Michael Maltzan - Metropolis Magazine
Transcription
Michael Maltzan - Metropolis Magazine
Michael Maltzan 46 MAL_01_12.indd 1 METROPOLISMAG.COM His work for the homeless in Los Angeles is a new paradigm for social housing. Portrait by Dave Lauridsen 12/19/11 8:07 AM OCCUPATION: Architect, landscape designer AFFILIATION: Michael Maltzan Architecture LOCATION: Los Angeles by Jade Chang “It drives me nuts when people say, ‘It’s great, you’re doing socially conscious projects.’ As if all my other projects are socially unconscious,” says Michael Maltzan, the 52-year-old Los Angeles architect. “It’s all of a piece for me. The only way culture survives is if it is elastic.” Elasticity— of form, idea, and intent—is what Maltzan strives for, but “socially conscious” is what gets all of the attention. We’re standing in the courtyard of his first solo project, the still-evolving Inner City Arts (ICA) campus, a bright spot on the gritty edge of downtown Los Angeles, where a dedicated staff provides innovative arts education to public school students. ICA is still a touchstone for Maltzan— its easy grouping of skylighted stucco and concrete studios a testament to the soundness of his design, its continued cultural influence a testament to his ability to create a building with “ambitions at the scale of the city.” “ICA is really a kind of miniaturized urbanism,” says Qingyun Ma, the dean of USC’s School of Architecture, where Maltzan recently taught a studio class on the challenges and opportunities of designing within the urban context of Los Angeles. “Michael has a very urban mind.” A popular Maltzan mythology hasn’t taken shape quite yet, but it’s easy to piece one together: A Long Island boy born and raised in Levittown, New York, the classic postwar suburb, hightails it out to L.A. and lands a job working for Frank Gehry. He crosses paths with a local businessman who happens to be the cofounder of the ICA—that leads to a commission. And then things start to snowball. A Ph.D. student who teaches at one of L.A.’s most exclusive private schools, Harvard-Westlake, writes his dissertation on ICA, which results in a project for the school. Around the same time, a prominent art-collecting couple commissions a home, the Hergott Shepard Residence, which ends up in MoMA’s seminal The Un-Private House show in 1999. And then, “ICA is a kind of miniaturized urbanism,” says Qingyun Ma, the dean of USC’s School of Architecture.“Michael has a very urban mind.” Michael Maltzan stands in his office in Los Angeles’s Silver Lake neighborhood. Behind him are models of his three Skid Row Housing Trust projects; in front of him, an experiment with air succulents. METROPOLIS 01.2012 MAL_01_12.indd 2 47 12/19/11 8:07 AM A mixed-use, single-occupancy prefab, the Star Apartments represent a step forward for homeless housing in Los Angeles. Amenities will include a walking track, a basketball court, and a yoga area. Counseling and support services will all be in-house. “Michael is of a generation that understands architecture in strategic terms,” Thom Mayne says. 48 MAL_01_12.indd 3 just five years after leaving Gehry, at the tender age of 39, our architect lands the MoMA QNS commission. In the decade since that heady rush, Maltzan has judiciously managed a career that meets the classic Hollywood “one for me, one for you” formula, but instead of alternating indies and blockbusters, the architect switches between multimillion-dollar homes for high profile clients, institutional projects, and housing for the homeless. All of Maltzan’s work, whether it’s intended for a mogul like Michael Ovitz or a denizen of L.A.’s Skid Row, is marked by an attention to fluidity, to the ways that people move in and out of spaces. The ICA campus is set so that there are diagonal views throughout, and pathways offering significant views of the street. “The corners are always cracked open,” Maltzan says. That becomes even more significant with a development like the Carver Apartments, one of two homeless housing projects that he has completed with the Skid Row Housing Trust (SRHT). A third, the mixed-use, singleoccupancy STAR building, just began construction, and will be completed this fall. With the Carver Apartments, Maltzan has created a bold, elegant whorl of public and private spaces that include 97 single-occupant units, a communal kitchen, social services, and offices. Unexpected sightlines slice through the building, which is very freeway-adjacent. Instead of hiding the rushing cars, Maltzan makes them a part of the Carver’s views by precisely framing the ribbon of freeway with a long, horizontal window in the laundry room—a move that allows drivers an equally clear view of the inside. And that’s the intent. “Depending on where you place things,” he says, “you can create social dynamics.” Rather than hiding the homeless housing, Maltzan’s design turns it into a beacon. While we’re visiting the Carver apartments, one of the residents, a tall man around Maltzan’s age, bounds up to him Courtesy Michael Maltzan Architecture STAR APARTMENTS 2012, Los Angeles METROPOLISMAG.COM 12/19/11 8:07 AM Iwan Baan “Depending on where you place things,” says Maltzan,“you can create social dynamics.” with his hand