Locust, and revived with the strong reaction to the deleterious effects of modern urban planning that emerged in the 1960s. 3 In 1971, not more than six years after the Watts uprising, and at the height of Jane Jacobs’ campaign for the preservation of “urban” communities such as the West Village in Manhattan, the city of Los Angeles was, in the eyes of most urban and architectural intellectuals, a decidedly negative example. As the architectural historian Thomas Hines put it: “The thrust of this book will not likely appeal to Jane Jacobs or to Lewis Mumford or to orthodox planning theorists or to half the intellectuals of Southern California.“4 For many, the city of Los Angeles, as Francis Carney wrote in his review of Banham‘s book for the New York Review of Books, was „Mumford‘s `anti-city;‘ Reaganland, the Ur-city of the plastic culture, of Kustom-Kars and movie stars, nutburgers and Mayor Yorty and the Monkees, the Dream Factory, fantasy land, Watts and the barrio, glass and stuccobuilt, neon-lit, chrome-plated, formica-topped“ if not the „Schlockbaus of the Western world,“ that was to say, „everybody‘s favorite horrible example.“ 5 Banham himself had anticipated such criticism, frankly admitting that, „insofar as Los Angeles performs the functions of a great city . . . all the most admired theorists of the present century, from the Futurists and Le Corbusier to Jane Jacobs and Sibyl Moholy-Nagy have been wrong.“ 6 And, given the long tradition of LA boosters and LA haters, he had in a balanced afterword conceded that „there are many who do not wish to read the book, and would like to prevent others from doing so,“ acknowledging that Los Angeles, while rising to the level of a great city, was „not absolutely perfect.“ [I A 236] Early reviews of the book were at least polite, if slightly incredulous; but it was the art critic Peter Plagens in a vituperative review in ArtForunz, who established the book firmly in the tradition of LA boosterism, to the extent that, by 1990, Mike Davis, another opponent of the booster tradition, had ruefully to admit that Banham had produced a work that had become „the textbook on Los Angeles.“ 7 Indeed, its very subtitle, despite the TLS reviewer‘s pain over the misuse of a word originally meaning the „study of“ eco-systems, had become an invitation to invent further, and less engaging, „counter-ecologies:“ the „ecology of evil“ of Peter Plagens, and Mike Davis‘s own „ecology of fear.“8 But in considering the book entirely Anthony Vidler aus: Introduction to Reyner Banhams Los Angeles Dead Cities and other Tales, 2002 45 Amerika-Exkursion within the narrow genre of LA literature, reviewers and subsequent readers have largely missed what, for Banham and much of his architectural public in Britain, was one of its primary aims. As a work commissioned within a series entitled „The Architect and Society“ edited by the British historians John Fleming and Hugh Honor (a series that included James Ackerman‘s elegant monographic essay on Palladio, among others), the book was first and foremost intended as a new kind of work on a city, one that, rather than surveying major monuments and historical buildings one by one, took an the whole fabric and structure of an urban region. In this attempt, Banham worked to develop an entirely radical view of urban architecture, one that has had a major impact an the discipline of architectural history. In this context, the book was very different from traditional architectural and urban histories that surveyed the major monuments of a city or considered its planning history, but without constructing any overall schema that would link the two. Its subtitle, „The Architecture of Four Ecologies,“ marked it out as special and different. Joining architecture to the idea of its ecology, this title immediately announced Banham‘s intention to pose the interrelated questions: what had architecture to do with ecology, what might be an ecology of architecture, and even more important, what would be the nature of an architecture considered in relation to its ecology? Taken together, Banham‘s answers to these three questions provided a road map for the study of urban architecture not just in its geographical, social, and historical context - this was already a common practice among the social historians of architecture in the late ‚60s -but as an active and ever-changing palimpsest of the new global metropolis. Not incidentally, they also entirely redefined the architecture that scholars were used to studying, now embracing all forms of human structure from the freeway to the hotdog stand, and a plurality of forms of expression not simply confined to the aesthetic codes of high architecture. Here, of course, lay one of the problems for his early reviewers: as a critic, Banham had established himself as an apologist for Pop Art and pop culture, a reputation that, together with his evident fascination with technological innovation and change, made it all too easy for the book to be seen as a Pop history of LA. The very inclusion of traditionally „non-architectural“ structures -from freeways to drive-in restaurants, and thence to surfboards - obscured the real seriousness of Banham‘s intent to destabilize the entire field of architectural 46 history. But an this he was explicit from the outset. „The city,“ he wrote, „has a comprehensible, even consistent, quality to its built form, unified enough to rank as a fit subject for a historical monograph. Historical monograph? Can such an old-world, academic, and precedent-laden concept lay claim to embrace so unprecedented a human phenomenon?“ [LA, 21] After all, the traditional history of LA architecture had already been written by his friend the architectural historian David Gebhard in a „model version of the classical type of architectural gazetteer.“9 But Banham‘s history was not to be confined in a study of, as he put it, „dated works in classified styles by named architects;“ rather he wanted to embrace the „extremes“ of hamburger stands, freeway structures and civil engineering. Hence his programmatic intent to insert these polymorphous architectures into a „comprehensible unity“ that finds its place within their context - the four ecologies. In his attempt to take on the whole fabric and structure of an urban region, Banham was forced by the special conditions of LA to develop an entirely radical view of urban architecture, and one that has had a major impact an the discipline of architectural history over the last thirty years. Indeed LA turned out to be precisely the vehicle needed to blow up what Banham had earlier called „trad“ history, precisely because it defied the „trad“ city as a city, and the „trad“ place of architecture an the streets and squares of the „trad“ city; precisely because Los Angeles was a city where the structure of the regional space was more important than individual grids or fabric; precisely because of its semi-self-conscious „pop“ culture; precisely, finally, because it represented to „trad“ historians everything a city should not be, it was possible to write the kind of history of it that was everything a history of architecture should not be.“10 It is in this context, then, that I want to approach the development of Banham‘s thought as a hi.rtorian rather than the „Journalist“ assumed by his reviewers, as he encountered LA, that apparently most unhistorical of Cities, and to explore the effects of his complex response an the history of architecture and of Cities. It was in the summer of ‚68, following radio programs dealing with the French student revolt, the „revolution“ at Hornsey College of Art, the Velvet Undergrounds LP White Light, White Heat, the showing of Jean-Luc Godards Weekend, the assassination of Robert Kennedy, the ongoing war in Vietnam, and the Russian Invasion of Prague, that listeners to the British Broadcasting Company‘s Third Program, the channel for intellectual discussion and cultural commentary, März 2003 were treated to the decidedly better news of Reyner Banham‘s visit to Los Angeles in four witty talks. As published in the BBC‘s house Organ The Listener, between August 22 and September 12, they were titled respectively: „Encounter with Sunset Boulevard“; „Roadscape with Rusting Rails“; „Beverly Hills, Too, Is a Ghetto“; and, finally „The Art of Doing Your Thing.“11 Banham began by recounting his perplexity at the layout of the City as a whole by telling the story of his journey to Los Angeles by bus, and his mistake in assuming the downtown bus terminal would be „closer“ to Sunset Boulevard and his hotel in Westwood than the Santa Monica terminal would be. Sunset, he found, was one of those arteries that traverses the side of the LA River valley from Downtown to the sea. The point of the story was, further, to demonstrate to himself it seemed as much as to his audience the wonder of the rooted Norfolk-reared, London-based, non-driving Banham feeling „at home in Los Angeles.“ And even more curiously he concluded by arguing that indeed, London and Los Angeles had a lot in common, each a conglomeration of small villages, spread out in endless tracts of single-family houses, despite the vast apparent differences - car travel, freeways, climate, scale - between them. For Banham, the structural and topographical similarities were striking. The second talk picked up an this theme to explore the infrastructural formation of LA, and its basis not so much in freeways, as the commonplace went, but in the vast and expansive light rail system built up between the 186s and 1910, Pacific Electric‘s inter-urban network, that gradually, between 1924 and (extraordinarily enough) 1961, formed the backbones of LA‘s working and living systems. This was however a preface to what was to enrage critics a couple of years later, Banham‘s eulogy of the freeway system: this non-driver turned driver out of instant love with a city was exultant at the „automotive experience,“ waxing eloquent over the drive down Wilshire toward the sea at sunset, and downplaying the notorious smogs in comparison to those in London: his proof: „a shirt that looks grubby in London by 3 p.m. can be worn in Los Angeles for two days.“ 12 The third talk looked at Beverly Hills, an exclusive community self-incorporated specifically to prevent the schools from being invaded by other classes and ethnicities, the „most defensive residential suburb in the world,“ an enclave of unrelieved middle class singlefamily dwellings, created to send children to school without the risk of „unsuitable friends.“ The Listener article was illustrated by a Ralph Crane photo of a typical upper middle class family relaxing around the pool. Banham noted the „apparently total indifference to the needs of all communities except one‘s own that is one of the most continuously unnerving aspects of public life in Los Angeles,“ „the ugly backside of that free-swinging libertarian ethic that makes so much of Angeleno life irresistibly attractive.“13 This would be Banham‘s didactic method - that of contrast, „for“ and „against“ balancing each other, with more often than not the „for“ an the winning side. In Banham‘s account, Beverly Hills was a „self-contained, specialized area,“ and a „socio“ and „functional“ „monoculture.“ For him it was the proof of the fact that if you „insist an trying to use LA as if it were a compact European pedestrian city“ you become campusbound. Banham admits that he too nearly succumbed to this mentality: „At the University of California in Los Angeles (UCLA) you never stir out of the Rancho San Jose de Buenos Ayres. You live in digs in Westwood, stroll over to classes, eat in the Faculty Club or Westwood Village restaurants, go to Village bookshops and cinemas. In short you do exactly what we accuse Angelenos of doing, living restricted and parochial lives that never engage the totality of Los Angeles.“ But Banham was, he claims, saved by the realization that „the amount of distorted and perverted information circulating about Los Angeles in quasi-learned journals about architecture, the arts, planning, social problems and so forth,“ came not so much „from hasty judgments formed by lightning visitors,“ but rather „from visitors who may have spent a semester, a year, or even longer, in the city, but have never stirred beyond the groves of academe - eucalypts, jacarandas, bananas -planted in the 1920s an the old Wolfskill ranch that too can be a ghetto.“14 Finally, Banham delivered his judgment an the pop culture of LA: its „doing your own thing“ tradition of artistry, from the motorcycle pictures of Billy Al Bengston in the early ´60s, to Von Dutch Holland‘s painted crash helmets, and the ubiquitous surf board decoration down in Venice, to that monument to do-it-yourself culture, Simon Rodia‘s Watts Towers, the do-it-yourself sublime. These were „not, as some European critics seem to maintain in any way naive or folksy. Their structure is immensely strong, the decoration of their surfaces resourceful and imaginative.“15 The same was true of contemporary pop artists, like Ed Ruscha -his „26 Gasoline Stations,“ his „34 Parking Lots,“ his „Every Building an Sunset Boulevard,“ were all, to Banham‘s eyes, dead-pan statements that were content to „do their own thing,“ neither judging nor criticizing. These apparently random radio musings an his recent travels emerge, with hindsight, to be entirely systematic, as we realize that Banham was carefully building up 47 Amerika-Exkursion three of his four final ecologies - the beach, the foothills, and the freeways, as well as beginning the treatment of its alternative architecture, that of „fantasy.“ Subsequent articles in Architectural Design („LA: The Structure Behind the Scene“16) elaborated his take an the transportation network and its process of continual adjustment. By the Spring of 1971, the overall plan of the book had been set, and its complicated outline developed. And the structure of the book was indeed complicated - a number of reviewers castigated its apparent lack of unity, and even suggested reordering the chapters. But Banham‘s ordering was in fact a part of his conscious attempt to reshape not only how one looked at a city like Los Angeles - an order forced by the unique form of the city itself - but also how one wrote architectural history in a moment of widening horizons and boundaries; when the very definition of architecture was being challenged and extended to every domain of technological and popular culture, and inserted into a broad urban, social, and, of course, ecological context. Thus he self-consciously intersected chapters an the „ecologies“ of architecture, with those an the architecture itself, and these again with notes an the history and bibliography of the city. The book opens with a brief history of the geographical and infrastructural formation of the city, tellingly entitled „In the Rear View Mirror,“ as if one could, as indeed Banham did, glimpse fragments of that not-so-Jong history while driving the freeways and glancing back(wards) into the rear view of the city. This was followed by four chapters an each of the four „ecologies“ of the title: „Surfurbia“ (the beach and coastline); „Foothills“ (the Santa Monica Mountains); „The Plains of Id“ (the great flat central valley); and the most important one of all, „Autopia“ (the freeway system and its correlates). These ecological studies did not form a continuous narrative but were broken in sequence by four parallel chapters an the specific „architectures“ of LA dealing with „The exotic pioneers,“ „Fantastic“ architecture, the work of the distinguished foreign „Exiles,“ arid concluding with a homage to the new LA modernism of the 1950s embodied in the Case Study House movement, in Banham‘s eyes „The Style that Nearly“ but not quite became a true regional genre. These were interrupted by four thematic chapters that stepped out of the systematic study of ecology arid architecture to add notes an the development of the transportation network, the culture of „enclaves“ unique to LA, arid a brief consideration of downtown. This last chapter was the most heretical with respect to traditional city guides. Where the latter would start with the old center arid demonstrate a nostalgic sense of its 48 „loss,“ in Banham‘s view a „note“ was all that downtown deserved in the context of a city that had become an entire region, arid where downtown seemed just a blip an a wide screen. Finally, Banham‘s programmatic conclusion was entitled „An Ecology for Architecture.“ Such a complicated arid multi-layered structure was obviously Banham‘s attempt to break up irrevocably the normal homogeneity of architectural narratives arid urban studies, insistently inserting the one into the other in a kind of montage that worked against the narrative flow to instigate pauses for reflection arid re-viewing; as if the historian/critic was circling around his objects of study, viewing them through different frames at different scales arid from different vantage points. On one level, this structure was entirely new, one engendered by the special conditions of Los Angeles itself; it was a freeway model of history, one that saw the city through movement arid as itself in movement. On another level, however, Banham the self-conscious historian of modernism, who had ten years earlier published the first full-length study of architectural theory arid design between the Wars, was drawing inspiration from many precedents - proclamations of modernism that called for the rejection of „high“ architecture in favor of structures generated by functional arid technological demands; alternative modernist „utopias“ from the technotopias of Buckminster Fuller to the contemporary work of the Archigram group in London; appreciations of the consumer society and its modes of representation, exemplified in the discussions and exhibitions of the Independent Group in London, and notably in their „This is Tomorrow“ exhibition of 1956“17; scientific prognostications of the future, and especially the potential effects of new biological, genetic, and chromosome research. All these paradigms and many more were formative for Banham‘s radical rewriting of history and theory. But, for the purpose of exemplifying the special character of LosAngeles, two models are particularly significant; one that had a major impact an the narrative form of the book, the other an its „ecological“ content. Both, in a way that indicates Banham‘s polemical intention to criticize and continue the positive tendencies he detected in the first Modernisms, were themselves exemplary statements of high modernist positions. The first was Le Corbusier‘s celebrated manifesto-book of 1923, Vers une Architecture, translated into English as Towards a New Architecture, a precedent which might at first seem surprising, given Banham‘s often repeated rejection of what he called academic formalism and his critique of inadequate, modernist, functionalism. But Banham had early an März 2003 taken it to be his mission as a historian to fill in what he called the „Zone of Silence: “ the history of the Modern Movement between 1910 and 1926, that is between what Sigfried Giedion had taken as the subject matter of his Bauen in Frankreich (1928-29) and his later Space, Time and Architecture (1940-41). The then commonly-held assumption was that the end of the great years of the Modern Movement should be dated around the time of the First World War; thus Nikolaus Pevsner, Banham‘s PhD advisor, had concluded his Pioneers of Modern De.rign with the industrial design exhibition of the Deutscher Werkbund in 1914; Giedion‘s Bauen in Frankreich had stopped even further back with the turn of the century. Banham, in his PhD thesis, published in 1960 as Theory and Design in the First Machine Age, argued otherwise. 18 Here he not only introduced his innovative view that the Futurist Movement‘s emphasis an technology was central to the history of modern architecture, but also undertook for the first time a close analytical reading of Le Corbusier‘s writings. Vers une Architecture, Banham wrote, was „one of the most influential, widely read and least understood of all .the architectural writings of the twentieth century.“ (TD 220) In analyzing the form of this book, assembled out of individual chapters from earlier issues of the journal L‘Esprit Nouveau, he found it without „argument in any normal sense of the word.“ It was made up of „a series of rhetorical or rhapsodical essays an a limited number of themes, assembled side by side in such a way as to give an impression that these themes have some necessary connection.“ (TD 222-223) Banham identified two main themes in Le Corbusier‘s chapters -those that dealt with what Banham called the Academic approach to architecture, dealing with architecture as a formal art derived from Greek and Roman models, and as it had been taught in the BeauxArts schools, and those that dealt with Mechanistic topics: the engineer‘s aesthetic, ocean liners, aircraft, cars, and the like. These themes alternated, chapter by chapter, through the book, with the Mechanistic essays „firmly sandwiched“ within the others. Banham further noted the rhetoric of the illustrations, the celebrated facing-page photos that pointed comparisons, historical and aesthetic. This, still one of the very best readings of Le Corbusier we have, is revealing in a number of ways. First, it reveals the underlying mission of Banham‘s entire career, dedicated so to speak to freeing the „mechanistic“ from the embrace of the academic. As he wrote in the conclusion to Theory and Design, Banham espoused „the rediscovery of science as a dynamic force, rather than the humble servant of architecture. The original idea of the early years of the century, of science as an unavoidable directive to progress and development, has been reversed by those who cheer for history, and has been watered down to a limited partnership by the mainstream. Those who have re-explored the twenties and read the Futurists for themselves feel once more the compulsion of science, the need to take a firm grip an it, and to stay with it whatever the consequences.“ [TD,13] We might well imagine that in LA Banham found the solution to the modernist dream of the ubiquitous automobile, sketched with primitivist formalism by Le Corbusier in his comparison of the sports car with the Parthenon. Secondly, Banham‘s description of the narrative structure of Vers une Arcbitecture might well apply directly to that of his own book Los Angeles, with its interspersed series of essays an two main themes (the ecological and the architectural) together with its insistent visual layout with paired, comparative, photographs an facing pages. In this sense we might infer that Los Angeles was in some way Banham‘s response to, and triumph over, what he regarded as the central manifesto of 1920s modernism, and we would be reinforced in this conclusion by his sly acknowledgement to Corbusier in the last chapter, entitled not „Towards A New Architecture,“ but „Towards a Drive-In Bibliography.“ Which we might decipher as „(Driving) Towards a New Architecture.“ The second major influence an the content of Los Angeles was perhaps more substantial, and came from Banham‘s discovery of a work by Anton Wagner, a German urban geographer who had discovered Los Angeles as a thesis topic between 1928 and 1933 through the auspices of his uncle who had settled in Santa Monica in 1878. There Wagner completed his research, finally publishing his monumental „geographical“ study in 1935 with the title Los Angeles. Werden, Leben und Gestalt der Zweirnillionstadt in Südkalifornien (Los Angeles. The Development, Life, and Form of the City of Two Million in Southern California). 19 The subtitle of Wagner‘s book was, as he noted, calculated to evoke comparisons with that other paradigmatic modern metropolis, Berlin. Los Angeles, he noted in the Preface, was a „city which far exceeds Berlin in expansiveness,“ [WLA 1] and he drew a map that superimposed the plans of the two metropoli to prove the point. Wagner‘s research for the book was exhaustive, if not exhausting: throughout he recounts the results of numerous interviews of all types of inhabitants, and his understanding of the city was accomplished by a rigorous survey conducted, despite the distances involved, mostly an foot (unlike Banham‘s), as he explored and mapped its „lived space and access paths“ (Lebensraum). At the same 49 Amerika-Exkursion time (like Banham) he took his own photos: „I captured the appearance of the cities and quarters in numerous photographs which still bring to mind the details of the cityscape, despite increasing spatial and temporal distance.“ [WLA, 7] Interested in the play of „forces of nature“ and „activities of man“ - the need to study all the geographical factors and the biosphere of the region - and the urban landscape [„die städtische landschaft“] he started the book with a detailed study of the city‘s geological history and structure - its „geological dynamism“ as he called it. Indeed, dynamism was the watchword of Los Angeles for this European observer: „A quickly evolving landscape, and a city whose formation proceeded faster than most normal urban development, thereby encompassing much larger spatial units, requires an emphasis of dramatic occurrences, movement and forces. Especially for the current form of Los Angeles, becoming is more characteristic than being. This determines the method of representation.“ [WLA, 6] And he concluded: „For Los Angeles . . . tradition means movement.“ [WLA, 207] Present during the major Long Beach earthquake of March 10, 1933, he was well aware of the kinds of movement to which Los Angeles is susceptible, and characterized the building of the city as a struggle between nature and man: „the life of so artificial an urban organism . . . depends an how much it is secured against catastrophes.