extended. “Hey man, hey! You’re the architect, right? I just wanted to thank you, it’s a beautiful place,” he says. Maltzan shakes his hand warmly, chats for a minute or two—it’s a comfortable encounter. He’s the same with the staff of ICA and his own office of 30 employees. In a profession full of outsize characters, Maltzan seems almost daringly even-keeled. When I mention this to his fellow Angeleno, Thom Mayne, the famously combative architect hoots, “That’s the worst thing you can say about someone!” But then Mayne allows that Maltzan’s temperament might turn out to the key to his success. “He’s of a generation that understands architecture in strategic terms. When we were young we were part of the resistance, we were interested in autonomy. He’s much more aware of the political, cultural, economic glue.” It’s that awareness that has made Maltzan such an effective force in getting projects like the Carver Apartments off the ground. As part of his push to keep homeless housing projects visible, Maltzan and the SRHT found a site outside of downtown’s traditional Skid Row, convinced the city to give its blessing to L.A.’s first multifamily prefab building— cutting the construction time and the carrying costs in half—and then devised a construction plan that would allow existing retail to stay open. Maltzan’s office is working on other city-scale projects that aim to be “socially conscious,” even without the involvement of a nonprofit organization. A mixed-use development adjacent to SCI-Arc will be close to the MTA’s planned Red Line station. Housing in this building ranges from starter studios to lofts. Further afield is the Central Park at Playa Vista, completed in mid-2010, part of a giant development that encompasses an entire community—housing, offices, and recreational areas—built from the ground up. Maltzan worked on the semi-public park, which is bordered by Hughes Aircraft and will be open continued on page 51 INNER CITY ARTS 1989, Los Angeles Maltzan turned a former auto-body shop into an arts institution for public school students—over 150,000 kids have learned ceramics, animation, dance, and more, sometimes from “teaching artists” like luminaries Yo-Yo Ma and Peter Sellars. METROPOLIS 01.2012 MAL_01_12.indd 4 49 12/19/11 8:08 AM PLAYA VISTA PARK AND BANDSHELL 2010, Playa Vista, Los Angeles Landscape architecture represents a new challenge and a new playground for Maltzan’s firm. The Playa Vista park is built on a former airfield— the landscaping works as a “kidney” for the park, as part of a system that filters groundwater. SFSU MASHOUF PERFORMING ARTS CENTER 2013, San Francisco Maltzan’s design for the university’s new performing arts center turns the flow of patrons and performers into a form of theater by wrapping the structure with a glass walkway visible from the street. 50 MAL_01_12.indd 5 Photos, Iwan Baan; renderings, courtesy Michael Maltzan Architecture “I love the institutional scale,” Maltzan says.“The chance to make something of great presence and clarity out of extremely complex dynamics.” METROPOLISMAG.COM 12/19/11 8:09 AM CARVER APARTMENTS 2009, Los Angeles Designed to encourage social interaction while still providing spaces for refuge, this 97-unit building is part of the Skid Row Housing Trust’s effort to make homeless housing a visible and vibrant part of the community. continued from page 49 primarily to residents and people who work in the neighboring offices. “I want it to have different uses throughout the day,” he says of the nineacre park where everything, from a bandstand to a beach volleyball court, is surrounded by landscaped groupings of native flora and crisscrossed with pedestrian bridges that encourage wandering. At the moment, Maltzan is most excited by the San Francisco State University Mashouf Performing Arts Center, a 1,200-seat theatre that eschews traditional opera-style seating in favor of a more democratic scheme. Set to begin construction at the end of the year, the $146 million building will be Maltzan’s largest to date. “I love the institutional scale,” he says. “The chance to make something of great presence and clarity out of extremely complex dynamics— I’d like to continue to deal with that at a large scale.” As he enters his fifties—the age at which architects generally hit their stride, uniting ambition, skill, and actual commissions—Maltzan is increasingly being given the opportunity to do so. He doesn’t take the responsibility lightly. “Architecture has, as a fundamental element, an ambition to say something about culture, about the time we live in, and about the future. It has the ability to speak very loudly about what our responsibilities are.” METROPOLIS 01.2012 MAL_01_12_rev.indd 6 51 12/20/11 7:42 AM Tim Duggan 64 DUG_01_12.indd 1 METROPOLISMAG.COM/POV Read Q & As with Tim Duggan and Tom Darden. He is helping revive New Orleans through ambitious experiments in landscape design. Portrait by Cedric Angeles 12/19/11 8:05 AM by OCCUPATION: Landscape architect AFFILIATION: Make It Right LOCATION: New Orleans issues, and the emphatic personality of the man made a larger, more expansive role almost preordained. “Tim is tenacious,” says Duggan’s mentor and former boss, Bob Berkebile, one of