“ [WLA, 166] Beyond this totalizing and systematic yet dynamic and processual geological „history“ of the city, Wagner traced its successive development booms and the growth of its communities in meticulous detail from the establishment of the first pueblos and ranchos, which he maps, to the development of the rail transportation system, again mapped, to the aspect of every quarter in the 1930s. These maps, it should be noted, formed the basis for many of those elegantly transcribed by Mary Banham for the later book, as well as forming the basis of Banham‘s own perceptive history of transportation networks and land ownership patterns. Like Banham some thirty years later, Wagner‘s physical survey of the „cityscape,“ as he calls it, omits nothing, however squalid; and no „architecture“ however tumble-down or populist escapes his gaze and camera. He revels in the studio lots or „stage-set cities“ (Kulissenstädte) as he calls them [WLA, 168]; he speaks of the „cultural landscape“ of the oil fields with their „drilling tower forests“; [WLA, 169] he examines the stylistic and plan typologies of every kind of housing, from the modest bungalow to the apartment house and Beverly Hill mansion; above all he remarks an the eternal billboards - „a major aspect that dominates parts of 50 the frontal view, or elevation (Aufriss): the business advertisement . . . The billboard that emphasizes the incomplete (das Unfertige) in the landscape,“ taking two pages to describe the physiognomy of the billboard as it competes for view amidst the „inelegant posts and wiring of the telephone and electric lines.“ [WLA, 1721 Wagner‘s conclusion to his epic study is that „It is not only architects, statisticians and economists who should draw lessons from this work of urban geography, but everyone who is a member of an urban community.“ [FLA, Zo7] It is easy to see what Banham drew an as inspiration from this unique work: the idea of a city whose history is firmly rooted in its geology and geography - a rooting that is itself as mobile as the ecological circumstances of its site; the idea of a city that is important as much for change as for permanence; the idea of the architecture of the city as less important than the totality of its constructions; the notion,finally, of taking the city as it is as opposed to any utopian, idealistic, or nostalgic vision of what it might be. As he wrote in the article „LA: The Structure behind the Scene,“ „Los Angeles represents processes of continuous adjustment, processes of apportionment of land and resources . . . . As far as Los Angeles is concerned, the land and the uses of the land are . . . the things that need to be talked about first.“20 His history of LA development, of the transportation network, of the transformation of the city from ranchos and pueblos into a single sprawling metropolis takes its cue at every moment from Wagner. Finally, Wagner‘s understanding that it is „movement“ of every kind that characterizes Los Angeles is echoed in Banham‘s own sense that if there is a „local language“ to be identified in Los Angeles, it is a language of „movement.“ In the light of such precedents, what appeared to critics as Banham‘s apparently light-hearted „drive-by“ approach to Los Angeles, emerges as a tightly constructed part manifesto, part new urban geography, that, joined together, form an entirely unique kind of „history.“ Answering Banham‘s own call for a post-technological, post-academic, even post-architectural, discourse, the book resolutely sets out to engage the city as it is, refusing to lower its gaze in the face of sprawl, aesthetic chaos, or consumerist display. Rather than, with Le Corbusier, calling for a „new architecture,“ Banham‘s manifesto prefers to ask for a new and uncompromising vision, one that might not immediately see what it wants to see, but nevertheless may be rewarded by glimpses of other, equally interesting and satisfying subjects. Rather than, with Anton Wagner, calling for a totalizing geo-urbanism, Banham‘s self-fabricated „ecology“ provides hem with an open framework for heterogeneity in März 2003 subject matter and observation. The city of Los Angeles, then, was both vehicle and subject for Banham, and its strange attraction allowed hem to forge a new sensibility in his own work, one that would, just over ten years later, be fully explored in the equally misunderstood work, Scenes in America Deserta. Like LosAngeles, this book was greeted as a „guide,“ an object in „a desert freak‘s checklist,“ but also like LosAngeles, its purpose was more serious and radical.21 Treated as a set of personal „visions“ of different deserts, it stands as a poetic evocation of landscape, to be set beside all its British and American romantic precedents; but treated, as Banham no doubt intended, as a new kind of environmental history, it is clearly the logical conclusion, the second volume, of a work that, as Banham made clear in America De.rerta, has as its major purpose the complex examination of environmental experience as a whole. And while the „eye of the beholder“ that looks in the rear-view mirror or across the Mojave is first and foremost Banham‘s eye, by extrapolation it stands for a sense of the meaning of objects in space that goes far beyond the architectural, the urban, the regional, to engage the phenomenology of experience itself. Anthony Vidler, Los Angeles December 2000 1 Blaise Cendrars, Flollyavood:: Mecca of the Movies (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995), p. i7. Translation of Hollywood, La Mecque du Cinema (Paris: Grasset, 1936). 2 Reyner Banham, Los Angeles. Ihe Architecture of Four L’cologies (London: Allen Lane, The Penguin Press, 1971). 3 Roger Jellinek, The New York 7irnes, Saturday July io, i 971. The best recent discussion of LA literature, for and against, is William Alexander McClung’s Landscapes of Desire: Anglo Mythologies of Z.os Angeles (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2ooo). 4 Thomas S. Hines, review of Reyner Banham, Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four 1 ‘cologies (London: Allen Lane, i 97 i) in Journal of the Society of Architectural 1-listorians, Vol. XXXI, No. i (March 1972), pp. 75-77. 5 Francis Carney, “Schlockology,” review of Los Angeles: 7he Architecture of Four Ecologies by Reyner Banham, The New York Review of Books, June i, i 972. 6 Reyner Banham, LosAngeles, p. 236. All further references to this work will be given in the text in the form [LA ]followed by the page number. Company, 1998). 9 David Gebhard and Robert Winter, A Guide to Architecture in Southern California (Los Angeles, 1965). 10 The consideration of architecture as “trad” or “nontrad” was drawn by Banham in his critique of Sir Basil Spence’s rebuilt Coventry Cathedral, in “Coventry Cathedral - Strictly `Trad, Dad’,” Nerv Statesman, LXIII (May z5, 1962), pp. 768-769. The argument over tradition was taken up by Stanford Anderson in a lecture of 1963 at the Architectural Association, London. See Stanford Anderson, `Architecture and Tradition that isn’t `Trad, Dad’,” in Marcus Whiffen, ed., The History, Theorg and Criticism of Architecture (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1964). 11 Reyner Banham, “Encounter with Sunset Boulevard,” The Listener, Vol. 8o (zz August 1968): pp. 235-236; “Roadscape with Rusting Rails,” (zg August 1968): pp. 267-268; “Beverly Hills, Too, Is a Ghetto” (5 September 1968): pp. 296-298; “The Art of Doing Your Thing” (i2 September 1968): pp- 330-331. 12 Banham, “Roadscape with Rusting Rails,” ibid., p. 268. 13 Banham, “Beverly Hills, Too, Is a Ghetto,” ibid., p. 296. 14 Banham, “Beverly Hills, Too, Is a Ghetto,” ibid., p. 298. 15 3 3 i. Banham, “The Art of Doing Your Thing,” ibid., p. 16 Banham, “LA: The Structure Behind the Scene,” Architectural Design Vol. qi (April, Ic97I): pp. 227-23o. 17 For an account of this exhibition and the Pop movement in general, see Modern Dreams: The Rise and Fall of Pop (London: The Institute of ContemporaryArt, 1988). 18 Banham, Theory and Design in the First Machine Age (London: Architectural Press, ig6o). Further references to this book will be cited in the text in the form (TD). 19 Anton Wagner, Los Angeles: Werden, Leben und Gestalt de Ztveimillionstadt in Südkalifornien (Leipzig: Bibliographisches Institut, 1935). A manuscript translation of this work by Gavriel O. Rosenfeld, entitled Los Angeles: The Development, Life, and Form of the Southern Cäli, fornian Metropolis was commissioned by the Getty Research Institute in the History of Art and the Humanities, Los Angeles, i 997. Further references to this work will be in the text in the form [WLA ]. Wagner had been guided in his search for a topic by his advisor at the University of Leipzig, the urban geographer O. Schneider (who had himself published a work an “Traces of Spanish Colonization in the American Landscape” [Spuren Spanischer Kolonimhin in US-Amerikanischen Landschaften, Berlin, 1928). 20 Banham, “LA: The Structure Behind the Scene,” p. 227. 21 Banham, ScenesinAmericaDeserta (Salt Lake City : Gibbs M. Smith, Inc., 1982). 7 Peter Plagens, “The Ecology of Evil,” ArtPbrum i i 5 (December, i 972): 67-76. Mike Davis, City of Quart.Excavating the Future in Los Angeles (London: Verso, 1990), p. 74. 8 Mike Davis, L’cology of Fear.- Los Angeles and the Imagination of Disaster (New York: Henry Holt and 51 Amerika-Exkursion 52 März 2003 The Transportation Palimpsest ‘A city built an transport‘ - like all truisms it offers a misleading truth, because it is persistently interpreted as referring only to automobile transport, and that interpretation is so trivial and so shallow historically that its use casts doubts an the right of the user to speak. Motorized transportation is almost as much of a recent epiphenomenon and the basic city of Los Angeles as it is in any other major metropolis. However, the less densely built-up urban structure of the Los Angeles basin has permitted more conspicuous adaptations to be made for motor transport than would be possible elsewhere without wrecking the city. The fact that these parking-lots, freeways, drive-ins, and other facilities have not wrecked the city-form is due chiefly to the fact that Los Angeles has no urban form at all in the commonly accepted sense. But the automobile is not responsible for that situation, however much it may profit by it. The uniquely even, thin and homogeneous spread of development that has been able to absorb the monuments of the freeway system without serious strain (so far, at least) owes its origins to earlier modes of transportation and the patterns of land development that went with them. The freeway system is the third or fourth transportation diagram drawn and a map that is a .deep palimpsest of earlier methods of moving about the basin. In the beginning was the Camino Real, the Spaniards‘ military road (if anything so tenuous deserves so positive a name) with its military bases, missions, and assistencias, wandering with seasonal variations across the present Los Angeles area from south-east to north-west and its way to the northern presidios of Monterey and San Francisco. Its exact route seems pretty difficult to establish nowadays, though it is widely held to have followed something like the line of the present Wilshire Boulevard from the pueblo to the La Brea tar-pits (that is, from present downtown to Hancock Park) and then turned north over the Cahuenga pass into the San Fernando Valley. By the time the Yankees moved in, or very soon after, there must have been a well established track running down to San Pedro, along which the ox-drawn carretas could rumble an their massive wheels, and by the end of the sixties there began to be a well-beaten track branching off the Camino Real to go down to Santa Monica, and so forth. But movement was painfully slow; two days to Santa Monica, and in the memories of the grandparents of men my own age it could take up to a week to get into the downtown area from the farms south of Riverside with a loaded wagon. While transportation remained in this condition, the pueblo city of Los Angeles could not hope to be more than a minor market-town - so things could not be allowed to remain in that condition for long after the ambitious Yankees arrived, and an this point there was sufficient consensus for community action. However much the pioneer railroad [30] -down to the harbour at San Pedro may have served the private ends of its chief promoter, Phineas Banning, owner of the rancho-Land where the new port would be built, the railway was financed with public money - bond-issues by the City of Los Angeles and the County. The line began operation in 1869, connecting the business community in the city with deep-water anchorages at Wilmington / San Pedro, where, after Banning‘s dredging activities, there was eighteen feet draught clearance over the sand-bar. Yet it now appears that the true importance of the Wilmington line was less in its inherent usefulness than as a negotiable property or bargaining-counter in the railroad deals of the next decade. When that same business community discovered that the Southern Pacific line from San Francisco to Yuma might ignore them and go straight across the high desert, they Reyner Banham aus: Reyner Banhams Los Angeles The Architecture of four ecologies, 1971 53 Amerika-Exkursion could see only economic stagnation in a future that would leave them disconnected from direct access to the transcontinental railroads - few cities bypassed by the main trunk routes prospered. So they had to bestir themselves again and the infant Wilmington line was part of the king‘s ransom the Southern Pacific extracted from Los Angeles before they would agree to divert their line south over the Soledad pass, and down through the San Fernando Valley into the pueblo and then east to San Bernardino and an to Yuma. This arrangement was patently useful to the S P, who could bring heavy equipment and materials ashore at Wilmington and up the city‘s line, and then build out east and west from the pueblo, instead of having to overland everything through the San Joaquin Valley from San Francisco. The conclusion of the deal was also, as far as anyone can judge, the most important single event in the history of the area after the foundation of the pueblo in 1781, and considerably more consequential than anything since. The terms of the deal with the S P began to shape the future supercity almost at once. Construction began in three directions from the pueblo: north to San Fernando, east to Spadra en route to San Bernardino, both as part of the transcontinental linkage, and south-east to the vineyard colony at Anaheim - a quid pro quo for the County. The first train ran from San Fernando to Spadra in 1874, and in the same year Senator J. P. Jones of Nevada floated a rival company to build a line from the pueblo to deep water at Santa Monica, to be connected back inland with the S P‘s competitors, the Union Pacific. In the upshot it was to be a decade before any transcontinental line beside the SP came over the mountains into Los Angeles, but Jones‘s thwarted plan gave Los Angeles the Santa Monica line. These five lines radiating from the pueblo towards San Fernando, San Bernardino, Anaheim, Wilmington, and Santa Monica constitute the bones of the skeleton an which Greater Los Angeles was to be built, the fundamentals of the present city where each of these old lines is now duplicated by a freeway - an the San Bernardino freeway, tracks run down the central reservation for some miles, so close is the agreement between the rail and road networks. But these lines did more than provide the skeleton, they brought the flesh. Subdivision of adjoining land proceeded as fast as the laying of rails - construction of the Santa Monica line began in January 1875, and land sales began in Santa Monica itself in July the same year. More important, if the words of J. J. Warner in 1876 mean what they appear to mean, then commuting began almost as soon as the rails were down - `Daily we go to breakfast in Los Angeles from San 54 Bernardino, and back to its fountains and groves ‚ere nightfall‘. Before 1880 then, the railways had outlined the form of the city and sketched in the pattern of movement that was to characterize its peculiar style of life. Shortly after 1880, too, the railroads were to bring in the Angelenos in something like their present quantities. Once the Santa Fe had come down the Cajon pass into San Bernardino from the desert, and then west to the pueblo in 1885, there were two genuinely competitive transcontinental systems serving the area, and in the ensuing rate-war, fares from Kansas City were at one point cut to one dollar - ` one single silver dollar,‘. The first great wave of immigration from the Middle West poured into Southern California and precipitated a land boom that lasted almost a decade. And although paper fortunes were made and lost with the usual legendary rapidity and parcels of land changed hands several times a day and all the rest of it, the final collapse of the boom seems to have been far less disastrous than in the normal scenario for such affairs; land-speculation remains a major industry still. Yet, with a rising tide of human immigration coming in, and the process of land-subdivision proceeding with the usual U S enthusiasm, why was the result not the usual outward sprawl from a central nucleus? The pueblo / downtown area did indeed concentrate the bulk of the population in the second half of the last century, but the nearer to the end of the century the less convincing its dominance - the immigrants who came in after 1885 tended to broadcast themselves more evenly across the face of the land. In this trend a number of factors were involved. First, a very large proportion of the immigrant population came from thinly peopled farming areas in the Middle West and their intention in California was to farm - they had the habits and the intentions of a dispersed way of living. They could settle anywhere that was served by water and transportation - and the transportation was there even before they arrived. Furthermore, the railway promoters worked closely with the subdividers, creating town-sites along the tracks. Some of these speculations faded away again, leaving only a pattern of pegs in the ground, marking the unbought lots. Others took root however, and formed centres of settlement and development with an economic and municipal life somewhat independent of downtown. But the speculators could not develop land that was not theirs to subdivide; the order in which the rancho lands were sold off by the grant holders and their successors was another dispersive factor; Santa Monica may have been subdivided in 1875, but adjoining San Jose de Buenos Aires just inland was not successfully subdivided until half a century later. But the greatest dispersive factor is what März 2003 is hinted at in Warner‘s apparent reference to commuting habits; given a railway system it was as convenient to live in San Bernardino or Santa Monica as an the outer fringes of the central city, especially where those fringes were illserved by any form of transportation, as they were until after the railway age had begun. Judge Widney‘s Spring and Sixth Street line opened operations with its horse-drawn street-cars only in 1874, to connect the then business area with the fashionable residential zone around Spring and Hill, and in the next fifteen years other street-car lines opened in Pasadena, Pomona, Santa Monica, San Bernardino and Ontario (where the mules rode back down the long gentle slope of Euclid Avenue an special flat-trucks behind the cars, which were powered by gravity in this direction). But by that time - by 1887 in fact - George Howland‘s Pico Street line was operating out of downtown to serve the `Electric Railway Homestead Association Tract‘ and the definitive age of the development of Los Angeles had begun. Local electric services by street railways and inter-urban lines were to make almost every piece of land in the Los Angeles basin conveniently accessible and thus profitably exploitable, and the Pico line was the true beginning of the process, not only because it was directly linked to a subdividing company, but because it also formed the basis of the early speculations Route map of the Pacific Electric Railroad, 1923 of Sherman and Clark, pioneers of the get-rich-quick electric railway. They seem to have been primarily speculators (`General‘ Moses Sherman liked to have a finger in every profitable pie within reach) whose companies floated, grew, collapsed, merged, came and went, were wrested from them by outraged shareholders, but popped up again under different guises. In the process, lines were built down to the University of Southern California and up to Pasadena (largely by merging and connecting existing local companies) and, in `Sherman‘s March to the Sea‘, out through Hollywood to Santa Monica with an extension to Ocean Park in 1896 - perhaps the most important of all their ventures since it provided the transportation infrastructure for an area of land that was to contribute much to the present character of the city. But Sherman and Clark were small fry compared to the next generation of electric railway Promoters, especially Henry Edmunds Huntington, son of Collis P. Huntirigton of Southern Pacific fame. In fifteen years of wheeling, dealing, buying-out the Santa Monica network, beating off rivals (including, confusingly enough, the Southern Pacific from time to time), consolidations and reorganizations, culminating in the `great merger‘ he gave the City the Pacific Electric Railroad (and, out of the proceeds, his palace in 55 Amerika-Exkursion San Marino as the Huntington Museum and Library). The PE‘s `Big Red Cars‘, so called to distinguish them from the narrow-gauge street railways operated by the associated Los Angeles Railway Co., operated over standardgauge tracks that ran, for much of their lengths, over private rights-ofway, avoiding the congestion of the streets, though they had to become street railways when they entered already well-developed areas, running in central or lateral reservations. The Big Red Cars ran all over the Los Angeles area - literally all over. The mute map of the PE [30] at its point of greatest extension, when it operated 1,164 miles of track in fifty-odd communities pretty well defines Greater Los Angeles as it is today. Services ran down the coast to Balboa and along the foot of the Palisades to the mouth of Santa Monica Canyon; up into the valley and to San Fernando; to Riverside, Corona, and San Bernardino; out through La Habra and through Anaheim to Orange; through the foothill Cities of the Sierra Madre to Glendora, and via Pasadena to Echo Canyon and Mount Lowe. Within the area laced by this network the Stops and terminals already bore the names of streets and localities that are current today. Not only did the PE outline the present form of Los Angeles, it also filled in much of~ its internal topography, since its activities were everywhere involved - directly or otherwise - with real estate. Yet real estate was to be one of the two factors that undid this masterpiece of urban rapid transport. As subdivision and building promoted profitably increased traffic, they also produced more intersections and grade crossings where trains could be held up and schedules disrupted, so that the service began to deteriorate and street accidents began, in the twenties, to give the Big Red Cars a bad name. And what was obstructing the grade crossings and involved in helping to cause the street accidents was the other factor in the undoing of the P E; the automobile. Convenient as the services of the PE might be, the door-to-door private Gar was even more convenient in this dispersed city, and had begun to proliferate in the area even before the inter-urban railway network reached its operational peak. As early as 1915 the automobile had begun to steal custom directly from the PE, since it was used for the Jitney services that cruised the main streets and avenues picking up waiting passengers at the trolley Stops. Even so, it took the automobile an unconscionable time to kill off the PE (partly because of shortages and rationing in the Second World War) and it was not until 1961 that the last train ran an the line through Watts to Long Beach - both places virtual creations of the P E. By that time the city had already embarked an a programme of studies in the kind of 56 Urban Rapid Transit now fashionable in cityplanning circles (e.g. San Franciscos BART line), but it looks like being a long time before anything serious is done about it. It will not be easy to persuade Angelenos, many of them able to remember the dying agonies of the P E, to leave the convenient car at home - in spite of their complaints about traffic jams - and climb into- whatever coloured rolling-stock the new dream-system offers. As Ray Bradbury (a non-driving Angeleno) rightly said in 1960: . . . it‘s no use building it unless we dramatize it enough to make people use it. I‘m all for making Walt Disney our next Mayor . . . the only man in the city who can get a working rapid transit system built without any more surveys, and turn it into a real attraction so that people will want to ride it. The city got Sam Yorty for its next Mayor and Walt Disney died and rapid transit is presumably postponed till the Greek Kalends. The automobile remains the characteristic transportation of Angelenos. The date when it became characteristic is not easy to fix. The Automobile Club of Southern California has been incapable of conceiving any other form of movement ever since it’s foundation in 1910, but is notoriously among the most bigoted lobbies operating in the area (which is quite an achievement in that stronghold of the John Birch Society). But if one takes the conscious provision of large-scale specialized facilities for automobiles as marking their effective ascendancy, then the establishment of the Motor Age in Los Angeles dates neither from the foundation of the Automobile Club, nor from the building of the first freeway, but from about 1927. Now, one of the attractions of the automobile in a dispersed and relatively under-equipped community is that it requires, fundamentally, very few special facilities - it will run tolerably on any fairly flat, hard surface. So Sunset Boulevard was not surfaced at all beyond Fairfax Avenue as late as 1927. But in that year work was already in hand on the first real monument of the Motor Age: Miracle Mile on Wilshire Boulevard. The Boulevard itself was the creation of years of ad hoc subdivisions, beginning with a quarter-mile stretch West of the present McArthur Park laid out in 1895 by the ineffable Gaylord Wilshire - socialist, enthusiast, medical crank but - more to the point - member of a clan that had already developed parts of Fullerton and knew their Business. Further West, the stretch of the Boulevard through Beverly Hills was regularized as part of Wilbur Cook’s plan of 1906, and the continuation to the sea at Santa Monica was completed in 1919. But the eastward extension into downtown, which converted West Lake Park into McArthur Park as we März 2003 know it, was not made until 1934 - after some dogged resistance from downtown interests to whom the shops on Wilshire constituted a grave commercial threat. The possibilities of shopping on Wilshire had been spotted about a decade before, by A. W. Ross, a real estate operator who had looked into the probable Shopping habits of the new, affluent, and motorized inhabitants of areas like Beverly Hills, the westerly Parts of Hollywood, or the areas of the Wolfskill Ranch that were about to become Westwood and Holmby Hills. The chances appeared to be that they would prefer to come to shops along the stretch of Wilshire between La Brea and Fairfax, and by 1928 this stretch was already known as Miracle Mile. But it was not open to unlimited commercial development. Downtown interests had wanted it to be a broad residential avenue, not a business rival, and the city had zoned it accordingly. Ross therefore had to negotiate or litigate a ‘spot‘ waiver to the residential zoning for every site, and this he could only do for substantial and well-regarded clients who would not lower the supposed tone of the street. But substantial operators were in the mood to move, and the mighty Bullock‘s department Store was ready for Wilshire Boulevard by 1928, though their chosen site was further east, not an Miracle Mile proper. But Bullock‘s-Wilshire, like the new shops on the mile, were all built with parking-lots at Parking behind Wilshire Boulevard the rear [31] and were specifically designed for motorized access, with Portes-cochères or other specialized entrance facilities an the parking side. The result is a unique transitional monument to the dawn of automobilism; the shops on Miracle Mile stand hard up to the sidewalk so that it looks like a conventional Shopping street, except that it is not clogged with cars mis-parked in desperation by frustrated shoppers. All but a few of them are safely and correctly stowed away round the back, and Wilshire Boulevard is one of the few great streets in the world where driving is a pleasure. It is also, of course, the first linear downtown, with residential areas immediately behind the parking-lots and almost seventy thousand souls within walking distance, never mind the motorized shoppers from a city-wide catchment area. More conventional public provisions for the automotive age began in the same years as Miracle Mile: the upgrading of nondescript through-streets to the Status of Boulevards (though long stretches of Santa Monica and Pico, for instance, are still pretty nondescript for mile after mile), the installation of traffic signals (synchronized, for the first time, on Wilshire) and the Figueroa Street grade separation in the north-east corner of downtown. This last - a simple enough underpass in its origins - is another historical Landmark of importance, since it was the first of the works that 57 Amerika-Exkursion Arroyo Seco Parkway, 1939 58 eventually led to the Arroyo Seco Parkway, otherwise the Pasadena Freeway, the beginning of the freeway network. The grade separation was begun early in 1938, the Automobile Club’s celebrated Traffic Survey proposing a freeway system had been published the previous year, and the State of California legislation that made the freeways possible followed in 1939, by which time the Arroyo Seco Parkway was well in hand. It was only six miles long, and it was a parkway for a variety of reasons. One was emulation of Robert Moses‘s celebrated parkway system in New York; another was to mollify local opinion, since the side had been sliced off Elysian Park and the park strip in the bottom of the Arroyo had been extensively invaded by the time the highway reached Raymond Hill and curled round into Pasadena. No doubt Sunset magazine, the official Organ of obsessive gardening and planting in Southern California, had a hand in the parkway concept too. Certainly the magazine is credited with a lobby that has sustained the parkway tradition ever since, so that - however much one may be amused at the signs an the freeways warning Danger Landscaping Ahead - one can still be grateful for this sustained programme of planting and improvement that has made the freeway embankments and cuttings a visible environmental asset to the city (even if freeway noise and dirt are not). The Arroyo Seco Parkway [32] was the only section of the freeway system completed before the Second World War. The first of the post-war links, the Hollywood, went over the mountain into the San Fernando Valley, its southward extension became the Santa Ana (of ill repute, because of its März 2003 jams and accidents) and the Pasadena‘s southern leg became the Harbor Freeway. This may sound like rapid progress, but freeway building has not been as fast as it sometimes supposed - the San Diego was not over the Santa Monica mountains into the valley until 1962, and my first road map of Los Angeles, printed in 1964 still did not show the western end of the Santa Monica freeway. Thus the wide-swinging curved ramps of the intersection of the Santa Monica and the San Diego freeways, which immediately persuaded me that the Los Angeles freeway System is indeed one of the greater works of Man, must be among the younger monuments of the system. It is more customary to praise the famous four-level intersection which now looks down an the old Figueroa Street grade separation, but its virtues seem to me little more than statistical whereas the Santa Monica/ San Diego intersection [33] is a work of art, both as a pattern on the map, as a monument against the sky, and as a kinetic experience as one sweeps through it. And what comes next? The freeway system is not perfect - what transport system ever Intersection of Santa Monica and San Diego freeways is? - and even though it is vastly better than any other urban motorway system of my acquaintance, it is inconceivable to Angelenos that it should not be replaced by an even better system nearer to the perfection they are always seeking. A rapid-rail system is the oldest candidate for the succession, but nothing has happened so far. The core of the problem, I suspect, is that when the socially necessary branch has been built, to Watts, and the profitable branch, along Wilshire, little more will be done and most Angelenos will be an average of fifteen miles from a rapid-transit station. The next candidate was the Superfreeway, with access only from existing freeways, not from surface streets. This one never seems to have got beyond the status of a cocktail-party topic - better performance can probably be got by filling out more of the proposed grid of the present freeway system [34] to increase the number of usable alternative routes. As currently proposed, the grid would give 1 500 miles of freeways on a pattern of approximate three-mile squares. After the Superfreeway came the urban helicopter, connecting landing pads next to freeway intersections 59 Amerika-Exkursion Intersection of Santa Monica and San Diego freeways and served by freeway-flyer bus services (which had been proposed independently as the simplest way of putting Watts back in touch with the city). And then in 1969 it was suddenly observed that the fifth diagram of the transportation palimpsest had been drawn, not in fancy but in fact. It was in the air above the Angeleno‘s heads, but it was not the helicopters that planners and professional visionaries had led them to expect. With hindsight, one can now see that in a city as disurban as Los Angeles, the answer was more likely to be rural than conventionally urban, and what the Angelenos Gould See over their heads was usually that most rural of aircraft, the Twin Otter, designed for bushwhacking the outbacks of Canada. As an urban commuter plane it has the prime rural virtue of short take-off and landing runs (STOL) which enable it to operate out of odd Corners of larger airports or from small private and municipal airfields, mach more cheaply than any helicopter, and to potter about in the clear airspace below the crowded jetways above. Flying these bushcraft, airlines like Cable and Aero-Commuter are - at this writing - already offering a dozen daily scheduled flights between Los Angeles International Airport and all Stops to Fullerton, Barbank, or El Monte, and twice that number of Services to the alternative international airport at Ontario. In other words, the urban air-bus exists and is in regular service in Los Angeles. As with Miracle Mile, Los Angeles has Bone what we are always told it will do, bat rarely does in fact - prototyped a new solution for other cities to contemplate. 60 März 2003 Map of Los Angeles freeways and airports 61 Amerika-Exkursion 62 März 2003 Views of Los Angeles On my first visit to Los Angeles I was conventionally prepared for almost anything except for what it really looked like - a quite beautiful place. Nathan Silver: New Statesman, 28 March 1969 Now I know subjective opinions can vary, but personally I reckon LA as the noisiest, the smelliest, the most uncomfortable, and most uncivilised major city in the United States. In short a stinking sewer ... Adam Raphael: Guardian, 22 July 1968 It is as though London stretched unbroken from St Albans to Southend in a tangle of ten-lane four-deck super parkways, hamburger stands, banks, topless drug-stores, hippie hide-outs, Hiltons, drive-in mortuaries, temples of obscure and extraordinary religions, sinless joy and joyless sin, restaurants built to resemble bowler hats, insurance offices built to resemble Babylon, all shrouded below the famous blanket of acrid and corroding smog. flavour there, liberated the individual to enjoy the sun and space that his environment so abundantly offered, put the manifold advantages of a great metropolitan area within his grasp. aus: Reyner Banhams Los Angeles The Architecture of four ecologies, 1971 Richard Austin Smith: Fortune, March 1965 In Los Angeles people think of space in terms of time, time in terms of routes . . . and of automobiles as natural and essential extensions of themselves . . . Los Angeles has no weather. It rains during February but when it is not raining it is warm and sunny and the palm trees silhouette against the smoggy heat haze sky. Miles : International Times, 14 March 1969 Burn, Baby, burn! Slogan of the Watts rioters, 1965 LA has beautiful (if man-made) sunsets. Miles: op. cit. James Cameron: Evening Standard, 9 September 1968 To be able to choose what you want to be and how you want to live, without worrying about social censure, is obviously more important to Angelenos than the fact that they do not have a Piazza San Marco. Jan Rowan: Progressive Architecture, February 1968 Whatever glass and steel monuments may be built downtown, the essence of Los Angeles, its true identifying characteristic, is mobility. Freedom of movement has long given life a special 63 Amerika-Exkursion 64 März 2003 part III Zusammenstellung von Plänen und Texten der wichtigsten Bauwerke in Los Angeles und New York. 65 Amerika-Exkursion cathedral of our Lady of the Angeles Report by Michael Webb photos by Grant Mudford architect client mechanical engineering address Rafael Moneo Archidiocese of Los Angeles Ove Arup & Partners California Temple Street / Grand Avenue aus: domus 853 November 2002 site foto 66 A cathedral for the ages The first, modestly scaled Catholic cathedral of Los Angeles was built in the 1870s, when L.A. was a dusty farming town of 50,000 people. In 1904, as immigrants flooded in, the diocese resolved to build a new cathedral, but the decision was repeatedly postponed until the 1994 earthquake rocked Saint Vibiana’s and made it unusable. Two years later, developer Ira Yellin and architect - planner Richard Weinstein organized an international competition to select an architect. Rafael Moneo was named the winner on the same day that he came to L.A. to accept the Pritzker Prize. The archbishop of Los Angeles, Cardinal Mahony, wanted to build over the humble old structure; however, preservationists objected, and a new, more prominent site was found. The new cathedral occupies a full city block atop Bunker Hill, just west of the original settlement and City Hall. In contrast to the Music Center (an overwhelmingly banal arts acropolis completed in 1969), which lies diagonally across the street intersection, the cathedral is asymmetrical in form and placement on its rectangular site, and its plaza is designed to serve as a civic amenity as well as accommodate festive processions and outdoor services. An outdoor cafe, olive grove, fountains, gardens and shade trees soften the expanse of scored or stamped concrete. The complex is contained yet readily accessible. Lita Albuquerque’s fountain (a film of water flowing over a white marble drum) and cascade mark the point of entry from the underground parking garage into a sunken plaza and through an arch topped with a carillon from the street. From this openair foyer, diverging flights of steps and a ramp lead up to the north entrance and main plaza. A pergola and double-glazed windows (etched with angels) separate the plaza from the river of cars churning along the Hollywood Freeway to the north (Moneo likens it to the Seine flowing past Notre-Dame). Moneo, whose previous experience of designing sacred spaces had been limited to a small chapel in Spain, understood the challenge of creating an architecturally distinguished building for a strong-willed client and a multicultural archdiocese of four million. ‘Conscious of the difficulty that the construction of the cathedral implied, I did not covet the commission, but fate ended up giving it to me’, he later wrote. The National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., and Saint John the Divine in Manhattan have been handcrafted over generations, like their Gothic predecessors. In L.A., a limited budget and an urgent need for new space mandated completion in less than four years. However, the cardinal wanted the cathedral to endure for at least five centuries. To this end, the structure is mounted on 200 base März 2003 floorplan and section isolators, which should cushion the impact of the strongest earthquake, and the concrete mix was carefully calculated to achieve maximum density, impermeability and evenly integrated colour. There’s a suggestion of adobe in the warm-toned concrete, and the cloisters and deep-set windows recall the Spanish missions. But the stepped profile of the walls, which fold and jut at eccentric angles, avoids literal allusions to history. The blocky forms are an understated expression of the interior volumes. The cathedral may be entered though massive bronze doors to the south or a more modest entry to the north, down ambulatories lined with wedge-shaped chapels that face outward to separate private devotion from public worship. The south ambulatory slopes gently up and is tapered to create a forced perspective, and light from a narrow slit in the ceiling gleams off a floor of polished limestone blocks. A baroque Spanish retablo mounted on the west wall draws the eye. To attend mass one can follow this processional route to the end, turn into the nave and descend toward the altar or pass directly inside through openings between the top-lit chapels. For inspiration, Moneo turned to Le Corbusier’s chapel at Ronchamp and Erik Bryggman’s Resurrection Chapel in Turku, Finland - two of the very few buildings he considers to be both modern and spiritual in feeling. However, these places of worship serve small groups of pilgrims or mourners; the cathedral accommodates 3,000 and is open to all. ‘What they all share’, the architect observes, ‘is light as the protagonist of a space that tries to recover the sense of the “transcendent” and is the vehicle through which we are able to experience what we call sacred’. Most of the glass in the cathedral is masked by screens of veined Spanish alabaster that create a soft glow more reminiscent of a Byzantine than a Western church, though a few fugitive sunbeams glance through the unshielded interior model light scoops over the transepts. Within the spacious volume of the nave, the folded planes and interwoven geometries of walls, paving, slatted ceiling and alabaster provide an inspirational experience. Shallow transepts and a vestigial apse hint at a cruciform plan, but the celebration of mass is centralized by setting the altar at the front of the sanctuary and allowing space and seating to flow around it. The side chapels create an insistent vertical rhythm, and an axial path links the baptistery to the altar - a vast slab of dark-red Turkish marble. The impact of this glorious room would be enhanced if the thicket of lamps suspended above the pews were rigorously pruned - or eliminated in favour of the recessed ceiling spots that light the sanctuary. The bronze trumpets that amplify sound are less obtrusive than suspended speakers, but again they are too prolific. Still more distracting are the commissioned ‘artworks’ that will eventually fill nearly every space and surface. The pioneers of modernism banished surface ornament, but the general public still finds bare spaces ‘unfriendly’ and insists on cluttering them. When Moneo expressed the wish that the art could have been more daring, the cardinal responded: ‘We have MOCA down the street - let them do the contemporary art. We have so many ethnic groups; we want them to feel at home and recognize basic things’. This translates into figurative forms- a sculptured angel over the door, a tapestry of saints, a wreath of gold angels around the base of the altar-that are saccharine and curiously lacking in conviction. The stained-glass windows of a medieval church told biblical stories to illiterate churchgoers, and the artists who designed them believed in what they were doing. But the L.A. cathedral’s parade of saints-modelled on people plucked from the streets by a casting director- panders to the everyday and mirrors its viewers like a television sitcom. The artist, Gregory Nava, has commented: ‘The figurative artists I admire take a pessimistic view. This had to be entirely hopeful and life affirming. It’s tricky to do that without Disney-fying the art or making it sentimental’. Still to come is a mural recounting the history of Christianity in Southern California that will cover the south ambulatory wall. It is not a happy prospect. section 67 Amerika-Exkursion somol house Report by nicolai ouroussoff Times Staff Writer architect client mechanical engineering address Linda Pollari and Robert Somol Linda Pollari and Robert Somol Olympic Boulevard / Highland Ave. aus: Los Angeles Time 15.05.2002 architecture review When Worlds Collide Linda Pollari and Robert Somol have designed a house for themselves that embraces its urban context while evoking a bit of postwar paradise. Linda Pollari and Robert Somol’s house offers a shimmering facade to the busy streets outside. 68 With its single-family tract houses, pristine lawns and streamlined cars, the suburban dream of postwar Los Angeles faded away long ago. It was swallowed up in a whirlpool of soaring land prices, rising congestion and social unrest. But in recent years, a younger generation of Los Angeles architects has been revisiting those old suburban clichés and imbuing them with a tougher urban edge. The result has often been a grittier vision of the city, a mix of suburban tranquillity and urban chaos, baked under a subtropical sun. Few projects capture that shift with more force than a recently completed house by the architectural team of Robert Somol and Linda Pollari. Built on a vacant lot overlooking a busy intersection at Olympic Boulevard and Highland Avenue, the $425,000 house is conceived as a clash of urban and suburban images, a vision of the American dream under siege. As such, it acts as a powerful metaphor for a city precariously balanced between fantasy and reality, between its shrinking aspirations and a stubborn desire to pursue worn-out dreams. Pollari and Somol, who married in 1994, moved here from the East Coast six years ago. Pollari, 47, is chairwoman of Environmental Design at Otis College of Art and Design; Somol, 42, teaches at UCLA‘s graduate department of architecture. Like generations of young architects before them, they saw Los Angeles as a place where untested talents could launch a career by designing small, residential projects on limited budgets. But the ideal client never appeared. And the kind of abundant, cheap lots where early Modernists such as Rudolf Schindler once created their most revolutionary works no longer exist. Eventually, the couple decided that they could best satisfy their architectural aspirations by designing a house for themselves. The lot they purchased was no one’s picture of paradise: Slightly asymmetrical, it extends 150 feet along Olympic Boulevard, tapering down from 60 feet wide along Highland to roughly 40 feet at its other end. Somol calls the site “an acoustical disaster zone,” and he estimates that thousands of cars, trucks and buses pass by every day. The organization of the plan is deceptively simple. A carport faces Highland Avenue while the rest of the house stretches out along Olympic, framed by two long walls that reflect the geometry of the site. The rooms--office, kitchen, living area, bathroom and bedroom--are arranged in a single file, which decrease in size as the walls converge. The rest of the lot becomes an enclosed private yard, a sliver of suburbia tucked behind the house’s barrier-like form. In effect, the 1,700-square-foot house becomes a wedge between two opposing März 2003 conditions: the mechanized world of the automobile passing by outside and the harmonious suburban world of the yard in back. Seen from Olympic, the house appears fortress-like. Its shimmering, corrugated metal facade is relatively blank, pierced by two horizontal, slot-like windows. Once inside, the house is as unpretentious as an industrial shed. Its sleek, concrete floors and industrial fixtures give it an appealing informality. Its wedge-like shape creates a forced perspective in the living area, exaggerating its length. What makes the design compelling is its ability to transform a seemingly mundane context into something of beauty. Set at eye level, for example, the narrow slot windows frame a view of the cars streaming by outside in both directions. The effect is mesmerizing. During rush hour, the monotonous flow of cars evokes the slow rhythm of waves lapping up on a beach--a sort of soothing urban tranquilizer. The back wall, meanwhile, is more delicately conceived. Two concrete block segments break up the wall’s horizontal rhythm. A long steel I-beam supports the roof above a series of sliding glass partitions, giving the house a surprising sense of lightness. When they are open, the glass doors disappear behind one of the concrete block walls, so that the entire house opens up to the backyard. Seen from here, the yard is a compact version of the conventional suburban fantasy. A series of deck areas are carved out of the lush, green lawn--an oval deck for lounge chairs, a smaller concrete pad for the barbecue. Eventually, the architects hope to build a large amoeba-shaped pool that will cover most of the yard. Modeled on the swimming pool at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas, the pool will have a shallow “sand bar” where couples can recline in waist-high water and sip drinks. The image evokes the Rat Pack glamour of Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr., if at low-budget prices. The idea is that the American dream, perhaps a bit blurrier after a few martinis, still haunts us. It has simply been driven underground, tucked away in the cracks and crevices of the city’s collective unconscious. Such fantasies are a far cry from the Modernist Case Study Houses of the 1950s. Then, architects such as Pierre Koenig and Raphael Soriano sought to create models for a perfectly balanced universe. Their designs--which seemed to embody Le Corbusier’s famous phrase that “a house is a machine for living”--were an expression of Utopian idealism, refined glass-andsteel structures where nuclear families lived in blissful harmony with nature. The Pollari Somol House sums up the profound generational shift that has taken place since that time. The old Utopian order is dead. The new Utopia will be rooted in harder realities, shaped by more personal desires. It is less concerned with high art ideals than with popular images. Its sense of social mission lies in its lack of pretension, its openness to new experience, its empathy for everyday life. It is a more complex, imperfect vision, but seen from a certain perspective, it is equally seductive - and perhaps more within our reach. Narrow windows give the cars streaming by a rhythm like ocean waves. 