the fathers of the green building movement and a founding partner of BNIM. “He sees the links and acts on them. I would clone him if I knew how.” Duggan’s route to Make It Right ran directly through his mentor. While working for BNIM in his hometown of Kansas City, Missouri, he designed an “eco-playground” for the tornado-stricken town of Greensburg, Kansas. That effort was featured on a special segment of CBS’s The Early Show; producers there were so pleased with the resulting story that they asked about building a similar playground in an urban setting. Through Berkebile, BNIM was already advising Pitt in New Orleans, as well as designing one of the first Make It Right houses. Once he arrived on-site in 2008, Duggan, the son of a concrete contractor, quickly became indispensible, especially in the chaotic early weeks of the project. “We built the first solar-powered eco-playground in North America, while they were constructing the first six houses,” Duggan says. “So we’d be building the playground continued on page 67 SUSTAINABLE STORM WATER KIT-OF-PARTS APPROACH Make It Right of replicable stategies that are employed alongside conventional methods. “New Orleans will always continue to require engineered drainage systems and pumps,” the city planning commission wrote in its master-plan report. “However, stormwater engineering increasingly is adapting the lessons of natural systems to controlling and filtering runoff.” typical roadway roadwaysurface surface Typical Street-sideraingarden rain garden streetside with curb with curbbreak breakand & native plant native plantmaterials materials 10’ 6” 5’ Courtesy Make It Right Foundation perviousconcrete concrete Pervious sidewalk sidewalk In 2010, the Make It Right Foundation produced an important manual for New Orleans city officials, building professionals, neighborhood groups, and citizens. It introduced a storm-water management “kit-of-parts” approach that consists Pervious perviousconcrete concrete sidewalk sidewalk Tim Duggan stands in the middle of North Prieur Street, in New Orleans’s Lower Ninth Ward. Although it certainly doesn’t look like it to the untrained eye, Duggan is here to demonstrate a Make It Right initiative every bit as radical as the Brad Pitt–sponsored starchitect houses dotting the landscape. This experimental street—built in collaboration with the city’s Department of Public Works and the University of New Orleans—dead-ends at the foot of the Industrial Canal levee, site of the infamous breach that inundated the neighborhood during Hurricane Katrina. Duggan, a bearded landscape architect built like the high school baseball catcher he once was, uncaps a water bottle, extends an arm, and pours. “The city spends almost fifty million dollars a year on electricity to pump excess storm water over the levees,” he says. “But the pervious concrete you see here is still forbidden in the city of New Orleans.” He lets that sink in, literally, as the water quickly becomes a moist blotch on the pavement. “Everything we’ve done, we’ve had to get a variance for.” His official title at Make It Right is “landscape architect,” but the unique nature of the project, the complicated planning Street-sideraingarden rain garden streetside with curb with curbbreak breakand & native plant native plantmaterials materials The landscape architect Tim Duggan, at the Make It Right eco-playground that he helped build. Martin C. Pedersen One-Way Local Street The sustainable landscape features include pervious concrete sidewalks, native ground cover, A and pervious concrete parking shoulders. 5’ 10’ 6” 12’ A 44’ 2” METROPOLIS 01.2012 DUG_01_12.indd 2 65 12/19/11 8:05 AM KIT OF PARTS Rain Gardens Bioswales Rain gardens are depressions constructed within the landscape that are built to capture and detain storm-water runoff. These areas are intended to hold rainwater for no more than 48 hours after precipitation. Vegetated swales, or bioswales, are similar to rain gardens, but they are linear features intended to convey storm water toward a detention zone, street, or drain. They encourage infiltration into the water table. Native Plantings Pervious Pavement Native plant selections are flood and drought tolerant, require less maintenance once established, and are naturally resistant to disease and pests. They act as living cisterns. Mature trees are capable of absorbing thousand of gallons of storm water after a single rain event. Typical concrete or asphalt roadways and driveways are impervious surfaces that shed storm water as runoff. Pervious solutions, such as pervious concrete, nonrigid pavers, and open-cell pavers, help reduce runoff by allowing storm water to be absorbed into the ground. Rainwater Collection Naturalized Detention and Retention Rainwater collection strategies are an imporant part of storm-water management, as they provide a means to reduce runoff, allow for potential reuse, and can take a variety of forms, depending on site-specific opportunities and constraints. Detention ponds are large, constructed depressions intended as catchments for large volumes of stormwater runoff. These ponds have an outlet to permit water to flow, at a reduced rate, into engineered storm-water systems. Retention ponds, on the other hand, are usually disconnected from such systems. 6’ 7’ 8’ 37’ 10” 23’ 8’ Pervious concrete sidewalk Street-side rain garden or bioswale with curb break and native plant materials Typical roadway surface Typical roadway surface 23’ 7’ 10’ Top portrait, David Eber/Lower 9th Ward CSED; bottom portrait, Cedric Angeles; others courtesy Make It Right Foundation 4’ Street-side rain garden or bioswale with curb break and native plant materials Pervious concrete sidewalk The sustainable landscape features include pervious concrete sidewalks; street-side rain gardens within traffic-calming bump-outs; and curb breaks that facilitate drainage into the rain gardens. Neutral ground Duggan’s report on storm-water management—a huge issue for the city, which gets nearly 70 inches of rain a year—is think-tank worthy in its breadth, and it makes a compelling economic argument for change. Major Street With Neutral Ground 136’ 2” 66 DUG_01_12.indd 3 METROPOLISMAG.COM 12/19/11 8:05 AM continued from page 65 with pervious concrete, solar panels, wetlands, and a rain garden, then I’d hop in the Bobcat and drive to the other side of the development and help them grade a house site for landscape installation.” It wasn’t too long before Berkebile received a call from a Make It Right official asking, “How would you feel if we borrowed Tim for a while?” Duggan’s work—which, he stresses, is “highly collaborative; I don’t do it alone”—operates on three interconnected scales: the neighborhood (Make It Right), the community (the Lower Ninth), and the city. “The first time I attended a community meeting, someone asked, ‘Tim, how is Make It Right not colonizing our neighborhood?’” he says. “That was the very first question I was asked as an employee. It caught me a little off guard.” That question—and those raw wounds—were the impetus behind the Community Beyond Housing project, which pulled together a long and impressive list of collaborators, including the landscape architects Walter Hood and Elizabeth Mossop, to create a series of community gardens throughout the Lower Ninth. “Tim really spearheaded that effort and it’s ongoing,” says Tom Darden, Make It Right’s executive director. “The gardens we install are fully maintained by the community and the homeowners.” Duggan realized early on that he would need some buy-in from the city of New Orleans to accomplish his goals—or, at the very least, a slew of variances, since continued on page 83 Duggan, a native of Kansas City, Missouri, and a graduate of Kansas State University, rides his bicycle through the burgeoning Make It Right development. Ward “Mack” His Lower Ninth Ward Village McClendon is a linchpin of the community. Ward McClendon’s plan for the building—even before Katrina—involved antique cars. Prior to the storm, he had owned 14 of them, “and they made me feel good,” he says. But the cars, like so much else in the Lower Ninth Ward, were gone. “I was just trying to find something to pick up my spirits,” McClendon says. “I was always fascinated with old cars. It would be nice to tinker with them again. That was my intention when I got the building.” The building in question—a big Quonset hut–like structure, located on a largely residential block—had intrigued him since he was a boy growing up in the neighborhood. At one point, it was home to a boat-propeller manufacturer; later, it was a beauty school. Pre-Katrina, McClendon, a former telephone company employee with a bad back and a modest monthly disability check, looked into buying the building, but couldn’t afford it. Like a lot of the Lower Ninth, it was abandoned after the hurricane, and suddenly, he could. He bought it in August 2007. “It was never my intention to have a community center,” McClendon says. “That was nowhere on my radar. But I’d been down to town hall meetings and I knew how bad the community was suffering. So at a meeting I got up and said, ‘Hey, I’ve got this building over here. If you guys want to take a look at it and try to make it a community center, then we’ll have a place for everyone to gather.’ I didn’t think anyone would come out, and I was shocked when just about the whole community showed up. But I’m stubborn. I had a little backup plan. I had some cards made basically asking, ‘Are you willing to donate money? Are you willing to donate time?’ I figured they wouldn’t bother filling out a card. Almost every one of them did.” And so the Lower Ninth Ward Village was born. It is very much an ad hoc organization, staffed by volunteers and pretty much anyone else who walks in the door. “The building is like magic,” McClendon says. After buying it, he says, “I was in there gutting it out by myself, and a busload of volunteers just showed up and asked, could they help.” Indeed, the place feels special. Under a vaulted ceiling, there’s room enough for a lending library, and a big expanse of open floor that's perfect for meetings and oversize art projects. Banners from schools, colleges (architecture schools are well represented), and volunteer organizations hang from the rafters, as in a high school gym. The building also has a media room stocked with donated computers, and plans for a small gym. Out back, Tim Duggan and the folks at