69 Amerika-Exkursion korean presbyterian church Report by bart lootsma photos by jan staller aus: architektur aktuell, June 2000 architect Greg Lynn FORM, Los Angeles client Douglas Garofalo Architects, Chicago mechanical engineering Michael Mcinturf Architects, Cincinnati adress Korean Presbyterian Church of New York, Queens, NY FTL Happold, New York City Long Island City, NY/43 - 05 37th Ave. Kohärenz im Kosmos, oder: Diagramme in Kostümen. Ich kann mich erinnern, dass ich ziemlich überrascht war, als ich das erste Mal das fertige Gebäude besichtigte. Überrascht von der Umgebung - eine ziemlich amorphe and undefinierte Industriegegend - und überrascht vom Gebäude selbst, das wesentlich, industrieller” wirkte als ich es erwartet hatte, speziell beim ersten Besuch, als es noch im Bau war. Ich hatte das Projekt vorher ziemlich häufig in Vorträgen und Publikationen gesehen, und da war stets diese verführerische, fremdartige Glätte der Präsentation. Diese geschmeidigen „blobs” wirken nun plötzlich „wie das segmentierte Ovum des Kosmos” (Brian Massumi). Später, vor nicht allzu langer Zeit sah ich die Fotos, die Jan Staller von der Kirche gemacht hat and plötzlich passte der Bau in eine Art neuer Kontinuität, die ich mir vorher nie vorstellen konnte. Und - natürlich - verstand ich: Das Universum ist kein Ei. Es ist ein unglaublich komplexes and chaotisches Ganzes. Nur brauchen wir manchmal das Ei, um es denken zu können. Jan Stallers Fotos sind ganz anders als die Architekturfotografie, die man normalerweise in den Fachzeitschriften sieht. Dort veröffentlicht man üblicherweise Fotos, die dazu dienen ,, Architektur zu domestizieren”, wie das Janet Abrams in ihrem Katalog über Fotografie in der frühen Moderne (Photographer’s Gallery, London 1991) formuliert hat: „Die veröffentlichten Abbilder sind ,Crufts Best in Show`, verwandt zwar, aber so gegensätzlich wie die Köter auf den Straßen (...) Architekturfotografie bereitet Dich nur auf eine Optimalverfassung vor, nicht nur ist das Gebäude wie neugeboren, unverdorben, sondern es ist auch säuberlich von seiner Umgebung getrennt, stets wie im Sonnenbad, in seinen wärmsten Tönen, lächeInd für 70 die Kamera.” Stallers Fotos sind fast das exakte Gegenteil davon. Sie sind ziemlich düster, weil der Fotograf bedecktes Wetter oder sogar die Nacht für die Aufnahme seiner Bilder gewähIt hat, and er scheint die Filme so entwickelt zu haben, dass die Schwarztöne starker herauskommen and die Kontraste erhöht sind. In einem Foto (siehe Umschlagabbildung) ist das Gebäude fast versteckt hinter Fässern and einem JOYS’ R’US”-Billboard. In einem anderen erhebt sich der Bau über einen tief schwarz asphaltierten Parkplatz mit Lastwägen and alten Autos unter der Prozessionsstiege. In Goldlettern and koreanischer Schrift steht auf der Hauptfassade geschrieben: „New York Presbyterian Church”, das ist eine Kirchenfabrik, eine Religionsindustrieanl März 2003 floorplans age, die Messen für zweieinhalb Tausend Gläubige veranstaltet. Aber die Kirche beherbergt auch vielfältige nicht-religiöse Programme in 80 Gruppenräumen, eine Hochzeitskapelle mit 600 Plätzen, verschiedene Versammlungsräume, einen Raum für Chorproben, ein Café und einen Kinderbetreuungsraum. Man stelle sich all diese Leute vor, die von verschiedensten Orten aus ganz New York kommen, die ihre Erinnerungen an Korea mit sich tragen, sich umher bewegen, ihre Tätigkeiten in verschiedensten Konstellationen verrichten - wie in einer riesigen Ameisenfarm. Greg Lynn hat schon bei vielen Gelegenheiten erklärt, wie das Design für die Kirche entwickelt wurde. Wie im Computer verschiedene „meta blobs” entsprechend ihren einzelnen Zonen, denen Gravitationskräfte zugeordnet werden, interagieren. Wie sie wachsen and so lange miteinander zu neuen Formen verschmelzen, bis sich eine Art Aquilibrium eingestellt hat. Wie diese meta blobs für verschiedene Programme stehen, einzelne Räume symbolisieren, die sich zu einem großen Raum mit einer einzigen Oberfläche verbinden, der das gesamte Bauprogramm enthält. Wie sehr das auch die Bauherren liebten, weil sie tatsächlich selbst die Formen beeinflussen and die Dinge größer oder kleiner machen konnten, ohne die Kohärenz des Gesamtkonzeptes zu zerstören. Dann - eine neue Strategie: Eine Reihe von Röhren wird auf das Dach eines existierenden Gebäudes gelegt, das wir noch nicht gesehen haben, die alte Knickerbocker-Wäscherei. Die Röhren wachsen and entwickeln sich zu einer rippenartigen Struktur mit einer inneren and einer äußeren Haut. Weitere Röhren für Zugang und Erschließung werden hinzugefügt. In dieser Phase ist die Geschmeidigkeit der blobs teilweise bereits ersetzt von einem bestimmten Grad an Segmentation, immer noch wirkt aber alles miteinander verschmolzen. Danach muss es eine dritte Phase gegeben haben, in der das Projekt an die Techniken des Baumeisters adaptiert wurde. Konstruktionselemente erscheinen and eine Industriefassade wird eingeführt. In dieser Phase hat das Projekt seine ursprüngliche Geschmeidigkeit verloren. Es wirkt fast wie die Dekonstruktion eines blobs. Was sich zunächst der Sprache zu entziehen schien, wird nun wieder zur Sprache, es wird durch die Sprache wiederangeeignet. Alle Materialien erzählen plötzlich vielerlei Geschichten darüber, was sie sind, wie sie gemacht sind, wie sie zusammenmontiert werden und wie sie sich zu anderen Materialien verhalten. Was zuerst wie eine kohärente Form wirkte, die von alten möglichen komplexen Systemen deformiert wurde, wurde plötzlich wieder zur Komplexität. Für sich betrachtet ist das kein Problem, weil das Gebäude, wie es nun dasteht, in mancher Hinsicht vielleicht sogar überzeugender ist als wenn es ein weicher blob geblieben wäre: Denn das hätte einen viel irritierenderen, sciencefiction-artigen Effekt ergeben. Es hätte so ausgesehen, als ob die „aliens” oder zumindest etwas von „da draußen” gerade gelandet wäre. Natürlich mag Greg Lynn solche Vergleiche and er bezieht sich bei vielen Gelegenheiten mit einer geradezu perversen Freude auf B-movieblobs. Da sie so viel Abscheu and Übelkeit bei ihrem Kinopublikum auslösen können, scheinen sie eine Art höhere Intelligenz zu besitzen. „Der Begriff ,blob’ bezeichnet ein Ding, das weder singulär noch vielfach ist, sondern eine Intelligenz, die sich verhält, als ob sie singulär and vernetzt ist, aber in ihrer Form virtuell unendlich vervielfältigt and verbreitet werden kann.“ (Greg Lynn in „Folds, Bodies and Blobs“) Dies ist aber eine unglaublich interessante Metapher für ein Gebäude, weil auch ein Gebäude niemals nur ein Ding, sondern immer in einem dauernd sich verändernden, komplexen Netzwerk von Beziehungen and Erzählungen gefangen ist. Das ist es, was Architektur so faszinierend macht. Dieser Prozess der 71 Amerika-Exkursion sections dauernden Änderung endet nicht mit der Realisierung des Gebäudes, sondern setzt sich in alle Ewigkeit fort. Denn wenn das Gebäude fertiggestellt ist, wird es von den Leuten, die es benutzen, angeeignet. Ich erinnere mich an einen Vortrag von Peter Eisenman vor langer Zeit, in dem er von einem seiner ersten Häuser sprach. Als es fertiggestellt war and die Bauherren es zum ersten Mal besichtigten, rief die Frau: ,,Aber ich habe geglaubt, wir bekommen ein Heidi-Haus!“ Sie zogen zunächst im Keller ein, veränderten das Haus vom ersten Tag an and bezogen es nach and nach, bis sie das Gefühl hatten, es sei endlich „ ihr“ Haus. Eisenman stimmte dem zu, nachdem er bewusst einen gewissen Widerstand in das Haus eingebaut hatte. Auf gewisse Weise ist die Art, in der die Bauingenieure und die Baumeister sich mit den ursprünglichen Entwürfen für die Koreanische Kirche auseinandergesetzt hatten und sie an Methoden angepasst hatten, mit denen sie sich vertraut fühlten, nicht so anders als Eisenmans Anekdote - auch wenn sie sich vor der Realisierung zugetragen hatte. Greg Lynn hat dennoch stets einen solchen Ansatz kritisiert, oder er hat zumindest eine dekonstruktivistische Architektur kritisiert, die von solchen Konflikten lebt and sie in Form geometrischer Konflikte nutzt. Statt dessen schlägt er eine Architektur vor, die verformbar, flüssig und geschmeidig ist und alle diese konfliktträchtigen Kräfte in einem neuen Ganzen unterbringt and integriert. Das Gebäude wird Teil einer größeren Ökologie and ändert sich mit dieser, was in der Designphase mithilfe der neuesten Animationssoftware möglich gemacht wird. Schlie8lich wird eine statische Form gewählt - statisch wie ein Segelboot, das eine Form hat, die sich in vielen verschiedenen Situationen bewährt. Es schließt alle diese Situationen mit ein, wobei die endgültige Form zwischen ihnen vermittelt. Im Falle des Bootes könnte 72 man es bequemer oder schneller machen, indem man die Parameter ändert - auf gleiche Weise könnte man das Gebäude nach den Wünschen des Bauherren andern. Die grundlegende Frage ist jedoch, welche unterschiedlichen Parameter ausgewählt werden, eine Rolle in der Originalumwelt zu spielen? Wie komplex ist diese Umwelt tatsächlich? Wer wählt die einwirkenden Kräfte aus und nach welchen Kriterien? Im Falle der Koreanischen Presbyterianerkirche erscheint die Ökologie des Gebäudes noch relativ einfach. Das ist nicht Außergewöhnliches, da sie eines der ersten Experimente Lynns in diesem Arbeitsstil ist. In der ersten Phase des Designprozesses wurde eine Software ausgewählt, die es zuließ, verschiedene Teile des Raumprogramms, beispielsweise die verschiedenen Kapellen, den Altar und den Chorbereich, in „meta blobs“ zu lokalisieren, die dann zusammenwuchsen. Dann konnten ihre Größe und Beziehungen zueinander verändert werden, während sie verbunden blieben and das Gesamtdesign kohärent blieb. Schließlich wurde das Originalgebäude in den Prozess eingeführt and das Modell grob daran angepasst. Grob, weil sie immer noch als verschiedene Einheiten auftreten. In späteren, ähnlichen Versuchen, eine neue Organisation in einem existierenden Gebäudeentwurf unterzubringen, wie etwa das Design von NOX für das V2 Labor in Rotterdam, erscheint die Beziehung zwischen der neuen und der bestehenden Form flüssiger and integrierter. Jedenfalls ist es exakt diese begrenzte ursprüngliche Gebäudeökologie, die Lynns realisiertes Gebäude wie eine Dekonstruktion der ursprünglichen Diagramme erscheinen lässt. Sie sind fast versteckt in der endgültigen Konstruktion und Detailausarbeitung. In diesem Sinne kommt Lynn in der Koreanischen Presbyterianerkirche nahe an die lose geschichtete Struktur heran, die Ben van Berkel und Caroline Bos für Diagramme in ihren Entwürfen als „interaktive März 2003 night view Instrumente“ verwenden: Eher als eine Art Zwischenstatements im Management des gesamten Projekts denn als etwas, das wörtlich realisiert werden sollte. In einem alten Text über Ben van Berkel habe ich davon unter Hinweis auf einen Text über die Arbeit des italienischen Malers Francesco Clemente gesprochen - den Berkel übrigens stets bewundert hat - und zwar als eine Art von „Diagrammen in Kostümen“ (in: A+U 342, 99:03, und: de Architect, März 1991). Der Traum des Architekten wird im Ganzen begraben, was allerdings interessanter ist als der Traum alleine. Greg Lynn scheint aber ehrgeiziger zu sein. Viel mehr als van Berkel, dessen Arbeit innovativ, aber gleichzeitig in einer traditionellen Praxis entsteht, die sich mit realen Bauaufgaben auseinandersetzt, entwickelt sich Lynns Arbeit viel mehr aus einer Tradition der akademischen und theoretischen Untersuchung und sollte auch als solche beurteilt werden. In jedem seiner Projekte wählt Lynn die Parameter aus, mit denen er arbeiten will. Im Projekt eines Haus-Prototyps auf Long Island sind es beispielsweise die Topographie, der Wind und der Lärm der nahen Straße und im H2-Haus für Wien (Projekt OMV-Pavillon) sind es das Sonnenlicht und die Autos auf der angrenzenden Autobahn. Lynn wählt für jedes Projekt auch eine passende Software aus, und in seinem „Embryologischen Wohnprojekt“, nimmt er eine Herstellungsmethode als Ausgangspunkt für den Entwurf. Als geradezu wissenschaftliche Experimente in einer kontrollierten Umwelt sind diese Projekte unglaublich wertvoll und üben bereits ihren Einfluss auf eine größere Gruppe von Architekten aus. Dennoch stellt sich die Frage, ob das der einzige Grund dafür ist, dass Lynn für seine Projekte nur eine ausgewählte Anzahl an Parametern zulässt. Es könnte nämlich auch sein, dass seine primäre Sehnsucht, Kohärenz in seinen Entwürfen zu produzieren, die Weise beeinflusst, in der diese Kohärenz im realisierten Gebäude hergestellt wird. Denn die reale Gebäudeökologie ist wesentlich komplexer als Lynns selektive Auswahl bestimmter Kräfte, die im Entwurf eine Rolle spielen. In diesem Sinne könnte Michael Speaks absolut richtig liegen, wenn er sagt, dass Lynn, ebenso wie sein Mentor Peter Eisenman, sich allzu sehr für die Metaphysik der Architektur interessiert (Architectural Design Profile 133, 1998). Das würde auch die Verachtung erklären, mit der sein Freund Sanford Kwinter von den Datascapes, die holländische Architekten wie MVRDV produzieren, als „Maastrichter Bohnenzählen“ spricht. Kwinter findet den Ansatz der Holländer viel zu pragmatisch. Darin kann ihm Recht gegeben werden, aber dennoch sind Datascapes exakt jene Art Diagramme, welche die komplexen Ökologien visualisieren, die an einem Bauplatz agieren, längst, bevor der Architekt ins Spiel kommt. Sie visualisieren Regeln und Bestimmungen, Raumprogramme, Wünsche der Bauherren und sogar Konstruktionstechniken. Einige davon sind formal von Lynns Projekten nicht einmal sehr weit entfernt. Dennoch ist ein einziger Datascape niemals genug, einen richtigen Entwurf hervorzubringen: Er wird erst mit den verschiedenen involvierten Parteien ausgehandelt. In ihren endgültigen Entwürfen versuchen MVRDV nicht, die Konflikte zwischen den verschiedenen Kräften - die im Datascape repräsentiert werden - zu verdecken oder zu synthetisieren. Außerdem treten die meisten dieser Diagramme als statische Formen auf, mit Ausnahme der Städte in der Installation „Metacity/Datatown“ (siehe dazu: Daidalos 69/70; EI Croquis 86, IV-1997; AA News, Autumn 1997). So gesehen arbeiten sie in der Tradition der Dekonstruktivisten, auch wenn sie ein breiteres typologisches Spektrum und abstrakte Organisationsmuster anwenden. Im Entwurfsprozess ersetzen diese Verhandlungen fast exakt die Software, die Lynn in der gleichen Phase einführt. In diesem Sinne wäre es interessant herauszufinden, ob diese beiden Methoden sich nicht verbinden ließen, um Projekte hervorzubringen, die sowohl „ökologische“ Qualitäten haben als auch eine innere Kohärenz. 73 Amerika-Exkursion CHEMOSPHERE Albrecht Kreuzer architects client address John Lautner Leonard J. Malin 776 Torreyson Drive, West Hollywood, CA 90046 Das 1960 in den Hollywood Hills errichtete Malin House, oder einfach “the CHEMOSPHERE”, ist vielleicht Lautners bekanntestes Gebäude. House Leonard J. Malin “CHEMOSPHERE”, 1960 House Leonard J. Malin “CHEMOSPHERE”, 1960 74 In Form einer oktogonalen fliegenden Untertasse, aufgeständert auf einer einzigen, hohlen Betonsäule, gestaltet, wirkt es vielleicht wie eine hemmungslosen Hingabe an den Futurismus, erweist sich jedoch als ausgesprochen sensible Lösung für eine schmale und steile Lage. Das Einzelfundament der Säule beschränkte die Zerstörung des bestehenden Terrain auf ein Minimum und vermied das übliche Planieren des Geländes und das für Gebäude mit Hanglage notwendige Errichten einer Staumauer. Der schlicht gehaltene Innenraum des auskragenden Wohnhauses bietet eine ununterbrochene, kontinuierlich übergehende Wohnfläche von 120 Quadratmetern und eine herrliche Aussicht auf das darunterliegende Tal. Der ursprüngliche Besitzer und Bauherr Leonard Malin war Weltraumingeneur. Im Alter von 27 Jahren gab er seinen Beruf auf, um mit Lautner sein Traumhaus zu bauen.: “Most people work an entire lifetime to buy the home of their dreams. I said, the heck with that, I`ll build the home of my dreams and pay for it the rest of my life.”, meinte er dazu. Die Malins bewohnten das Haus mit ihren vier Kindern bis 1972, und während der folgenden 25 Jahre wechselte das Haus dreimal den Besitzer. Dann erwarb das neureiche Verlegerehepaar Angelika und Benedikt Taschen den Grundbesitz um beinahe 1Million Dollar. Diese haben sich vorgenommen, das Haus zu renovieren, und Lautners Visionen, Originaldetails, die zur damaligen Zeit nicht zu verwirklichen waren, beinhaltend, gerecht zu werden. Außerdem planen die Taschens ein Gästehaus am Fusse des Chemosphere, das von Rem Koolhaas als Haus des 21. Jahrhunderts in einem ebenso kraftvollen konzeptionellen Design errichtet werden soll. Das Chemosphere House wurde als Set für den Film “Body Double” von Brian de Palma verwendet. Von den anderen Bauten Lautners ,die ebenfalls als Filmsets dienten, ist noch besonders das Elrod House zu nennen, in dem Szenen des Bondfilms “Diamantenfieber” (1972, Lewis Gilbert) mit Sean Connery in der Titelrolle gedreht wurden. John Lautner Nach Abschluss eines Anglistikstudiums an der Universität von Northern Michigan war John Lautner sechs Jahre lang Mitarbeiter von Frank Lloyd Wright in Taliesin. 1937 leitete er den Bau zweier Projekte Wrights, zwei Jahre später gründete er ein eigenes Büro in Los Angeles. Sein erstes Soloprojekt war ein Haus für seine eigene Familie, das der Architekturkritiker Henry Russel Hitchcock als “the best house by an architect under März 2003 30 in the United Sates” bezeichnete. Später sagte derselbe: “Lautner`s work could stand comparison with that of his master”. 1970 wurde er Ehrenmitglied des American Institute of Architects (AIA) für herausragende Verdienste im Design und erhielt 1993 die Goldmedaillie des AIA für sein Lebenswerk.Er starb am 24. Oktober 1994 im Alter von 83 Jahren. www.johnlautner.org www.usc.edu/dept/architecture/shulman/architects/ lautner www.arcspace.com/kk_ann/2001_03 www.midglen.com/newsletter/volume3.pdf http: //aluminumfilms.com/making%20of.htm John Lautner Grundriss, Ansicht und Längschnitt 75 Amerika-Exkursion KAUFMANN DESERT HOUSE Andreas Krainer architects client address Yet the finest and most celebrated of Neutra’s houses of the 1940s were indubitably the Kaufmann House, Palm Springs (1946), and the Tremaine House, Santa Barbara (1948). The first of these clients was Edgar Kaufmann, a wealthy Pittsburgh merchant and philanthropist, who was already famous in architectural circles for commissioning Frank Lloyd Wright in 1936 to design his epochal “Fallingwater” vacation house near Pittsburgh. Kaufmann’s son, Edgar, Jr., an architect, historian, and fond disciple of Wright, wanted his father to engage Wright to design the Palm Springs house, but the senior Kaufmann wanted a greater feeling of lightness and openness than Wright had imparted either to Fallingwater or to his own desert house at Taliesin West. Kaufmann Desert House, Richad Neutra 76 For this new commission Kaufmann eagerly turned to Neutra. A decade after the grand Brown House, this Palm Springs villa was Neutra’s first luxurious postwar private residence. Neutra likened the desert setting with its rocks and mountains to the landscape of the moon and conceived of the house as a gemlike pavilion in a lush oasis in the midst of a vast and relatively barren place. The house subsequently became the chef d’oeuvre in a suburban townscape, but it was born in the middle 1940s in relative isolation. Sited on a 200-by-300-foot lot, with spectacular views of the mountains Richard Neutra Edgar Kaufmann Palm Springs and desert, the 3,800-square-foot house takes the shape of a rough cross. From the main south entrance, a covered walk moves past garages to the entry hall, leading east to the living and dining rooms and a master bedroom overlooking the pool, west to kitchen and servants’ quarters, and north to an open, covered patio with guest rooms beyond. To provide a raised deck for viewing the desert, Neutra baned local authorities and skirted city ordinances against two-story dwellings by devising an open yet covered rooftop “gloriette,” reached by outside stairs. Its sturdy fireplace, built-in banquettes, and adjustable louvered screen wall give it the feeling of both an open porch and a snug, enclosed shelter. It also contributes significantly to the handsome profile of the overall structure. The relative massiveness of the house’s rock and concrete walls is lightened by the equally large expanses of glass and by the “floating” quality of the silver-gray metal trim. With its overhangs, adjustable louvers, and radiant floor heating and cooling systems, the house is a model of sophisticated climate control. Rather than building a house that appears to have grown “organically” out of the desert, as Wright had attempted to do in Arizona at Taliesin West, Neutra designed the Kaufinann House as a minimalist pavilion for inhabiting and observing the desert. März 2003 Kaufmann Desert House, Richad Neutra The house, he acknowledged, “is frankly an artifact, a construction transported in many shop-fabricated parts over along distance. Its lawns and shrubs are imports, just as are its aluminum and plate glass; but plate glass and aluminum, the water of the pool, all reflect the dynamic changes in the moods of the landscape. While not grown there or rooted there, the building nevertheless fuses with its setting, partakes in its events, emphasizes its character. Neutra gave Julius Shulman explicit suggestions for photographing the house. Aided by both the architect’s and the client’s insights, Shulman’s own perceptions of the building and its setting resulted in some of his most remarkable pictures. Grundriss The photograph taken from the east of the house and pool at twilight would become, in particular, one of modern architecture’s most famous images. Shulman’s interpretations were widely published, and the house was internationally acclaimed. Richard Neutras Windshield House Neumann Dieterich 2001 Lageplan 77 Amerika-Exkursion CASE STUDY HOUSE NO.8 Anna Edthofer architects address The “Charles and Ray Eames’ house was one of a number of Case Study Houses.The “Case Study House Program” was initiated in 1945 by Arts and Architecture magazine.The idea was to use modernist ideals for the postwar homes and housing of the three million returning soldiers. The “CSH – Program” enlisted the talents of eight Southern Californian architects. There was a sense that all the new technologies and materials of the war effort could be used to do something besides harm people. The Eames’ House uses existing industrially made componends. Case Study House No.8, Charles and Ray Eames Each house would be a “case study” of the needs of a particular client. It would solve the problems of the client, but in as universal a way as possible. Each client would be understood to represent a different type of homeowner. Charles and Ray Eames were the “hypothetical” clients of Case Study House No.8: a working couple with no children living at home,so they just need space for living and for working. (The initial design solution, the Bridge House, was by Charles Eames and Eero Saarinen. Never built, it was a cantilevered structure rooted on an east-facing hill that stuck out through a row of Eucalyptus trees on a then-secluded site in Santa Monica Canyon.) 78 Charles and Ray Eames 203 Chautauqua Blvd. Because it was to be made of steel, its construction was delayed by the postwar materials shortage. The Eames House had the advantage of being designed to be built completely of prefabricated parts. As Ray said, “It was the idea of using materials in a different way, materials that could be bought from a catalog so that there was a continuation of the idea of mass production, so that people would not have to build stick by stick, but with material that comes ready-made, off-the-shelf in that sense.” Above all, there was the desire to respect the meadow. Another was the recognition that the design had to be efficient in its use of materials. “Charles viewed it “almost as a math problem,” to use Ray’s words. “It was like a game to him.” How could one enclose the maximum volume with the same steel?” In a sense, they were applying to this work of architecture their learn-by-doing process. Playing with the elements the first time around had given them some insights. But completing the drawings, living with the site, seeing the delivered materials, and spending time with the model — all these things together primed the pump for an intense couple of months of redesigning while under the gun. The final design is very simple.There are two buildings, like two boxes. One house März 2003 Case Study House No.8, Charles and Ray Eames is the living space, the other the work space. A long, nearly 60 meter concrete retaining wall runs behind the structures so that the front of the buildings shows two stories to the world, but the back is set into the hill itself, insulating the buildings. The two buildings look similar, but they are not identical. Each is two stories high and can be measured in bays about 2.3 meters wide, but the module does not intrude. The living part is closer to the ocean and made up of eight bays (including an overhang of the patio), and the studio is made up of five bays. The patio between them has the width of four bays. Each structure has a two-story-high space on the end facing away from the other. The house is 140 square meters, and the studio 93. On the outside, the factory materials that make up the buildings are shown matterof-factly, not with pride or shame. Factory windows and X-trusses provide the texture of the exterior. Color panels (orange, blue, gold, and others) are arranged on the grid. The construction of the house took only a few months. Case Study House No.8, Charles and Ray Eames, R. Craig Miller gives this description of the interior: “In contrast to the starkness of many international style interiors, Eames’ interiors were increasingly filled with distinctive arrangements of furniture, rugs, flowers, pillows, toys, candles, shells and other collectibles that approached a high Victorian clutter.” It is impossible to understand the whole presence of this house from photographs its comfort in the landscape, the exquisiteness of the siting, the peacefulness of the meadow. Case Study House No.8, Charles and Ray Eames, Quellen: greatbuildings.com; architectureweek.com; modern architecture since 1900, William J. R. Curtis 79 Amerika-Exkursion CALIFORNIA STATE, POMONA claudia cavallar architects address Antoine Predock, Compiled by Brad Collins and Juliette Robbins. Rizzoli 1994 3801 West Temple Avenue Pomona, California 91768 CLASSROOM, LABORATORY, ADMINISTRATION BUILDING (CLA Building) California State Polytechnic University, Pomona 1987-1992 The Cal Poly building is truly a gateway building, visible from the freeways, the local flight patterns, and across the entire Pomona Valley. The building’s silhouette delineates the different elements of the program. The large tower houses a mixture of administrative, faculty, and student functions. The open-circulation classroom/ laboratory functions are the organizational core for the remaining elements of the program: computer labs and classrooms. Classroom, Laboratory, Administration Building (CLA Building) The sharpest angle of the triangular plan points toward Mount Baldy in the San Gabriel Mountains. Upper-level terraces in the stone tower also direct views towards the range. The prow of the tower points in the direction of the Kellogg ranch. One corner of the triangular plan is clipped to nestle against a duck pond. These geometric adjustments anchor the CLA to the spirit of the Pomona Valley. The building becomes an abstract geologic form mirroring the surrounding landscapes of basin, foothill, and mountains. The core classroom piece unravels around a central courtyard. In plan it begins as a square, becomes an U, an L, and finally an A. As it unwinds views of mount baldy become increasingly dominant. 80 The building is very permeable. It provides shortcuts to various parts of the campus and the open zone under the raised classroom block serves as a meeting ground/gateway. From the courtyard, elements of the building’s structure form a gigantic aperture opening to the Pomona Valley. It celebrates the school’s connection to agriculture focusing on the neighboring fields framed against the tawny hills of summer and the green hills of winter. MOVIE CONNECTIONS: The building was one of the locations used in the movie Gattaca (1997). The Diamond Ranch High School by Morphosis, also in Pomona, was used in The Cell (2000). www.predock.com www.csupomona.edu März 2003 Classroom, Laboratory, Administration Building (CLA Building) Pläme Classroom, Laboratory, Administration Building (CLA Building) 81 Amerika-Exkursion CHIAT/DAY BUILDING Cornelia Faisst architects client address FRANK O. GEHRY & ASSOCIATES 1985-1991 Jay Chiat Main Street, Venice The Chiat/Day Office Building is located on Main Street in Venice, four blocks from the Pacific Ocean. The area is evolving from a funky beach town into a more urban contemporary community. The L-shaped site is within the California Coastal Commision’s jurisdiction and the project went through an extensive review process. The building reflects the dense but low-scale development that the Coastal Commision envisions for this beach community. Chiat/Day Building, Fassadenansicht, Main St. 82 The 75,000 square foot, three-story office space was designed specifically for the use of Chiat/Day advertising agency as its West Coast Corporate Headquarters. The building sits atop three levels of underground parking for three hundred cars. The Main Street facade is expressed as three distinct elements which relate in scale and level of detail to the surrounding neighborhood. The entry to the parking structure is through the centrally placed binoculars, conceived and created in collaboration with Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen. The binoculars contain space for private conferencing and research and are tied into the main client conference room. Each cylinder is topped by one skylight oculus. On one side of the binoculars is a curved screen wall which provides shade from the western sun and is shaped to relate to the marine imagery. On the other side of the binoculars is a sculptural expression of columns in an almost forest-like density. The columns are clad in copper and also create a sun screen. Because of the configuration of the site, as well as the height constraints imposed by the coastal commission and the density required by the client, the building sits on the property lines on all sides. On the third level of the south facade, a very long skylight extends down through the building to the first floor. Additionally, there are lightwells that bring light down to the first and second floors around the building. At the fork of the “L” is the core of the building, adjacent to which is a large, two-story skylighted meeting room. The Coastal Commision’s height limit of thirty feet meant that the building floor-tofloor heights had to be kept to ten feet. This imposed a structural solution of flat plate concrete framing and required a great deal of coordination between mechanical and electrical trades. This tight ceiling space is mitigated by exposing the structure to the underside of the concrete deck in many places as well as by the placement of the lightwells and more open vertical spaces. Simple built-in workstations are designed in plywood. “You can’t make people work harder and smarter,” says Jay Chiat. “You can give März 2003 them an environment that helps them to to building, but its stamp, along with Gehry’s, work harder and smarter.” remains indelibly on it. The process has accelerated in recent years. The Santa Monica headquarters opened to much fanfare only in late 1991. “Still”, says architect Susan Lanier, “Chiat wanted to bust out of prescribed notions, the complacency in the way they were working. He was really convinced the system they had was archaic.” Texte: http://www.arcspace.com/calif/build/chiat.htm http://www.smmirror.com/volume3/issue16/chiat_day_ advertising.asp http://web.gmu.edu/departments/safe/clips/chiat.html Bilder: http://www.arcspace.com/calif/build/chiat.htm http://www.archiweb.cz/builds/admin/chiatday.htm Lanier is partner in Lubowick/Lanier, which has reworked the Gehry building’s interior. Chiat’s new metaphor for both Santa Monica and New York was of a college campus, where students move from classroom to classroom, to library and lab. Similarly, most Chiat/Day staff aren’t tied to desks. After checking out computers and phones at the “company store,” they go where the resources they need are, whether that be a meeting room (fitted uptemporarily of course-with computer, video equipment, tack space, and white board) or a quiet corner equipped only with a seat. “Much more difficult, Lanier feels, was the issue of flexibility: “To allow people to move to a zone to perform a task doesn’t mean everything has to be movable. If that was the tack, you’d end up with rather mediocre space architecturally and otherwise. Things get moved around and left, and it’s nobody’s space. There can be some smaller movable objects, but the spatial character needs to be maintained.” Lanier felt floating workers needed some kind of mooring. “Since people were losing their personal space, the store and a concierge space on the second floor are like neighborhood landmarks, where you know the people working there. It provides that comfort zone of people and familiarity.” J.S.R. Architectural Record/ September 1994 Chiat-Day has long since left this Plan Chiat/Day Building 83 Amerika-Exkursion SCHINDLER House Cornelia Steirer architects address Rudolf Michael Schindler 835 North Kings Road, West Hollywood, CA 90069, USA Rudolf Schindler 1922 Kathryn Smith, MAK Center brochure: Rudolf M. Schindler’s Studio-Residence was the first modern house to respond to the unique climate of California, and as such it served as the prototype for a distinctly Californian style of design. From 1922 until his death in 1953, the building functioned as both his house and studio. Rudolf Schindler 84 During this 30 year period, Schindler designed the houses and small commercial buildings that today are considered landmarks of the modern movement. In his own house, Schindler expressed his philosophy about structure and materials most clearly, but the entire site demonstrates his exploration of the relationship of space, light and form. In this, his first independent design in the U.S., Schindler set forth the basic tenets of his architectural philosophy, which he called “Space Architecture.” In this masterwork he established himself as a major figure in the history of the modern movement. Smith recounts how Schindler was born in Vienna, where he studied art and architecture and worked with Otto Wagner and Adolf Loos. In 1914, Schindler moved to Chicago to work with a commercial architectural firm. After this job, he joined Frank Lloyd Wright’s studio, travelling in Los Angeles in 1920 to supervise the construction of the house. Schindler began his own practice in 1921, designing the house and studio to accommodate two couples: he and his wife, Pauline, and Clyde and Marian Chace. The Chaces left in 1924, but were replaced by Richard Neutra and his family in 1925. Collaboration with Neutra (a former schoolmate from Vienna) produced several modern architectural landmarks: Schindler’s Lovell Beach House at Newport Beach, their joint competition for the League of Nations Building, and Neutra’s Lovell “Health” House in Los Angeles. Each house needs to be composed as a symphony, with variations on a few themes. The Schindler studio-residence was built between Februar and June 1922 on Kings Road in Hollywood, California. The houses design addressed and even resolved architectural problems involved with new methods of construction, a low budget, organization of living space, aesthetics, and a new life philosophy in a revolutionary manner. In many respects, the Schindler house marks the beginning of modern architecture in California.The house was built according to the life philosophy of Pauline Schindler and a rather optimistic appreciation of theusually mild Southern Californian climate. März 2003 Few materials were used: concrete, wood, glass, and canvas. It was important to Schindler to integrate the natural properties of the materials into the design of the building. Architectural functions remained visible, and the natural colour and texture of the materials were not covered by layers of paint. The house was designed for 3 households consisting of 2 couples and one bachelor without children. The floor plan consists of three L shapes spinning out from a central fireplace. The building sits directly on a concrete slab which serves as foundation and floor, avoiding the expense of excavation. Concrete was poured into wooden molds to form panels that were then tilted up to form walls. Three inch (7.5 cm) glass strips separate the panels. A wooden frame solidified the structure. Each adult disposed of a private studio for work and play. Each studio is enclosed on 3 sides by concrete walls with one open side facing a patio serving as a living and dining room. The garden opening is controlled by three translucent sliding canvas panels. The floor level is the same as that of the patio minimizing the transition from indoors to outdoors.The ceilings are of wood with skylights between different ceiling levels. Roofed sleeping baskets were the only living quarters above ground level. In the hopes that shared cooking duties would reduce their drudgery, a common kitchen was shared by the occupants. The buildings plans extend outside the enclosed structure to the property boundaries. Living areas are delimited by hedges and differing garden levels which are no less complexly conceived and structured than the enclosed spaces. Schindler’s own description of the house: Each room in the house represents a variation on the constructive architectural theme. This theme corresponds to the principle requirements for protecting a tent: a protected back, an open front, an open fireplace and a roof. Each room has a concrete wall at the rear and a large front opening onto the garden with sliding doors. The shape of the rooms and their relationship to the patios and various rooflevels creates a totally new spatial concept between the interior and the garden. http://www.galinsky.com/buildings/hollyhock/index.htm http://www.fosh.org/RMSchindler.html http://www.fosh.org/index.html http://www.fosh.org/RMSchindler.html http://www.fosh.org/kings_road.html Plan Schindler House 85 Amerika-Exkursion HOPE RESIDENCE David Baum architects client address site several graded lots at the top of a mountain road overlooking Palm Springs, the nearby mountains and the surrounding desert. requirements Frank Lloyd Wright discusses with other apprentices while Lautner sits at the table behind. Hope residence John Lautner Mr and Mrs Bob Hope 1979 Southridge Drive, Palm Springs, California a relatively small personal residence for the Hope family on the second floor above an expanded ground floor entertainment complex with a restaurant-sized kitchen and luxurious guest rooms. “The required spaces are contained in a large basic cone using the same slope as on the surrounding mountains in order to blend into them. Arched openings, 100 foot wide, open the house to the views, while 30-foot overhangs protect against the hot sun. My original 1973 design had an exposed concrete roof shell engineered by Félix Candela. Later the concrete shell was substituted with a steel construction with wood sheathing. Following a disastrous fire when welders’ sparks ignited and burned the wood sheathing off the steel frame, the Hopes decided to modify the original design. The roof frame remained structurally sound after the fire, but much of the luxury of the original scheme was omitted [weggelassen] as time eroded [zerfrass] the Hopes’ original plans. The court has a 60-foot diameter opening in the center to allow the spectacular skies at night to be seen, as well as to light the interior during the day. The original design had an openable skylight and an airconditioned, enclosed three to four story entertainment space. The executed design eliminates this closure and retains the space as an open, sheltered terrace.” John Lautner: “Architecture in its truest sense cannot be academically defined” 1911 roof construction 86 born in Marquette, Michigan Lautner once said he had to have ‘eight to ten good reasons to do something’. Thus , an element in a house of his may answer different questions, it can have different meanings on the various conceptual levels of the project. He creates strong, powerful, elegant or sensuous forms, but never for the sake of the form alone. They are pragmatic solutions to a project’s specific problems. The forms he creates - his architecture, that is - are highly recognizable, and too often they are looked at without making the effort to appreciate, or simply without understanding, the process of their creation. Too often his buildings have been branded as ‘arbitrary whims’ [launisches Zufallsprodukt] It seems to be a phenomenon of our time that ‘form’ is separated from the context from which it originates, divorcing it from the specific connotation it has in this context. Lautner’s main concern in his work is the space; the relation of the space to nature. Shelter, as he puts it, is a basic human need. He develops his buildings from the inside out and, logically, the facade is but a reflection of the inside. He insists that he has never designed a facade. He searches for a main idea that will respond to the site conditions, to the specific requirements, needs, likes and dislikes of his client. Since the parameters of every project are dissimilar, his houses are different März 2003 view from the garden one from another. The main idea controls the whole project: the organization of the floorplan, the materials and, in the end, the construction details - what Frank Lloyd Wright would call the ‘grammar’ - which are the means to express the main idea. [...] Lautner learnt how to build as an apprentice at Taliesin and, during World War 2, as a contractor. His profound knowledge of construction makes him genuinely respect good craftsmanship. Lautner’s ‘main idea’ can be compared to a theme in a piece of music. Like a composer who knows what any instrument can do, he knows how to orchestrate the music he writes. In contrast, the attention given by so many architects to elaborate but purely decorative details or to dazzling but meaningless forms is a presentation of creative virtuosity, ordinary, even vulgar. A building full of these perfectly executed details is as interesting as listening to a pianist who is technically brilliant but not musically gifted. Technical brilliance, important as a vehicle to transport an artist’s vision, is on its own meaningless. Today, such virtuosity seems to be not only accepted but praised, in literature, in music, in architecture. This obsession with the purely decorative detail is, as Lautner dryly puts it, ‘for the birds’. Lautner came to Los Angeles to supervize the construction of two of Frank Lloyd Wright’s houses, the Sturges House and the Oboler House. Though he never liked Los Angeles, a city he described as ‘so ugly, it made me physically sick’, he stayed and started a practice of his own. He knew that the sheer size of the population would make it easier for him to find people interested in his architecture than in any other city. In 1941, having built his own house (the first project after leaving Wright), the Springer and the Bell Houses, World War 2 brought his career to a pause. During the war years he first worked as a superintendent with the general contractor Paul Speer. Later, a short association with Douglas Honnold, an established Beverly Hills architect, followed. Lautner worked on several residential and commercial projects before he was able to go back to his own practice. view from underneath the roof Luigi Nervi, Eduardo Torroja, Frei Otto or Félix Candela, with whom he worked on the original scheme for the Bop Hope Residence. Lautner is a free-thinker, an architect who forms his ideas without regard to any established authority. His philosophy is based on simple, human principles, on what he calls ‘intangibles’ [Unfassbares/ immaterielle Werte]. His thinking certainly reflects the years spent as an apprentice with Frank Lloyd Wright - Henry RussellHitchcock stated that Lautner’s work could ‘stand comparison with that of his master’ - but in essence it is his own philosophy as an architect, and it is his thinking, the way he approaches architecture, that ties the multi-faceted body of his work together. Most of Lautner’s earlier projects were done on limited budgets. Just after the war he designed several houses with prefabricated steel or wood structures, not all of which were built. In many cases the clients would subcontract parts of the house or even finish their houses themselves. Lautner explored not only the economic and the structural possibilities of prefabrication, he used the architectural potential of these structures positively, introducing entire movable walls and pivoting [schwenkende] glass walls. Lautner’s aim, to connect the He died 1994 in Los Angeles interior space with the outside, making the architecture part of the surrounding nature, is visible in these early projects. From the early 1960s on Lautner started to get larger commissions, allowing him to explore new materials and ways of construction. The ‘Silvertop’ house of 1963 marks a turning point in his career. It is the first house in which he used concrete for the roof structure and for the nowfamous cantileverd driveway. Concrete is, in Lautner’s words, ‘Solid, yet Free’, a material that lets him express his formal visions, allowing the infinite variety of the form he seeks. Form is correlated to technology and to the material used. It is futile [sinnlos] to compare Lautner’s architecture to the work of other architects. He eludes [meidet] categorization. He concentrates on his own work, showing interest in the work of only very few other architects like Eero Saarinen, or Oscar Niemeyer whom Lautner met on a trip to Brazil. He is more interested in the work of structural engineers such as Pier excerpts taken from: “John Lautner: Architect”; edited by Frank Escher; Princeton Architectural Press; (July 1998) www links: http://www.johnlautner.org http://www.usc.edu/dept/architecture/shulman/ architects/lautner http://www.csupomona.edu/~blemerton/ Palm%20Springs/Lautner.html lower level 87 Amerika-Exkursion ELROD RESIDENCE Günther Dreger architects address client John Lautner Palm Springs, California Arthur Elrod Elrod opened 1954 Arthur Elrod Associates on Palm Canyon Drive, a design studio and furniture and fabric showroom and became the design king of the dessert. „After showing me the side, Elrod said:‘Give me what you think I should have on this lot.‘ As a very knowledgeable interor designer, Elrod was capable of designing really good for himself, but he wanted the architecturally exceptional,“ recounted John Lautner John Lautner To make the house part of the desert site and of the mountain itself, the land was cut down about 2.5m, to expose larger rocks on the edge of the property which were then built into the new home. (a work from scratching with basic ideas-not a style stuck on a rock). A curved wall gives complete privacy from the street and forms an entrance court with sculpture garden. The entrance is a large pivoting, framesless copper gate, counterbalanced for easy operation. The bedroom and carport wing has a roof garden blending into the landscape. The livingroom, a circular space with a diameter of 18m, has a concial dome with clerestories radiating from the center resembles a concrete-and-glass mushroom that hovers overhead like a spaceship. The clerestories catch the different light of the moving sun and solve the problem of west sun and view (22o-degree view: segments of the roof open to the snowcapped Mount Jacinto, while the roof overhand blocks the rays of the low west sun. In the roof overhang around the entire house are holes formed in concrete with foam cylinders, containing low voltage lights. At night, with the house lights dimmed, the black slate floor in the livingroom seems to disappear into the night, and one finds oneself in space viewing the sparkling lights of Palm Springs. Elrod Residence 88 The furniture was a mix of modernist pieces by Knoll, Harry Bertoia, Warren Platner, Marcel Breuer, and costume designs. A circular Edward Fields carpet of concentric circles woven in shades of green grounded the livingroom. A 8.5m arced sofa and facing curved bench by Martin Brattrud were coverd in a Jack Lenor Larsen fabric strechts taut so that no seams showed. In the dining area the walls and buffet were of teak. Eight black leather and chrome chairs surrounded the dining table, which was 1.8m long with two sheets of black glass with hammered and polished edges on a glass-and-chrome base. ‘we had belly dancers performing on he table at one party‘ says E. A mitered glass wall that wrapped inside, around th living room‘s terrace, blew inward in a freak windstorm shortly before the house was to be used for the 1971 James Bond movie Diamonds Are Forever. ‚Doors flew off and the televison set ended up in the middle of the Paul Jenkins artwork that had been specially stretched for the living room‘s arced wall‘ says E.‘We were supposed to be having a party for a hundred just two weeks after the storm. We ended up edging the floor with potted plants so that the people didn‘t step off the rocks and into the pool.‘ Lautner replaced the interior glass wall with massive electronic sliding doors suspended from the perimeter of the roof. The parties continued, and in März 2003 fact became legendary. Bill Blass held a fashion show. Playboy did a feature. Elrod was photographed in his sunken bathtub with bubbles. Neighbours included Steve McQueen and William Holden. ‚Arthur Elrod wanted a party house, and he got one.‘ Two years after Elrod died the house was put on the market. It went through varios owner until a recent restoration by Steven Heisler of beckson Associates in Los Angeles returned much of is‘t original spirit. Lautner John architect 1994 Princton Architectural Press, NY ed. by Frank Escher, ISBN-7643-5526-3 The architecture of John Lautner 1999, Thames & Hudson, London Hess Alan, Weintraub Alan ISBN 0-500-34175-3 Plan, Elrod Residence 89 Amerika-Exkursion ENNIS BROWN HOUSE Hicham Benmoussa Ennis Brown House, westend architects address client The Ennis-Brown House is the magnificent creation of world- famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright. It is one of the most outstanding residential structures existing in the United States. The house was built for Mabel and Charles Ennis in 1924, and after changing hands many times, it was purchased by Augustus O. Brown and Marcia Brown. Efforts to restore and maintain the house throughout the years have been very rewarding. In Architectural Digest (October, 1979)* Thomas Heinz states: “The residence is one of the most unusual of Wright’s California designs. In it, he combined elements from his past work with a new vocabulary created specifically for the sun-drenched, slightly rugged topography of Southern California. Aware that his client shared his affinity for Mayan art and architecture, he drew inspiration from that culture’s highly ornamented and organized buildings. “The Ennis-Brown House is one of the first residences constructed from concrete block. Wright transforms cold industrial concrete to a warm decorative material used as a frame for interior features like windows and fireplaces as well as columns. His sixteen inch modular blocks with intriguing geometric repeats invite tactile exploration. Ennis Brown House 90 In general, Wright´ s work is predominantly horizontal: certainly the great majority of Frank Lloyd Wright 2655 Glendower Avenue Mabel and Charles Ennis in 1924 the prairie houses were such, and some of the larger non-residential work, such as Midway Gardens and Imperial Hotel bear this distinctive characteristics. But here, in a narrow ravine in Pasadena, is a work that has strongly vertical elements and vertical significance. This was the first house to be built of the new system he had innovated and named “textile block construction”. “we would take that despised outcast of the building industry- the concrete block…find hitherto unsuspected soul in it- make it live as a thing of beauty- textured like the trees. All we would have to do would be to educate the concrete block, refine and knit it together with steel in the joints… the walls would thus become thin but solid reinforced slabs and yield to any desire for form imaginable” A large portion of the Ennis house is given over to the massive concrete block retaining walls that support the building on the steeply-pitched hillside. The other concrete block houses by Frank Lloyd Wright, built in the same region and at about the same time, have a scale that is more typical of his treatment of residential architecture. He calls it “human scale”, meaning to bring the traditional unnecessary heights down to a scale more in keeping with the occupants. But the Ennis house is a definite break in this rule: the rooms are high, with lofty ceilings, which accounts for the massing März 2003 Ennis Brown House, southface Ennis Brown House, pool of concrete block rising above the window lines. In plan the house is basically a two bedroom house with guest room adjacent to the dining room. Bedrooms for the original owners are spaced apart from each other, connected by a long enclosed gallery and an open terrace. The dining room, kitchen and guest room are set on a raised level above the living room. This is one of the last residences by Frank Lloyd Wright to employ stained glass, and one of the first residences, along with the nearby Freeman House, to employ mitred glass windows. The monumental nature of the design throughout is somewhat softened and made more human by the scale of the concrete block, and the combination of plain and patterned blocks. “The art glass windows and doors, reminiscent of examples from the earlier prairie period, here achieve greater colour suddenly as they graduate in intensity from darker at the top to lighter at the bottom. The wisteria motif mosaic above the living room fireplace is the extant example of the only four art glass mosaics Wright ever designed. Ennis Brown House, loggia In 1980, Brown donated the house to the Trust for Preservation of Cultural Heritage, a non-profit organization led by professionals and individuals active in historic preservation. In consideration of the gift, the house was renamed the EnnisBrown House. Ennis Brown House, fireplace 91 Amerika-Exkursion CASE STUDY HOUSE NO.21 Iris Diederichs Case Study House No.21, Pierre Koenig architect address Case Study House No.21 verkörpert einen Höhepunkt in der Entwicklung des Stahlrahmenhauses. Es stellt, in Planung und Ausführung, einen musterhaften Auszug der architektonischen Möglichkeiten dar, die dieses bisher als experimentell geltende Material bietet. Durch den sorgfältig konzipierten Einsatz leicht verfügbarer Formstücke und Produkte aus Stahl entsteht ein vollendetes Produkt, das mit jedem anderen Luxushaus vergleichbar ist, ohne die hohen Kosten zu verursachen, die in der Regel mit Qualität und Originalität in Verbindung gebracht werden. John Entenza nannte dieses Haus: „some of the cleanest and most immaculate thinking in the development of the small contemporary house“. Das vollständig von Wasser umgebene Haus stellte ein neues Konzept bei der Verwendung von Wasser als integralem Bestandteil der Konstruktion und der landschaftlichen Gestaltung dar. Hier gibt es keine Dichotomie; vielmehr wird ein architektonisches Ganzes erzielt, denn das Wasser spiegelt die Geradlinigkeit der Konstruktion und lässt sie größer wirken, während es zugleich die Heiterkeit und Schönheit der Anlage verstärkt. Die Wohnbereiche werden durch Backsteinterrassen erschlossen, die über das Wasserbecken führen. Zusätzlich wird hierdurch dem Zusammenspiel von Wasser und Gebäude eine weitere Ebene 92 Pierre Koenig 9038 Wonderland Park Ave. und Oberflächenstruktur hinzugefügt. Das Wasser wird, durch eine Zeituhr gesteuert, zu bestimmten Zeiten aus dem Becken in die Wasserrinne gepumpt und fließt von selbst durch die Einlauföffnungen zurück. (Anreicherung mit Sauerstoff). Das Thema Wasser wird im zentralen Innenhof des Hauses wieder aufgenommen. Hier spritzt es gegen eine Mosaikwand und fließt in ein davor liegendes bepflanztes und reflektierendes Becken. Ein einfacher und interessanter Grundriss wurde dadurch erzielt, dass der Innenhof und zwei Bäder zusammen als vollständig von den Aussenwänden des Hauses losgelöste Einheit betrachtet werden. Dieser zentrale Kern trennt Wohn- und Schlafbereich. Der Innenhof mit dem Wasserbecken fungiert als Zentrum des Hauses; hierdurch ist es möglich, dass an dem Punkt, der am weitesten von den Aussenwänden entfernt ist, Licht in den Wohnbereich und die Küche gelangen kann. Glasschiebetüren mit Stahlrahmen verbinden den Hof mit dem Wohnbereich und den beiden Bädern. Mit 20cm I-Stahlträgern errichtet, die in einem Abstand von 6,6 x 3m gesetzt sind, hat der Wohnbereich des Hauses eine Fläche von 13,5 x 9m, wobei nur zwei Stützen im Innenraum stehen. Ein offenes Stahl-Flachdach spannt sich über die Träger und wird maximal ausgenutzt. März 2003 Case Study House No.21, Charles and Ray Eames Zwischen den im Abstand von 3m gesetzten Trägern füllen auf der Baustelle montierte Vorhangwände die Fläche. Diese preisgünstigen Platten bestehen bei den Fassadenflächen aus Stahl. Zwischen der Aussenhaut und der inneren Oberfläche ist Platz für Leitungen, Rohre und Isolierung. Die inneren Trennwände bestehen aus soliden beschichteten Gipswänden, die 5cm dick sind. Als Wandisolierung dienen 2,5cm starke Glasfaserplatten. Die stahlgerahmten Glasschiebetüren sind zwischen die im Abstand von 6,6m stehenden Träger eingeschweißt. den Schlafzimmern oder vom Innenhof her direkt zugänglich. Der Innenhof ist direkt mit den Schlafzimmern und den Wohnzimmern verbunden, die beiden Schlafzimmer verbindet ein Korridor an der Wand zum Vorratsraum. Eine der Glasschiebtüren verschließt in beiden Schlafzimmern diesen Durchgang, so dass von dort aus nur eine unterbrochene, von den Schiebetürflächen gebildete Glasfläche ins Auge fällt. Um eine präzise Fassadenabwicklung und maximalen Sonnenschutz zu erzielen, wurden an der Südfassade KoolshadeSonnenblenden angebracht, die kein Vorspringen der Fassade erfordern. Die gleichen Schutzblenden werden auch bei der Öffnung über dem Innenhof verwendet, wo sie Sonnenschutz gewährleisten und den Eindruck von Überdachung hervorrufen. Zum langfristigen Schutz und insbesondere zum Schutz des dem Wasser ausgesetzten Stahls wurde überall eine Perma-BarWaterproof Schutzschicht aufgetragen, die dort, wo eine andere Farbe gewünscht war, mit Vinyllack der gleichen Firma gespritzt wurde. Indem die Grundierung als Farbe der Leisten verwendet wurde, erübrigte sich ein besonderer Anstrich. Die Grundfarbe im gesamten Gebäude ist mattweiß, die der Leisten mattschwarz, so dass die Kraft des Stahls und seine Schlankheit deutlich hervortreten. Die Küche ist groß genug, um als Ess- und Familienzimmer verwendet zu werden; von hier gibt es einen direkten Zugang zum Carport. Die Erschließungswege spielen im Gesamtentwurf des Projekts eine wichtige Rolle. Den zentralen Kern bildet eine Insel, die von überall her erreichbar ist. Die Badezimmer sind aus Case Study House No.21 Grungriss 93 Amerika-Exkursion HOLLYHOCK HOUSE Katharina Schendl architects client address Frank Lloyd Wright Aline Barnsdall Barnsdall Art Park, 4808 Hollywood Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90027 History Built between 1919 and 1921 for oil heiress Aline Barnsdall, Hollyhock House is Frank Lloyd Wright’s first project in Los Angeles. Its namesake is abstracted and geometricised in much of the house’s design, including exterior walls and interior furniture. Hollyhock House was the centerpiece of a mostly unrealized Wright master plan for a theater community set on a thirty-six acre site. Though the site is now fully hedged by urbanization, it still affords one of the best views in the area due to its position on “Olive Hill”, a gentle slope that reaches 500 feet above sea level. Hollyhock House 94 Wright left much of the supervision of construction of Hollyhock House to his son, landscape architect Lloyd Wright, and to architect Rudolf Schindler, as Wright himself was working on the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo (since destroyed). In 1927, Aline Barnsdall donated the Hollyhock House and eleven surrounding acres to the City of Los Angeles for use as a public art park. It has been leased over the years to various arts organizations, necessitating a cycle of alteration and rehabilitation that is culminating in the large-scale rehabilitation starting in the fall of 1998. (The rehabilitation is being partly funded by the lease of the property to the Los Angeles Mass Transit Authority for subway construction adjacent to the park.) Today Hollyhock House is a part of Barnsdall Art Park, with a local art gallery, theater, and children’s activities. About the house The house was designed at the end of Wright’s Prairie House era. One can see that some elements of the “prairie house” remain in the design. The Hollyhock motif, found throughout the house came from Barnsdall’s favorite plant. Many of the forms can be traced to Mayan temples, and the appearance of stone construction adds to this pattern. Wright established an east-west axis for view and daylight purposes. Structure The Barnsdall house follows Wright’s tradition of concealing the structural system. There is an appearance of reinforced concrete, but the bearing walls are actually hollow, terracotta tile with the faces scored to receive a stucco finish. In the living room the attic area is wood framed trusses covered with stucco. The wood trusses rest on a concrete belt course that rests on the tile walls. März 2003 Hollyhock House, interior The columns with hollyhock motif capitols were concrete and served as structural elements. Otherwise, the concrete was limited to ornamentation. Wright later wrote that reinforced concrete would have had greater structural stability, and achieves the same effects. The walls were a cheap substitute for proper earthquake construction, a major concern in the southern California area. In the courtyard two steel “I” beams span a bridge across the courtyard, the only significant use of steel in the building. The building needs to withstand the construction materials’ dead loads but little live loading since the structure is mostly one story. The building should have been designed to withstand lateral loading of earthquakes, but because of budget concerns was not designed effectively. natural sunlight, reflecting it off the moat’s water. Apparently, Wright’s calculations in this matter were imperfect; a heavy velvet curtain had to be added to prevent extreme (and extremely annoying) glare. Landscaping On the outside of the house, Wright designed a circular pool that looked much like a Greek amphitheater. This pool had a small pipe inside that ran through the center of the house and out the other end. The purpose of the pipe was to supply water to the pool in front of the fireplace and the pond at the other side of the house. Wright ran water from the outside of the house, into the house, and back out again. This is another example of Wright’s love of bringing nature into the house. The fireplace is also fascinating because, The approximate dimensions of the living with the immense skylight above, it brings room area are 42 feet by 20 feet. The span light, fire, and water together into one of the wood trusses is approximately 20 harmonious structure. feet. The load bearing terra cotta tile walls are approximately 9 inches to one foot thick. Hollyhock House, fireplace The Fireplace Covered by a skylight, ringed by a water filled moat, and constructed of heavy concrete it almost literally represents the four elements: earth, wind, water, and fire. Unlike the fireplaces in Wright’s midwestern homes, this one is not . symmetrically aligned. Perhaps Wright realized that a fireplace is not a central element in a Californian home. Some have also noted that Wright may have departed from the domesticity of a central hearth as his own domestic life became significantly peripheral to him. The room’s furniture highlights the fireplace by mimicking the angle of the moat around the fireplace. A large couch/bench frames off the space in front of the hearth and directs attention to the hearth. The skylight overhead brings in Hollyhock House, plan 95 Amerika-Exkursion CASE STUDY HOUSE No.22 Lukas Galehr architects client address Pierre Koenig Buck & Carlotta Stahl 1635 Woods Drive “Pierre Koenig himself, like his architecture, is inspirational.- still enquiring, exploring and inventing, never ready to rest on his laurels... his career-to which his wider body of work bears witness-is one of constancy and truth to principles. “ Sir Norman Foster Case Study House No.22 View of LA Pool 96 Pierre Koenig came home from the war. In 1946 on the Queen Mary, sleeping in a lifeboat on deck for two weeks rather than participate in the abysmal living conditions provided below. Always the nonconformist, he chose the chilling air over the warmth of the troop ship’s crowded quarters. In similar fashion, he has chosen a life path that has provided him the bracing, sometimes arctic atmosphere necessary to practice his art on his own terms. Hoping for a college education, Koenig enlisted in the United States Army’s Advanced Special Training Program, which offered volunteers a full four year curriculum abbreviated to two years. He had studied engineering at the University of Utah for only one semester when the program was cancelled, and the seventeen-year-old Koenig joined the ranks of GIs, attending the basic training program that prepared him not only for his Army experiences, but also in many ways for life. In Texas, he was trained to become a flash ranging observer, a skill which he used in frontline combat in France and Germany so effectively that he was not discharged from service until 1946. Once home, Koenig renewed his efforts to achieve a college education, attending Pasadena City College on the GI Bill until he could gain admission to the University of Southern California. After a two year waiting period, he was finally accepted into the USC School of Architecture whose program was just beginning to shift emphasis from the classical Beaux Arts style to Modernism. Koenig was in his appropriate element. While a student at USC, he designed and built his first steel-framed house, using his Army discharge pay to buy a lot in Glendale and to finance the construction on a very thin shoestring. This was the house that caught the eye of John Entenza and later motivated him to ask Koenig to join the Case Study program. “L”-shaped and spare, the futuristic wing of structural steel that was to become CSH No.22 was assembled on site in a single September day in 1959. Prefabricated in the factory to Koenig’s precise specifications, the steel sections were transported in an articulated truck up the steep and winding roads to the client’s location. Once there, the rectangular modules were assembled like a gigantic erector set under the architect’s exacting eye. In a daring display of mathematical acumen, Koenig utilized only two structural components in designing the steel frame. Twelve-inch 1-beams and four inch H-columns were set twenty feet apart to create a grid of twenty-bytwenty bays, three along the short end of the L, and four defining the north-south axis. The underlying calculations of this minimalist equation contain within them a mysterious symmetry: I-beam + H-column = Elegance. Welded to the foundation and the reinforced concrete caissons that went März 2003 Case Study House#22 deep into the granite below, the skeletal frame of the house cantilevered out ten feet into open space at the southeast corner of the property. The steel sculpture, visible from Sunset Boulevard I25 feet below, seemed to be dangling in thin air, yet Los Angeles’ most representational image had literally been set in stone. Nine months later in June of 196o, Arts and architecture magazine published an eight-page layout of the completed CSH No.22, featuring extraordinary photographs by Julius Schulman and explanatory text by Pierre Koenig. is at the far end of the living area, separated by a low wall of kitchen cabinets containing two stainless steel sinks. The range top, two ovens, refrigerator, and washer and dryer are all electric. All of the rooms open onto the swimming pool and recreational areas, creating a fusion between inside and outside that reflects Koenig’s lifelong commitment to environmentally-oriented architecture. Director of the Natural Forces Laboratory at the University of Southern California where he was recently made a Distinguished Professor, Koenig advises his students to build in tune with nature, using to full advantage passive ventilation (or heating and cooling) systems that are ultimately more reliable than mechanical systems. Because each job site has its own micro-climate, he recommends careful study of all of its aspects before beginning the design process, the same procedure he followed with CSH No.22. Utilizing the benign aspects of the Southern California climate, he calculated the heat of the sun in different seasons and the flow of the site’s prevailing breezes to determine the environmental plan. The solar panels that provide radiant heating for the swimming pool are an example of his early awareness. Because the panels were not commercially available in 1959, Koenig had them built on the site, fabricating wood-frame boxes that held coiled water pipes covered with fiberglass panels. He also used radiant heating for the house itself, installing the system of gas-heated coils on the ground before the slab was poured. Because of his environmentally sound design principles, none of Koenig’s Southern California houses require air-conditioning, and CSH No.22 was no exception. The Stahls have learned to operate their open able walls of glass like flaps on a flying wing, expertly capturing the wind whenever they need it. The architect describes it as a pavilion-type house in an ideal setting and walks the reader through his construction explaining the details along the way. A skin of uninterrupted glass set into sliding-door frames wraps the house in transparency, unbroken except for a solid curtain wall of short span steel decking to provide privacy at the street entrance. Soaring over the house is the spectacular long span roof decking that cantilevers eight feet out over the inner courtyard providing shade for the house’s interiors and shelter for the recreational pool area. The house and the swimming pool are integral to each other and are bound together by a series of concrete terraces and walks. The house interior is divided into the living area and the sleeping area along the lines of the “L” and at its juncture is the guest bath, master bath, service porch and walk-in dressing room. Adjoining this in the short wing is the master bedroom suite, and the children’s two bedrooms, each with private bath and divided by a folding partition. The long wing of the house is 70 feet of space surrounded by glass, and at the center of the living room, a raised stone hearth supports a free-standing fireplace that is framed with 4-inch steel angles and open on all sides. The steel-framed furniture Buck and Charlotta Stahl have lived in lends another architectural component to their famous house, one of the most the atmosphere of the house. The kitchen photographed in the world, for close to four decades; its fortieth birthday takes place during the year 2ooo. There, they have raised their family and when the children grew up and moved away, the Stahls built themselves a new and interesting life in the film industry. Over the years, CSH No.22 has gained status as a favored location for numerous movies, television and print ads, appearing ubiquitously in the background of films with a Los Angeles setting such as “The Marrying Kind” with Alec Baldwin, “Playing By Heart” with Sean Connery, and Robert De Niro’s “Heat.” The Stahls can watch the production process unfolding their living room, or they have the option to move, all expenses paid, to a nearby luxury hotel if the filming becomes too lengthy. As a result, their home has become a source of ongoing entertainment while providing them with a considerable annual income. In 1989, the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) used the Frank Gehry-designed Temporary Contemporary facility for an exhibition titled “Blueprints For Modern Living.” An in depth examination of the Case Study program, the highly successful presentation curated by Elizabeth Smith with installation by Craig Hodgetts and Ming Fung, featured a fullscale three-dimensional replica of Koenig’s CSH No.22. The program was open to the public for five months during which thousands of visitors had the opportunity to walk through the authentically furnished model and experience it firsthand. Both of Pierre Koenig’s Case Study Houses, No.21 and No.22, were approved for Historical Cultural Monument status by the Los Angeles Conservancy and were designated in November 1999. Koenig himself was awarded the American Institute of Architects/Los Angeles Gold Medal in October, 1999. Iconic LA, Gloria Koenig 97 Amerika-Exkursion LOVELL HOUSE Maja Ozvaldic Lovell House architects aclient address Neutra besuchte von 1911 bis 1917 die Technische Hochschule in Wien und daneben die Bauschule von Adolf Loos. 1923 ging Neutra in die USA, wo er zuerst bei William Holabird und Martin Roche in Chicago, später bei Frank Lloyd Wright in Taliesin tätig war. In Los Angeles arbeitete er mit Rudolf Schindler unter anderem am Wettbewerbsprojekt des Genfer Völkerbundpalastes (1927). 1926 eröffnete er ein eigenes Büro und begann mit dem Jardinette-Apartmenthaus in Los Angeles (1926/27), einem Stahlbetonbau mit Fensterbändern. Die Idee für das Haus war: “Design a house that will enhance by its design the HEALTH of the inhabitants of this house! How can we design a residence that would enhance the health and wellbeing of its inhabitants?” “In response, my dad provided outdoor sleeping porches, an exercise yard and equipment, a swimming pool on this impossible site, basketball and handball court, etc., along with an emphasis on great amounts of glass to place inhabitants close to nature. The kitchen was outfitted with special water purification equipment, and vegetable and fruit juicing facilities. His experience in working on steel-framed 98 Richard Neutra Philip Lovell 4616 Dundee Drive lovell buildings in Chicago and the research he did in writing his first book, found out about a new form of depositing concrete through the use of hoses; The Lovell house... had in Los Angeles in 1929 an importance comparable to the early iron or steel and glass exhibition buildings in Europe, and indeed it was through this house that Los Angeles archtiecture first became widely known in Europe.” Basis diese Hauses an einem steilen Hang des Canyons von Los Feliz ist ein lichtes Gefüge aus Stahlprofilen auf einem auskragenden Stahlbetonfundament. Die Balkone sind vom Dachrahmen abgehängt, die Flächen mit Beton und Glas ausgefacht. “The open-web skeleton, in which standard triple steel casements were integrated, was fabricated in sections and transported by truck to the steep hillside site, and the lightweight bar joists of floors and ceilings were electrically welded in the shop. The shop work was held to a decimal tolerance to avoid the costliness of changes during assembly on the site, and as a result the skeleton was erected in forty hours—too fast to photograph the various stages of construction.” März 2003 The balconies, usually called cantilevered, are instead suspended by slender steel cables from the roof frame. This use of members in suspension, and also the U-shaped reinforced thin concrete cradle in which the pool was suspended, created a stir in architectural circles. The walls of the house are of thin concrete, shop from two-hundred-foot-long hoses, against expanded metal, which was backed by insulation panels as forms... quarters on the next level down; with the pool and equipment areas below. Off to the side and down the hill a bit are the garages and extra rooms; quite a carry for the groceries!“ Lovell House http://www.neutra.org/tours.html#lovell ArchInform Ester McCoy Dion Neutra William Marlin These revolutionary methods were widely publicized and added to the almost surreal quality of this building, which evoked images of a spaceship from another planet that had landed on the hillside of Griffith Park The layout of the Health House has the bedrooms and study on the entrance level; the living room, kitchen, and maid’s Lovell House, Plan 99 Amerika-Exkursion P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center Mariela Spacek architects address Frederick Fisher 22-25 Jackson Aveat the intersection of 46th Ave in Long Island City, 11101 Im Labyrinth der digitalen Künste. Im New Yorker Multimediamuseum P.S.1 ist Videokunst einer der Programmschwerpunkte. Das liebste Abspielmedium für die Installationen der Künstler ist das Fernsehen: Auf den Bildschirmen tummeln sich Skurrilitäten wie ein lebendes Logo, eine in der Hölle schmorende Performance-Künstlerin und Tom Cruise, der immer wieder dem Lockruf des Sofas folgt. “Hello, my name is Annlee”, sagt das Mädchen mit den seelenlosen Augen. Sie hat lange dunkle Haare, Haut wie Porzellan, eine Stupsnase. Annlee war einmal das Geschöpf eines Herstellers für Comicfiguren in Japan. Nun gehört sie den französischen Künstlern Philippe Parreno und Pierre Huyghe. Sie kauften das virtuelle Wesen und retteten es vor dem CopyrightTod. Die Kreativen gaben ihr einen neuen Charakter und eine neue Stimme. “Nun verhält sie sich wie ein lebendes Logo”, sagt Philippe Parreno. Überlebensgroß projiziert er das Gesicht des Mädchens an die Wand. Dort darf sie ihre Existenz verteidigen. Allerdings nur noch bis Mai. Dann spielen die beiden Franzosen Gott und lassen Annlee endgültig sterben. Ist auch nicht schade drum. Figuren wie sie produziert die Entertainmentindustrie schließlich jeden Tag aufs Neue. So ist sie, die Unterhaltungsbranche: maßlos, dekadent, hinterhältig - und inspirierend. Das sehen nicht nur die beiden Franzosen so. Kritische Auseinandersetzungen mit 100 der multimedialen Welt finden sich überall im P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center an der Jackson Avenue von Long Island City. Aber auch humorvolle, interaktive Werke internationaler Künstler. “Video- und Multimediakunst machen inzwischen den Schwerpunkt der meisten Ausstellungen aus”, sagt Museumssprecherin Carolyn Bane. Die meisten dieser Produktionen kreisen thematisch um die Macht der Bilder. Das liebste Abspielmedium vieler Künstler im P.S.1 ist dabei das Fernsehgerät. Tolle Sachen im Vorhof zur Hölle Die Flut der Bilder prägt und verändert unser Bewusstsein, diagnostizieren einige Medienkritiker. Das P.S.1 hat sich diesem Themengebiet angenommen wie kaum ein anderes Ausstellungshaus in der Welt. Doch nicht nur thematisch ist das P.S.1 ein Museum der anderen Art, auch die Architektur-Historie des Gebäudes ist ungewöhnlich: Vor 40 Jahren sprangen, sangen und tollten Kinder durch die Flure, Gänge und Hallen der ehemaligen Grundschule. Daran erinnert noch heute der Name des Hauses: P.S.1 steht für Primary School One. Später baute Frederick Fisher, ein früherer Mitarbeiter des Stararchitekten Frank Gehry, die Schule nach den Vorstellungen der heutigen Direktorin Alanna Heiss zu einem Kunsthaus um. Das Projekt kostete 8,5 Millionen Dollar. Museumsmauern, März 2003 befand Heiss damals, seien nicht zwingend notwendig, um Ausstellungen zu zeigen. “Sie hindern die Menschen am sinnlichen Erleben, weil sie keinen Raum für die eigene Bewusstseinswelt lassen”, sagt sie. 1971 zeigte die Museumschefin Werke von befreundeten Künstlern unter einem der Sockel der Brooklyn Bridge. Die Idee zum P.S.1 war geboren: Das Museum stellt heute nicht nur in den ausgewiesenen Galerieräumen aus, sondern im coolen Betongarten, oder auf dem Dach mit Blick auf Midtown Manhattan. Manchmal lauern die Werke sogar dort, wo man sie am wenigsten vermutet. Hartnäckige Besucher, die keinen Winkel des Hauses auslassen, finden sie versteckt in der Toilette, im Lift, im Kellergewölbe, auf dem Dach - oder im Holzfußboden: Wer durch das dafür bestimmte kleine Loch im Parkett schaut, kann zurzeit beispielsweise der Schweizer Künstlerin Pipilotti Rist dabei zusehen, wie sie in der Hölle schmort. Auf Wiedersehen Außenwelt, hallo Kunst! Die von den Kritikern gefeierte Ausstellung mit dem programmatischen Titel “Loop” wird von dem deutschen Kurator Klaus Biesenbach betreut. Er ist gleichzeitig Leiter der Kunst-Werke Berlin. Drei Jahre benötigte er, um die Multimediashow zusammenzustellen. Doch das P.S.1 ist nicht nur ein Abenteuerspielplatz für Videokünstler. Die 37-jährige Berlinerin Birgit Brenner etwa erhielt neben 13 anderen Künstlern aus allen Teilen der Welt ein Stipendium, um für ein Jahr in einem der Museumsstudios arbeiten zu können. “Angst vor Gesichtsröte” heißt ihr analoges Kunstprojekt. “Es handelt von einer fiktiven, von Neurosen geplagten Frau”, sagt Brenner. Ein Woody-AllenCharakter, den sie bereits vom Therapeuten analysieren ließ und für den sie nun eine Vergangenheit entwirft. Die Eckdaten will sie mit Tausenden von Nägeln und roten Wollfäden an die Wand schreiben. Dieses Frühjahr haben Brenner und die anderen Stipendiaten zum ersten Mal ihre Studios geöffnet,um ihre Arbeiten der Öffentlichkeit zu präsentieren. Ihr Kollege Isozaki Michiyoshi muss für die Präsentation seiner Kunst keine Studiotür aufschließen. Der aus Japan stammende Künstler hat den wahnwitzigen Plan, eine Skulptur zwischen zwei Wolkenkratzern in Manhattan aufzuhängen. “Die Verhandlungen mit Sponsoren laufen”, kommentiert der Mann mit den hoch strebenden Ambitionen den Stand der Dinge. Aus dem Schlund der Figur sollen unzählige bunte Fallschirme fliegen, jeder einzelne versehen mit einem Wunschzettel. Auch dieses P.S.1-Event wird die New York Times sicherlich in ihrem Kulturteil berücksichtigen, wie so viele zuvor. Erst kürzlich verglich sie eine der Ausstellungen mit einem “Buffet aus vielen kleinen Snacks, einer Schachtel voller Süßigkeiten”. Das P.S.1 sei eine Bienenwabe, deren Zellen die Besucher zum Hineinkriechen einladen. Mit Kopfhörern bewaffnet, melden sie sich von der Außenwelt ab, um sich analoge Kunst und künstlerische Videos anzusehen. Wem nach den vielen bewegten Bildern der Kopf schwirrt, der begibt sich ins oberste Stockwerk des Museums. Dort können sich die Besucher auf eine Holzbahre legen. Das Haupt voran werden sie ein kleines Stück aus dem Fenster geschoben - um New York, die Welt, einmal aus einer ganz anderen Perspektive zu betrachten. P.S.1, plan 101 Amerika-Exkursion MoMAQNS Mariela Spacek The Museum of Modern Art, Queens architects address Michael Maltzahn 45-20 33 Street at Queens Boulvard, Long Island City, Queens MoMAQNS The Museum of Modern Art, Queens Bewegung in der Museumslandschaft Das MoMA zieht nach Queens. Der Auszug aus Manhattan war seit Jahren geplant und ist keineswegs eine Auswirkung des 11. September: Das Museum of Modern Art verlegt im Sommer 2002 für voraussichtlich drei Jahre seinen Standort von der 53th Street in Midtown nach Queens. Der Umzug ist notwendig, weil das Mutterhaus nach den Plänen des Architekten Yoshio Taniguchi teilweise neu gebaut und von Grund auf renoviert wird. Als Ausweichquartier wird eine nach Plänen des Architekten Michael Maltzahn umgebaute Fabrikhalle an der 33rd Street in Long Island City dienen. Die ehemalige Produktionsstätte für Swingline-Hefter wird Ausstellungfläche, eine Bücherei, Arbeitszimmer und Lagerräume bieten. Im ersten Jahr von MoMA QNS, wie das Provisorium offiziell heißt, sollen nach Angaben von Museumsdirektor Glenn Lowry unter anderem Ausstellungen zu den Themen Zeit und Autos sowie „Matisse Picasso“ und „Ansel Adams at 100“ zu sehen sein. In Long Island City trifft das MoMA QNS auf eine kleine, aber sehr vitale 102 Kulturszene, die im Wachstum begriffen ist. Bereits fest etabliert ist der nur einen Katzensprung entfernte MoMA-Ableger P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center. Das Isamu Noguchi Garden Museum, der Socrates Sculpture Park und das American Museum of the Moving Image liegen im gleichen Stadtteil. Bereits jetzt können die Kultureinrichtungen am Wochenende durch einen kostenlosen Shuttle-Bus stündlich von Manhattan aus erreicht werden. MoMA QNS wird ebenfalls an den Service des so genannten Queens Airlink angeschlossen werden. Überdimensionale Buchstaben auf dem Dach Architekt Maltzahn hat seine Umgestaltungspläne für das alte Fabrikgebäude aber eigentlich von einem Verkehrsmittel her gedacht: der U-Bahn. Die Linie 7 fährt auf ihrem Weg vom Times Square nach Flushing in diesem Teil von Queens oberirdisch. Künftige Besucher können schon von Ferne aus dem UBahn-Fenster die überdimensionalen Buchstaben M-o-M-A auf dem Dach des Gebäudes sehen, die langsam zum Museumsnamen zusammenwachsen, während sich die Bahn der Haltestelle 33rd Street nähert. Durch einen lichten Eingang betreten die Besucher dann eine Fabrikhalle, deren verschiedene Ebenen durch Rampen verbunden sind. März 2003 MoMAQNS Im Jahr 2005 wird das Museum nach der bisherigen Planung sein Provisorium in Queens wieder verlassen und in die neuen und verbesserten Räume nach Manhattan ziehen. Für Umzug und Umbauten hat das Museum laut Direktor Lowry bisher 507 Millionen Dollar an Spendengeldern gesammelt. MoMAQNS 103 Amerika-Exkursion FREY HOUSE I Marlene Pollhammer Frey House I Frey House I 104 architects address Albert Frey 1150 Paseo El Mirador, PAlm Springs, Californien In den vierziger Jahren konzentrierte sich Albert Freys Arbeit auf die Probleme Sonne, Temperatur und Wind. Mit der Verwendung von Material, das in funktionaler und ästhetischer Hinsicht den Gegebenheiten der Wüste entspricht, schuf Frey eine moderne Architektur, die Le Corbusiers Vokabular aufnimmt und an die Wüstenlandschaft adaptiert. Aus diesem Grund unterschieden sich Freys Arbeiten für die Ostküste radikal von seinen kalifornischen Bauten: sie entwickelten sich vom puristischen Bild eines abstrakten, vom Boden gelösten Raums zu einfachen rechteckigen Kompositionen aus horizontalen Ebenen, die in die Landschaft vorstoßen. Mitbedingt durch die damals bereits verfügbaren industriellen Baustoffe, begann sich auch die Maschinenmethaper auszuprägen. Das Haus Frey I, der aus der Vorkriegsperiode stammende Wohnsitz des Architekten, demonstrierte zum ersten Mal dessen neues Interesse an horizontal verlaufenden Wandebenen, die in die Landschaft hineinragen, eine Idee, die er in seinen Einfamilienhäusern der Nachkriegsjahre weiterverfolgte. Die Wände des Hauses sind eine Reihe von Ebenen „im Bann” einer großen quadratischen Dachebene, welche die Horizontalbewegung der Wände in die Landschaft verstärkt und daneben als Überhang und Schattenspender fungiert. Im Grundriss ist das Haus ein Rechteck von 5x7 Metern. Die Holzrahmenkonstruktion ist mit 1x2,5 Meter großen Betontafeln ausgefacht. Die ins Freie vorstoßenden Wände trennen die verschiedenen Aktivitätsbereiche im Außenraum und sind in ihrer Funktion nicht weniger wichtig als die Innenwände. Die Außenhülle des Hauses ist Wellblech, das auf den tragenden Umgrenzungswänden vertikal, auf den ins Freie ragenden Wandflächen horizontal aufliegt. Als Innenwandverkleidung wurden aufgeschraubte farbige Asbestzementplatten verwendet. Die Beleuchtungskörper sind, der konzisen Gestaltung entsprechend, in die Wände versenkt und mit Lüftungsgitter bedeckt. Die Sitzplätze um den Pool sind in den Beton eingelassen. Sie fixieren damit die durch jeden Platz begrenzte Aussicht und machen sie zu einem Teil der Gartenlandschaft. Der Idee, die Wandflächen ins Freie vorstoßen zu lassen, ging Frey auch im Haus Hatton und dem anstoßenden Gästehaus nach. Albert Frey benutzte das Haus Frey I als Labor, um neue Ideen und Bauelemente zu erproben. 1948 ergänzte er es um einen Wohnraum mit Innen-Außen-Pool, wie er bereits im Haus Loewy Verwendung gefunden hatte. Seine Erweiterungen und Veränderungen von 1953 verwandelten ein puristisches Gebilde im Geist Mies van der Rohes in ein expressionistisches, März 2003 FREY HOUSE I 1940 Das Belagmaterial der Außenwände ist Wellblech. Das Wellblech der Deckenebene ist hellblau gestrichen. Die Asbestzementplatten sind grün oder rosa, alle Fensterrahmen blassgelb. Die Dachrandeinfassung ist weiß gestrichen. oder, wie David Gebhard es nannte, „Freys Flash Gordon-Haus”. Das im ersten Stock ergänzte Schlafzimmer hat einen runden Grundriss und runde Fenster, die verschiedene Ansichten der Gebirgs- und Wüstenlandschaft rahmen. Für die Fenster entwarf Frey dem Winkel des Sonnenstandes entsprechende, individuell gestaltete Sonnenblendrahmen aus Blech. Sie umhüllen die Fenster und vermitteln, von innen betrachtet, den Eindruck, man blickte durch ein Teleskop. Die runden Flügelfenster drehen sich um die Vertikalachse und werden durch einen halbkreisförmigen Horizontalstab arretiert. Für die Außenhülle des runden Aufbaus wurde versteiftes Aluminium mit einem Rautenmuster verwendet, für die Innenwände eine durchgeheftete Verkleidung aus gelbem Vinyl, über die stahlblaue Vinylvorhänge fallen- alles in allem eine „futuristische” Atmosphäre. Weitere interessante Details der Innenausstattung sind eine Hängetreppe zum Schlafzimmer und ein runder Hängetisch im Esszimmer, beide mit Aluminiumstäben von 6 mm Durchmesser an der Decke befestigt. Um das Gartenstück mit Pool führt eine gekrümmte Schutzwand aus gewelltem Faserglas und Blech. Rundfenster und Hängetreppe verwendete Frey später in seinem Jachtklub North Shore (1958/59) und in den Première Apartments (1957/58). Albert Frey, Architekt Joseph Rosa FREY HOUSE I mit Erweiterungen 1947/1953 Primärfarben sollen die später angefügten Erweiterungen vom Rechteck des ursprünglichen Hauses abheben. Das Schlafzimmer hatte eine durch geheftete gelbe Textilverkleidung und stahlblaue Vorhänge. Aluminiumbeschichtete Vorhänge schützen den nach Westen ausgerichteten Innen-Aussen-Pool vor der Sonne. Die Einfassung des Pools ( auf der Südseite des Hauses) ist aus Wellblech, abwechselnd mit roten und grünen Fiberglassplatten. 105 Amerika-Exkursion DESERT HOT SPRINGS MOTEL Matthäus Wasshuber Desert Hot Springs Motel 106 architects address John Lautner, 1974 67710 San Antonio, Desert Hot Springs, CA 92240 Das Desert Hot Springs Motel befindet sich in der nahen Umgebung von Palm Springs, versteckt in der Wüste und abgeschnitten vom Glamour und Sonstigem, was sich mit dem Namen Palm Springs verbinden lässt. Der Auftraggeber war damals Lucien Hubbard, Produzent und Drehbuchautor aus Hollywood, bekannt geworden durch verschiedene Stummfilme. Das Motel sollte sozusagen als Zufluchts- oder Erholungsort diversen Schauspieler und sonstigen der Branche dienen. Das Motel 1947 gebaut, zehn Jahre nach seiner Zusammenarbeit mit Frank Lloyd Wright in Arizona, ist klar geprägt durch Grundsätze seines Meisters und moderne Tendenzen: Taliesin Fellows: the continuation of the architectural practice of Frank Lloyd Wright founded in 1893. wichtigste Material wurde, da es Vielfalt an Formen zulässt, zusätzlich kombiniert Lautner Stahl, Glas und Redwood. Die Anlage setzt sich aus vier miteinander verzahnten, eigenständigen Einheiten zusammen. Die Apartments haben gleiche Grundrisse, die klar nach Funktionen getrennt sind und den Ansprüchen des Nutzers optimal entsprechen sollen. Jedes der vier Apartments ist ausgestattet mit einer voll funktionstüchtigen Küche, Sitzecke, eigener Terrasse und einem anschließenden Kaktusgarten. Die Räume zeichnen sich durch eine gekonnte Lichtführung, kleine Lichtschlitze (dramatic play of light throughout the day and the night) und kommunizierenden Innen und Außenflächen ab. Die Einrichtung ist auf damalige Ideale abgestimmt. Descrition of the motel „The whole forms a protective line of defense in this harsh, windy environment, characterized by its low lying silhouette, where the broken shapes of the steels of the roof structure repeat the rhythm of the fissured mountain crags beyond.“ Steven Lowe übernahm 2000 die Anlage, renovierte sie und nahm den Betrieb wieder auf. Seither wird das versteckte Hotel in zahlreichen Travel- Zeitschriften als Geheimtipp angepriesen. Es bietet die Möglichkeit in authentischer 50er Jahre Atmosphäre (klassische Einrichtung, 1937 western electric telephone, queen bed...) eine ruhige Wüstennacht zu verbringen. Persönliche Gegenstände des Architekten und seines bekannten Auftraggebers sollen die Einzigartigkeit zusätzlich unterstreichen. Bei seinem Entwurf versuchte er das Gebäude gut in die anschließende Wüstenlandschaft zu integrieren und ihre strenge Formensprache aufzunehmen. Das Dach wiederholt den Rhythmus der Berge dahinter. In diesem Projekt verwendete er das erste Mal Beton, was später für ihn das März 2003 Desert Hot Springs Motel „The most fascinating of all the mid- century motels in this area, important example of desert modernism, the opportunity to visit and live in a Lautner environment is a very special experience“ „The motel offers an opportunity for persons to spend time in a Lautner building that reflects in small and gem-like scale the architect‘s approach to all of his work: a blending of indoors and outdoors, protection from the elements without sacrifice of light and air, an understanding of real human needs.“ Architekt: John Lautner, geboren 1911 in Marquette, Michigan, nach der Graduierung in Englisch von der University of Northern Michigan, wurde er ein Schüler von Frank Lloyd Wright. 1937 hatte er die Aufsicht über zwei Wright Projekte, 2 jahre später eröffnete er sein eigenes Büro in Los Angeles. Seine Gebäude dienten als Set in zahlreichen Hollywwod Filmen: „lethal weapon, less than zero, James Bond... „ http://blog.neoteny.com/takemura/archives/001262.html http://www.johnlautner.org/index.html http://www.usc.edu/dept/architecture/shulman/ architects/lautner Desert Hot Springs Motel, plan 107 Amerika-Exkursion „LA MINIATURA“ Michaela Koller architects address client G.M. Milliard House „La Miniatura“ Das Haus, das Frank Lloyd Wright für Frau M.Milliard im Jahre 1923 in Pasadena errichtete, ist sein erstes Gebäude, an dem die Beton-Block-Technik Verwendung fand! Die vorfabrizierten, standaridtisierten Betonblöcke sind ohne Mörtel, jedoch mit horizontal-, sowie vertikallaufenden Stahlseilen verbunden. Dieses “Verweben” der einzelnen Blöcke nannte der Architekt “textile construction”. Eine Japanreise galt als Inspiration für die Fassade. Die Oberflächenstruktur verglich F.L.W mit der der Bäume, die auf dem Grundstück sind. La Miniatura, one of Wright’s textile block houses „La Miniatura“ hat drei Geschosse. Über den Eingang im mittleren Geschoss gelangt man in das zwei Geschosse hohe Wohnzimmer. Den Vergleich mit Le Corbusier, der zu jener Zeit auch mit zweigeschossigen Räumen arbeitete, dementierte F.L.W wehement! Trotz den klar ersichtlichen europäischen Einflüssen hat das Milliard-Haus einen sehr starken Bezug zum Boden, was durch die Landschaftsarchitektur, entworfen von Frank´s Sohn Lloyd Wright, verstärkt wird! Um die Räume besser temperieren zu können, sprich damit sie im Sommer kühler bleiben und im Winter die Wärme halten, sind die Aussenmauern doppelt. 108 Frank L. Wright, 1923 LA, 645 Prosoect Crescent G.M. Milliard Die Bauherrin wünschte sich eine grosszügige Aufteilung der Räume: ein geräumiges Wohnzimmer mit einer Feuerstelle, drei Badezimmer, Gästezimmer, Angestelltenräumlichkeiten, Balkon und eine Garage. Alles sollte sehr herrschaftlich sein, angefangen von der Grösse und Anzahl der Räume bis zur Auswahl der Materialien. Bibliographie Frank Lloyd Wright, Monograph IV, 1914-1923, a.d.aedia Tokyo, p.210-216 A Concire History of American Architecture, Leland M.Roth, Icon Editions, p.254-255 März 2003 G.M. Milliard House „La Miniatura“ main floor, G.M. Milliard House „La Miniatura“ 109 Amerika-Exkursion CULVER CITY Johannes Mücke architects Going to see the box by Herbert Muschamp Culver City Conference Room Culver City 110 Today, when the issue of survival comes up in architecture, the subject is usually ‘sustainable’ design: a framework for restraining buildings.and their inhabitants from further degrading the physical environment. But survival should be staked to the mental as well as the material life of buildings. Life depends on designs, that reflect or reform relationships in consciousness. The mind needs a body to dwell in but it also requires life supports of is own. Without them the body may well lapse into a coma. In Culver City, a group of industrial buildings has survived, because Eric Owen Moss has reviewed their inner life. Retooling their workings, he has enabled these aging structures to attract a new kind of tenant, filling the void left by the erosion of the manufacturing base that initially brought them into being. These projects could only have occurred at the dawn of genetic engineering. They are mutated buildings from a mutated city. We can talk about them as works of art, but they are also strategies for survival. For me, they illustrate how art can reinforce endurance in environments, where change is a reliable caonstant. Eric Owen Moss I had a date with Eric Owen Moss in January 1994 – the morning the big earthquake struck Los Angeles. Thrown out of bed at 4:30 in the morning, I stood on the sidewalk outside my hotel, watching dawn come up in a city of shock. Moss was supposed to pick me up at nine, and on my relief, he pulled up right on time. I shouldn’t have been surprised, because the episode was not unlike Moss’s architecture. Walls fly away, ceilings dissappear stairs perform daredevil leaps across heart stopping voids, but in the end a design prevails: a connection is made across space and time. Things fall apart, but the center somehow holds. We were going to see The Box, the most recent of Moss’s Culver City projects.Moss was wearing dark glasses and an air of unflappable cool as we drove from Santa Monica to Culver City. His message, not all that understated, was: this happens here all the time. Stop acting like a tourist. I said, Oh? When was the last time the freeway fell down in three pieces? Moss couldn’t, come to think of it, remember a time when a quake had taken out a freeway. Still, as we peered through the windshield, I began to understand why Moss could regard the mornings upheaval as a common occurance: even on days without seismic disturbance, the city inhabits a more or less steady state of spatial, März 2003 visual and social shocks. The quakes visible effects – disordered little piles of bricks on the sidewalk, cracks in tiled walls – these were nothing compared to the vast disruption that is the city itself. The freeway broken into pieces is no more violent than the freeway intact, prouding out its lyrical, brutal logic of disconnection over the city it ostensibly knits together. The place expands and contracts under the pressure of its simmultanious desire to become a city and to escape one. sign, the whole tenuously held together by the framing device of the windshield and by the speed at which the frame devours the images passing through it. The question is, how to keep that angle of vision, how to maintain the speed? How to make buildings that are not like cars stuck in traffic, buildings that are not dull, disappointing letdowns after the vision that discloses itself through the frame? and medium-sized subjectivisms. Each bid for order only adds to the babble it strains to shut out. Architecture, in such a place, can not attain an objective frame of reference by reproducing older norms or inventing new ones. It can, however, frame the city’s subjective texture as a close approximation of subjective truth. This is what Eric Owen Moss’s buildings accomplish. Revealing That is the question to what Moss’s Culver the city’s logic by turning it outside-in, Moss City buildings have supplied a series of readjusts the world of material reality by stunning answers. The stunts that they reaching down hungrily into the mind. perform mirror the tricks that the city plays upon the eye of those moving through the city. He has recreated ‘the box’ not to destroy it on more time but to teach it poise. A sense of balance has grown stronger because of the challenge the design has inflicted upon it. Kenneth Tynan famously wrote that what, when drunk, one sees in other women, one sees in Garbo sober. What, when driving, one sees in Los Angeles, one sees in Moss on foot. ‘The Box’ is a charged term in american architectural history. The most celebrated act of our most celebrated architect, Frank Lloyd Wright, was the destruction of the box. With the open floor plan, the corner window, the berm wall, and the car port, Wright broke down conventions of enclosure and exclusion to create the classic suburban prototype. Rooted in a vision of the future in which the city had dispersed into the countryside, the prairie house sought a new equilibrium between the individual building and shared social space. Eric Moss’s buildings do not feel the way they photograph. Pictures emphasize Moss’s box readjusts to suit condition a their formal idiosyncrasies. They are real hundred years down the road. For the enough, but what you feel when you are future has not turned out exactly as Wright inside the buildings is the powerful sense had hoped. Urban dispersal is a reality, of logical governing their relationship to the but it has not resulted in the integration of city outside. Their idiosyncrasies are part architecture with the land. Instead, buildings of that relationship. They establish that a have become the land, or have artificially subjective mind is at work, constructing conditioned it into a building material. a set of places that recalls the process of Rather than provide the connective issue their creation. But to see them in context between buildings, the land has enabled is to appreciate the degree to wich that buildings to be disconnected from each subjectivity functions as an objective mode other, a series or boxes, strung out in of expression. The city around them is a disarray. repertory of little pieces that spire to some kind of objective norm-to history, technology, Still, if you survey the city from a certain structure, standardization, not to mention angle and certain speed, an urban image all the echoes of the 19th century codes does cohere. In a city where virtually all for domesticity, government power, culture, architecture occupies the foreground, the religion and industry. But the collective scenes register the city as a series of leaps result of all this yearning for normativity is from form to form, colour to colour, sign to a richly textured urban fabric of big, little, The Box Hercules Project, Hayden 111 Amerika-Exkursion WALT DISNEY CONCERT HALL Philip Wharton architects address Design Specs construction model overview construction overview 112 Walt Disney Concert Hall will be located in Downtown Los Angeles, immediately south of the Music Center’s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion on a full city block bordered by First and Second Streets and Hope Street and Grand Avenue. The 3.5-acre site has been leased to the Music Center by Los Angeles County, which also financed a 2,188-car parking garage through a county bond issue. Located beneath the Concert Hall and containing the base of the Hall, the garage was completed and opened to the public in March 1996. Walt Disney Concert Hall’s dynamic and provocative exterior superstructure will be clad in architectural stainless steel and will provide Los Angeles with a striking new landmark. The complex will be surrounded by an extensive urban public park featuring colorful and ornamental landscaping, walkways, benches and shade trees, providing a beautiful and inviting space for the public and concert-goers alike. Inside, the 293,000 square foot Concert Hall will house the main auditorium, other performance spaces, backstage areas for musicians and house management staff, several refreshment and beverage bars, a restaurant, café, gift shop, and other patron amenities. The 2,273-seat main auditorium was Frank Gehry 111 South Grand Avenue designed to achieve both visual and acoustic intimacy. Unlike traditional theater stages with proscenium arches and curtains that present physical barriers between the audience and the orchestra, the Concert Hall features an open platform stage. The 360-degree range of seating around the stage enhances the feeling that the artists and audience as a group are participating in a singular creative experience. Among the interior’s most distinctive characteristics are the sail-like forms of the wooden ceiling, which suggest a great ship. A large window at the rear of the Hall will allow natural light to enhance daytime concerts. A pipe organ, designed in conjunction with the interior, will occupy a central position between seating blocks at the rear of the stage. In addition to the main auditorium, the facility will feature a range of other indoor and outdoor performance spaces, including a 600-seat pre-concert foyer, a 266-seat theatre for CalArts, a 120-seat amphitheatre and a 300-seat Children’s Amphitheatre, and a chorus rehearsal room which doubles as a 137-seat theater. The Gehry design will also meet the Philharmonic’s needs for rehearsal space, storage facilities, and dressing rooms. The overall Walt Disney Concert Hall project comprises two additional architectural components: the Los Angeles März 2003 sketch Philharmonic Center and the Roy and Edna of construction feasibility. Disney/CalArts Theater. The extensive use of models and mock-ups An architectural landmark for music also allowed for the creation of an open dialogue during the design process, in Challenged by the complexities of the which the Disney family, the Philharmonic, program and the site, architect Frank Gehry the Music Center and local artists and has created a bold and splendid design contractors participated. for the new Walt Disney Concert Hall. Its extraordinary concept and presence in the Walt Disney Concert Hall has already historic Bunker Hill area help realize the achieved international recognition. The vision of a renewed downtown Los Angeles design was exhibited in the U.S. Pavilion and underscore the international stature of at the Venice Biennale in 1991 and has the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the city’s been featured in numerous publications premier cultural ambassador. throughout the world. In 1992 the design received an honor award from Progressive The building itself possesses an imposing Architecture Magazine for the sculptural and dynamic design, and much of the power of its form and the fluid procession of site is devoted to gardens and plazas its indoor and outdoor spaces. accessible from Walt Disney Concert Hall and the adjacent streets. From stage to lobbies to two outdoor amphitheaters, the architect has created an environment of physical and visual accessibility, reflecting a sensitivity to the art form itself, an attractive and functional working place for the Philharmonic’s musicians, a welcoming space for concert-goers and pedestrians and a distinctive architectural addition to the city’s profile. Design Process Walt Disney Concert Hall is the result of a lengthy design process using sketches, computer models and scale architectural models. From the beginning, Frank Gehry sought the counsil of internationally recognized musicians, conductors and directors in the development of all design concepts. Early sketches and diagrams were developed into physical models at various scales, and these models ultimately led to the development of fullscale mock-ups, in stone and metal for exterior elements and in wood for interior elements. These mock-ups assisted in the refinement of details and in the confirmation main hall entrance founders room interior sketch 113 Amerika-Exkursion SILVERLAKE Reinfried Blaha architects address Neutra immigrated from Vienna, in 1924, at first settling in New York City. He worked there for a time before he went to Chicago, and eventually worked for Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin-East. This is the beginning of the common thread that has tied this work and the work of so many others together. Had it not been for Neutra’s insistence, and perseverance in his desire to work for Wright it is truly doubtful that his career would have occurred as it did. Richard Neutra 114 Richard Neutra worked for Wright for about one year. During this time his colleague, Rudolph Schindler, urged him to move to Southern California. Neutra moved to Los Angeles during 1926. There was not an immediate working arrangement between Neutra and Schindler. However, they did eventually form a kind of partnership. To their credit are designs for several commercial projects and some housing projects. Perhaps best known and appreciated of their collaboration is the League of Nations design competition entry. This was not the sole work of Neutra; it was produced in collaboration with Schindler. The fact that Neutra’s in-laws did not include Schindler’s name on the competition boards, when the project was displayed in a traveling exhibit through-out Europe, was one of the several reasons their partnership ultimately ended. Richard Neutra & Dion Neutra 2300 E.Silver Lake Boulevard He worked in New York, Chicago and Wisconsin before settling in Los Angeles where he designed and built the original VDL House in 1932, located on Silverlake Reservoir about 2 miles northeast of the downtown area. The house represented Neutra’s progressive design approach and the latest in technology. He used the house as a living research building for showcasing the latest in “modern” architecture. Through experiencing, and living in Neutra’s VDL II house many basic attitudes about housing were generated. Neutra, probably more than any other Los Angeles architect of his generation, developed a comprehensive and consistent architectural language. Richard Neutra was funded partially by Dutch industrialist Cornelius H. Van der Leeuw (VDL). After a disastrous fire in March 1963, the VDL house was rebuilt by Dion Neutra in consultation with his dad, who was often out of town during those years. They rebuilt the structure and revived the house’s original research theme while also introducing some innovations. It was built almost entirely with donated materials. This house, which Neutra used as an advertising tool to attract new clients to his practice, was first built in 1933 at the height of the Depression. März 2003 the VDL Research House, 1965, roof top Solarium. By using mirrors Neutra was able to extend the view of the Silverlake Reservior. With the water roof he extended the sky. His use of the building as both home and office resolved his complex programmatic requirements. The original plan was slightly modified to encompass the changes in the Neutras lifestyle. The newer structure, like the original, incorporates the use of contemporary materials.The current dwelling consists of a two-story wing fronting the reservoir connected by a service core to a one-story wing at the rear. The one-story wing is the only remaining original portion of the house. Neutra placed the main living quarters on the second floor to take advantage of the views to the lake, and the abundance of sunlight. He placed his office and drafting studio on the ground floor. Among the many subtleties of this dwelling is the way that Neutra sought to differentiate entry. wings is a patio-courtyard reminiscent of the Spanish dwellings of early California. This garden room served as a second kitchen, and outdoor living room for entertaining. Between the ground floor drafting studio and the service corridor is a small bachelor apartment complete with kitchen. The most inviting as well as relaxing space in the house is the roof-top solarium. Facing the lake, Neutra employed a roof-top water garden that both cools and insulates the house. However, this choice also performs a much more heroic accomplishment. The water reflects the sky. This room, with its glass and mirrored walls in combination with the reflective qualities of the water envelope anyone who sojourns within this Since Neutra’s program required that very special place. the building have both the functions of work and dwelling combined he sought to formally separate the two. This was obviously accomplished by the floor separation discussed previously, however, everyone arriving to the building, including clients had to pass through a front door. To further separate the two functions of living and working Neutra included two formal front entrances to the building. One might assume the obvious choice would be to place these two doors as far apart from one and other as possible. However, Neutra choose to place the doors adjacent and at a 90° angle to each other. His design subtlety did not end there. He further expanded this definition by making each door of entirely different materials. The entrance to the dwelling is crafted of on-edge 1 x 2’s, forming a heavy wooden door that is naturally associated with dwelling. The business entrance was constructed of glass with aluminum hardware, and has the firm’s name painted on the glass surface. Formed by the main two-story, side service, and rear one-story Ground floor plan of the VDL II Research House, 1965 living room roof room view from the garden Main floor plan of Neutra’s VDL II Research House, 1965 115 Amerika-Exkursion NORTON RESIDENCE Sarah Schneider architects client address This three-story house is built on a typically narrow beachfront lot, bounded by a heavily-trafficed boardwalk to the west and an alley in the rear. The owners requested access to the ocean views without sacrificing privacy from passers-by and neighbours to the north and south. A blue-tiled box structure forms the ground-floor base to the simple stacking of programmatic elements. It contains a studio in front, two bedrooms and a doublecar garage in the rear. Living and additional bedroom areas on the second and third levels are raised from the street and are set back from the beachfront walk to increase privacy and allow for terraces fronting the ocean view. Norton Residence 116 The wide second-level deck also acts as a visual buffer between the boardwalk and the living-kitchen-dining areas, and is continuous with these areas when the glass doors are open. The kitchen´s deep skylight offers visual access to the thirdfloor bedrooms and opens up the long narrow living area. Frank O. Gehry, 1984 Norton 2509 Ocean Front Walk, Venice 90291 A stair leads from the western edge of the main deck to a freestanding study whose form echoes that of the nearby lifeguard stations and is a powerful compositional element, especially when viewed from the terrace of the third-floor master bedroom. Two terraces in the rear and easy access to the roof provide further privacy and panoramic views of the eclectic neighborhood. Diverse exterior materials include concrete block, glazed tile, stucco and wood logs. Their varied texture and colors reflect the visual chaos of the building´s complex urban context. März 2003 overview Norton Residence plan 117 Amerika-Exkursion THE GETTY CENTER Thimo Simma Grundriss architects address Das Getty Center sitzt auf einem Ausläufer der Santa Monica Mountains, direkt neben dem San Diego Freeway und in der Nachbarschaft der Wohngegend Brentwood. Strenge Bauvorschriften, deren Einhaltung an die Baugenehmigung gekoppelt waren, schränkten die Gebäudehöhe, die Volumina sowie die Ausdehnung des gesamten Komplexes von Anfang an ein. Unter Einhaltung dieser Beschränkungen wurde der Entwurf des Komplexes im wesentlichen von den natürlichen Voraussetzungen des erhobenen Standortes bestimmt, welcher fantastische Ausblicke über die Stadt, die Berge bis hin zum Pazifischen Ozean bietet. Die meisten Gebäude sind entlang der zwei natürlichen Bergrücken errichtet, welche sich, als Achsen gedacht, in einem Winkel von 22,5 Grad treffen Dies entspricht auch der Drehung die der San Diego Freeway aus dem Raster von Los Angeles heraus Richtung Norden macht. Der Entwurf basiert also auf einem Zusammenspiel dieses Winkels, einem von Los Angeles abgeleiteten Raster und einer Anzahl von geschwungene Formen die sich in der Topographie wiederfinden. Eine unterirdische Parkgarage und eine Straßenbahnstation wurden in etwa 1 km Entfernung vom Gebäudekomplex errichtet. Ob man nun mit dem Auto, was der Großteil der Besucher tut, dem Taxi, dem Bus oder zu Fuß kommt, 118 1985 - 1997 by Richard Meier Sunset Blvd /San Diego Freeway man gelangt immer auf demselben Weg zum Getty Center. Man braucht ca. fünf Minuten um mit der Straßenbahn auf die Höhe des Getty Centers zu gelangen. Die geschwungene Strecke bietet schöne Ausblicke auf die Topographie und den Getty Komplex. Die Strecke endet am Central Plaza, einem großen Platz, wo sich der Besucher erst einmal orientieren kann. Hier befindet sich ein 450 Menschen fassendes Auditorium, welches zusammen mit den Getty Trust Büros und dem Getty Information Institute den nördlichen Abschluss des Gebäudekomplexes bilden. Direkt daneben, nach Osten ausgerichtet, befindet sich ein Gebäude in dem das Getty Conservation Institute, das Getty Education Institute for the Arts, und das Getty Grant Program untergebracht sind. Dieses Gebäude ist zum Großteil nicht öffentlich zugänglich. Das Museum selbst erstreckt sich in südliche Richtung entlang der einen natürlichen Achse, während das Restaurant/Café und das Research Institute for the History of Arts and the Humanities strategische Positionen auf der sich nach Südwesten erstreckenden Achse einnehmen. Aufgrund der Bebauungsvorschriften müssen die meisten Gebäude unterhalb des höchsten Punktes von 275 m Seehöhe bleiben, was zur Folge hat, dass viele Einrichtungen auch unterirdisch angelegt sind. März 2003 plan Der ankommende Besucher wird aufgefordert zu wählen ob er sofort in das Museum eintreten oder die Anlage auf eigene Faust erkunden möchte. Jene die sich für das Museum entschieden haben bewegen sich nun über eine weitläufige Treppe auf das Museum zu und betreten dieses durch eine dreigeschossige zylindrische Lobby, welche sich zum Museumshof hin öffnet und so den Blick auf die verschiedenen Galerien freigibt. Die an Pavillons erinnernde Galerien strukturieren das Gebäude und verleihen ihm einen angenehmen Maßstab. Die Freiräume zwischen den einzelnen Pavillons geben immer wieder Blicke auf die umliegende Landschaft frei. chronologische Ordnung zu umgehen. Obwohl das Museum der bekannteste Teil des Getty Centers ist, nehmen die Galerien nur einen Teil dieses Weitläufigen Komplexes ein. Die anderen Institutionen des Gretty Trust beschäftigen eine noch viel größere Anzahl von Menschen. Auch diese Gebäude sind für Besucher nicht uninteressant. Das Restaurant/Café ist sicher ein beliebter Besuchertreffpunkt. Nahe des Central Plaza situiert ist es von den meisten Teilen des Komplexes leicht erreichbar. Durch großzügige Fenster und Terrassen können Ausblicke über die Berge im Norden bis hin zum Ozean im Westen genossen werden. Auf der anderen Seite des Central Plaza liegt das Die Ausstellung ist chronologisch Auditorium, in dem des öfteren Tagungen, und entsprechend der künstlerischen Vorträge, Konzerte und andere kulturelle Medien organisiert. Bewegt man sich im Veranstaltungen stattfinden. Uhrzeigersinn durch die Sammlungen so sind diese in chronologischer Reihenfolge Das Getty Research Institute for the History erlebbar, wobei die verschiedenen Medien of Art and the Humanities ist auf dem auf das Erd- und Obergeschoss der abgeschiedeneren westlichen Hügelrücken Pavillons verteilt sind. Die Bildergalerien situiert und vervollständigt den Gettynehmen das Obergeschoss eines jeden Komplex. Das zylindrische Gebäude enthält Pavillons ein. Aufgrund des ausgeklügelten eine Bibliothek die eine Million Bände fasst, Belichtungssystems können die Bilder am sowie Lesesäle, kleine Ausstellungsflächen, Tag ohne zusätzliche künstliche Belichtung Büros für die Angestellten aber auch betrachtet werden. Dekorative Kunst, Räume für Studenten und Wissenschaftler. Manuskripte, Fotografien und Arbeiten auf Dieses gewaltige Gebäude ist auch Papier sind im Erdgeschoss untergebracht im Inneren radial organisiert. Die um sie vor dem schädlichen ultravioletten Bibliothek bildet nicht das Zentrum des Licht zu schützen. Wechselt man nun Gebäudes, denn sie ist auf mehrere die Ebenen in einem Pavillon, so kann kleinere Sub-Bibliotheken aufgeteilt, um verschiedene Arten von Kunstwerken den Studenten und Wissenschaftlern sehen, die in der selben Epoche entstanden ein leichteres Arbeiten zu ermöglichen, sind. Bleibt man jedoch auf einer Ebene so sowie die Suche nach spezifischen erlebt man die Evolution eines Mediums Materialien einfacher zu gestalten. Die durch die einzelnen Epochen. Mehrere zylindrische Form des Gebäudes drückt Spezialausstellungsflächen, unter anderem im Grunde die introspektive Natur des eine für mittelgroße Wanderausstellungen, Forschungsinstitutes aus. bringen eine Entlastung für die einzelnen Bereiche mit sich. Für Besucher die nur Durch reichlich bepflanzte Terrassen und einen bestimmten Teil der Sammlung Plätze, die sich zwischen den einzelnen betrachten möchten bieten zahlreiche Gebäuden ausdehnen, wird versucht den Ersatzrouten die Möglichkeit die Komplex in die Landschaft zu integrieren. axo Brunnen und Kanäle, die bis in den Central Garden reichen, sind ebenso wichtige Elemente um den gesamten Komplex zu beleben. Verschiedene Arten der Gebäudeverkleidung sollen nicht nur eine Verbindung des Komplexes zur Umgebung herstellen, sondern auch die Verschiedenheit der darin untergebrachten Institutionen zum Ausdruck bringen. Das Museum als der öffentlichste Teil des Getty Centers, ist mit Travertin verkleidet. Diese Außenhaut soll ein Gefühl der Dauerhaftigkeit vermitteln, sich aber auch klar vom hügeligen Untergrund absetzten. Alle wichtigen Gebäude sind mit Travertin verkleidet und erwecken dadurch den Eindruck als würden sie direkt in die zahlreich eingesetzten Stützmauern fließen. Weniger wichtige Stützmauern werden verputzt oder mit anderen Materialien verkleidet. Das Research Institute als Ostgebäude, Auditorium, Restaurant/Café und die Nord-Gebäude mit ihren geschwungenen Formen und großen Fensterflächen sind größtenteils mit hellen Metallplatten verkleidet. Diese Fassade ist fast so dauerhaft wie Stein und reflektiert mit ihrer leicht matten Oberfläche das Licht ohne zu Blenden. Diese Mischung aus Stein und Metall, in Verbindung mit der üppigen Vegetation, harmonisiert sehr gut mit der Südkalifornischen Landschaft. Das Getty Center ist der Erhaltung und Bewahrung des kulturellen Erbes der Menschheit gewidmet. Um dieser Aufgabe gerecht zu werden wurde ein Komplex geschaffen, welcher symmetrische Organisation mit asymmetrischen Formen verbindet und dadurch versucht eine Balance zwischen dem Humanismus der Geometrie und der Spontaneität ihrer organischen Anordnung herzustellen. Eröffnet im Dezember 1997, wurde diese Institution zum größten kulturellen Zentrum von Los Angeles und zu einer Attraktion für nationale und internationale Besucher. Thimo Simma 119 Amerika-Exkursion LOVELL BEACH HOUSE Martin Zangerl architects client address Constructed in 1926, the Lovell Beach House was perhaps the first pure International Style house built in America. Designed by Rudolf Schindler for the same progressive physician who later commissioned Richard Neutra to design his well known Los Angeles home, the Lovell Beach House consists of a series of five concrete frames that form the main structure. The rhythm of these planes provides a striking composition of forms, and elegantly elevates the main living spaces above the surrounding ground level for a panorama of the ocean beyond. Rudolf Schindler 120 In recent years Schindler has become increasingly recognized as a key figure in the history of both international and American architecture. Serving as a lively conduit of trans-Atlantic architectural ideas, his work is a model for a humanistic, regionally sensitive architectural practice. Born in Vienna and trained in both architecture and engineering, Schindler absorbed the influences of the Austrian avant-garde during the first decades of the twentieth century, especially under the tutelage of Otto Wagner and Adolf Loos. It was his exposure to the work of Frank Lloyd Wright, however, that prompted him to come to America with the hopes of working for the elder architect. Schindler began his American career with the Chicago firm of Ottenheimer, Stern, and Reichert in 1914, where he oversaw Rudolf Schindler Philip Lovell 1242 Ocean Avenue,Newport beach the design and construction of a variety of buildings. In 1917 he fulfilled his wishes when he began work with Wright. Wright was to be an enormous influence on Schindler during the four years under his employ. The fact that Schindler remained in the States during the course of the traumatic First World War meant that the idealism of his early training was not subjected to the pursuant cynicism of his colleagues in war-torn Europe. He was able to forge a unique architectural identity that mixed the industrial utopianism of European modernism with the earthbound refinements of Wright. The result is an architecture that is particularly responsive to a site’s cultural, technological, and climatic conditions, and in direct opposition to the generic prescriptions of much of the most celebrated modern architecture of the first half of the century. Schindler moved to Los Angeles in 1920 to supervise a major project for Wright. He never left. In the thirty-three years that followed, Schindler built an enormously varied and vigorous body of architecture that took California as its muse. Schindler experimented with materials from concrete to translucent plastic; built in mountains, deserts, beaches, and hills; adopted standard building methods such as wood frame construction to achieve both greater März 2003 Ansicht efficiency and more expressive potential; and nimbly jumped from single-family to multiple-family dwellings, commercial to religious structures, with the goal of matching building to client and site. The results are superficially eclectic, one of the reasons he never rose to a level of prominence during his lifetime achieved by such contemporaries as Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe, or even fellow countryman Richard Neutra. However, over the past three decades architects and historians alike have found in Schindler a fascinating model of modernity that upholds, rather than rejects, heterogeneity. his output, one notices that each project differs greatly from the next: evidence of his constant search for architectural solutions to address each commission individually. Of particular interest is his sensitivity to local environmental, cultural, and industrial conditions, a feature that sets an example for all architecture, no matter its locale, to follow. As recent immigrants to this country are often able to do, Schindler saw the beauty and potential of the American landscape and tailored his architecture to take advantage of it. It is hoped that visitors will come away from this exhibition with a greater awareness of what can be done to encourage regional expression,especially Besides illuminating his place in the history in an age of globalization and its potential of modern architecture, a central issue for homogenization. that the exhibition considers is Schindler’s relevance to today’s architectural culture. Michael Darling, Assistant Curator, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles The body of scholarly interpretation on (MOCA) Schindler’s work has grown exponentially in the last thirty years, and this exhibition both Dennis Sharp. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of builds on that scholarship and provides the Architects and Architecture. New York: Quatro Publishing, 1991. ISBN 0-8230-2539-X. NA40.I45. most extensive artifactual evidence to date p136. from which to evaluate his career. Innenansicht The exhibition is organized chronologically, beginning with Schindler’s early work in Vienna, progressing to his work in Chicago, and concluding with his mature work in California. The distinctive yet subtle changes in his early phase are amply documented, while his mature work from the 1920s onward receives the most intensive attention. Schindler’s drawings constitute the core of the exhibition, as they show the architect vigorously experimenting with form, structure, and imagery. In many drawings, marginal notations and pictorial sketches reveal the thinking behind his creative process, while colorful presentation drawings dramatize his vision for the final product. One of the goals of the exhibition is to call attention to Schindler’s restless experimentalism. Scanning the range of Grundriss 121 Amerika-Exkursion MOCA Eva Diem architects address An exceptional surface of red Indian stone gives the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, sitting at the intersection of Grand Avenue and Kosciuszko Way, a unique appearance. Designed by Arata Isozaki of Gruen Associates, Architects, the building was constructed between 1983 to 1987. Ansicht MOCA MOCA 122 The landscape, designed by POD Inc., Landscape Architects, consists of an interconnecting plaza that acts as an exhibition area where alternating exhibits are shown between the two main buildings. The primary entrance to the museum is located at a lower level adjacent to a cafe laid out by designer Brent Saville. California Plaza, across the way, can be reached through the main plaza and by way of a Moorish/Spanish water garden.(ASLA) “Ordinances required a building of low height, with a pedestrian walkway crossing its axis....The building is built around a terraced courtyard. The galleries are below ground level, most having overhead lighting. Under the courtyard, the galleries lead into each other from left to right. Above the courtyard, the only building which stands out is the section devoted to administration, with a roof in the shape of a semicircular dome....The whole geometric composition of the building is based on the golden section as the Western method of planning shapes and subdividespaces, Arata Isozaki 250 South Grand Avenue, LA on the oriental theory of ying and yang, positive - negative. The rooms in the extremes of the building have expressive skylights in volumetrically pure shapes: various pyramids and a series of linear skylights....The exterior is a natural reddish coloured stone, contrasting with the transparent skylights and the lustre of the semi-cylindrical roof of the offices...” März 2003 main hall The Creator’s Words “For the first twenty years of my career as a professional architect, I believed that architecture could only be accomplished by irony. It could allude to treason. It made it possible to create architecture as criticism. It could admire the vulgar against the noble, the secular against the sacred, without shame. It was an unfulfilled wish, a mourning for what was lost Hiroshima, holocaust To bridge over the gap style of wit, a sense of humor and paradox were adopted. After twenty years of practical experience, I am now going to find a method to create architecture without irony. MOCA Arata Isozaki, “Architecture With or Without Irony,” 1985. from Arata Isozaki. Arata Isozaki: Architecture 1960-1990. p9. Josep M. Montaner. New Museums. p99. Architecture With or Without Irony,” 1985. from Arata Isozaki. Arata Isozaki: Architecture 1960-1990. p9 Grundriss 123 Amerika-Exkursion literature Die beiliegende Liste stellt nur eine Auswahl dar. 124 März 2003 Anderton, Frances und Chase, John Las Vegas - Ein Führer zur zeitgenössischen Architektur Könnemann, Köln , 1997 Anderton, Frances and Chase, John Las Vegas - the success of excess Könnemann, Köln , 1997 Venturi, Robert; Brown Denise Scott and Izenour, Steven Learning from Las Vegas (MIT press) World cities - Los Angeles academy editions, 1994 Balfour, Alan World cities - New York Wiley-Academy, 2001 Banham, Reyner Los Angeles - The architecture of four ecologies Harper & Row, Publishers, 1971 Gebhard, David and Winter, Robert Los Angeles, an architectural guide Los Angeles, 1994 Klotz, Heinrich (Hrsg.) New York Architektur 1970 - 1990 Prestel Verlag, München 1989 Koenig, Gloria ICONIC Stories of LA´s most memorable buildings (Foreword by Frank O. Gehry) Balcony press, California, 2000 Koolhaas, Rem Delirious New York Le Blanc, Sydney 20th century american architecture a traveler´s guide to 220 key buildings Mc Coy, Esther Case Study Houses 1945-1962 Hennessey & Ingalls, Inc. Los Angeles, 1977 Phillips-Pulverman, Dian Los Angeles - a guide to recent architecture Artemis London Limited, 1994 Roth M. Leland A concise history of American architecture New York, 1979 Sirefman, Susanna New York - Ein Führer zur zeitgenössischen Architektur Könnemann, Köln , 1997 Smith, Elizabeth A.T. Case study houses The complete CGH program 1945-1966 Taschen Smith, Elizabeth A.T. Blueprints for modern living History and Legacy of the Case Study houses The museum of contemporay art + The MIT Press Steele, James Los Angeles architecture The contemporary condition Paidon press, 1993 125