Make It Right have installed a community garden and a performance stage. The Village has become a beacon for both the neighborhood and visitors. “We know for sure that over 50,000 people have come through here and volunteered throughout New Orleans,” McClendon says. Last August, around the anniversary of Katrina, he hosted an emotional reunion for neighborhood residents exiled by the storm. Funded by small donations, the Village is a challenge for McClendon—“Mack” to just about everybody— but one he accepts. “You can go through your life and not find your purpose,” he says. “I’ve been able to find mine by embracing this project.” —M.P. METROPOLIS 01.2012 DUG_01_12.indd 4 67 12/19/11 8:05 AM cool by TIM DUGGAN continued from page 67 de- much of what he proposed (like pervious concrete) was, strictly speaking, illegal. There were entrenched cultural biases as well. “When I first got here, I was fluent in the language of rain gardens and bioswales,” Duggan says. “I’d walk through the streets and point out natural bioswales, and I was quickly told that those were in fact ditches, and that ditches were in neighborhoods for poor folks in New Orleans, whereas curved gutters were for the affluent.” “When I first got here, I’d walk through the streets and point out natural bioswales,” Duggan says. “I was quickly told that those were ditches, and that ditches were in neighborhoods for poor folks in New Orleans, whereas curved gutters were for the affluent.” But Duggan is nothing if not politically adroit. He has given dozens of demonstrations to skeptical city officials. In 2010, he collaborated with design colleagues at Make It Right to create a remarkable document for the Department of Public Works that laid out a new vision for stormwater management—a huge issue, since the city gets nearly 70 inches of rain a year and spends millions of dollars pumping it out. “And because the whole city is impervious, it does not recharge any of its groundwater,” Duggan says (referring to the process whereby surface water filters down to groundwater). As a result, the city is sinking at a rate of about an inch a year. The presentation, “Sustainable Stormwater: A Kit of Parts Approach,” illustrated a set of best practices, with examples from Make It Right, and then applied them to specific street types common to New Orleans. Though just 24 pages, the corresponding report is comprehensive and think-tank worthy in its breadth, and it makes a compelling economic argument for change. Dealing with city politics, however, can be frustrating. “I call it the bureaucratic wheel of impediment,” Duggan says. Still, it’s clear he does have people’s attention; the North Prieur Street experiment is a case in point. “We did a hydrology model that showed that our street project, if they let us do it, would capture 375,000 gallons of water every time in rained, just for that little 400-foot stretch of road,” he says. “The official from Public Works said, ‘Are you sure about that?’ And I said, ‘Here’s the model, here’s the seal from the engineer.’” The potential cost savings prompted the city to embark on an ambitious experiment. They divided the street into eight sections, each with a slightly different mix of pervious concrete and structural reinforcement, and then tested them for durability and water retention. “Our understanding is that the initial results were strong,” Darden says. “These could be viable replacement options for other streets.” These types of experiments have become commonplace at Make It Right, and they might, in the end, be the project’s most lasting legacy. “I think the ultimate goal of Make It Right is to complete our initial commitment and build 150 homes,” says Duggan, who, in addition to his continuing work in New Orleans, recently started his own firm, Phronesis Design. “But its secondary goal is using innovation in new ways that can lead to replication.” / sign January 2012 ad_page_83.indd 5 METROPOLIS modernfan.com | 888.588.3267 Circle 110 83 12/20/11 8:26 AM Courtesy the Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal Mirko Zardini By provoking and critiquing the profession, he sets a new standard for architectural exhibitions. 72 ZAR_01_12.indd 1 METROPOLISMAG.COM/MULTIMEDIA View a slide show of Mirko Zardini’s exhibitions. 12/20/11 7:50 AM OCCUPATION: Curator, architect, editor AFFILIATION: Canadian Centre for Architecture LOCATION: Montreal, Quebec Zardini is the director and chief curator of the Canadian Centre for Architecture, in Montreal. Curated architectural exhibitions are typically monograph-based shows, highlighting the work of a star architect with framed sketches and drawings that are hung like works of art. For the past seven years, Mirko Zardini, the director and chief curator of Montreal’s Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA), has been quietly and methodically subverting that staid and formulaic tradition. “I feel there is a moment in which you need to redefine the discourse, because the old paradigm and ideas are vanishing, especially in the context of how we live,” says Zardini, a trained architect who came to the CCA in 2005, after stints as an editor at Casabella and Lotus magazines during the 1980s and ’90s. “We try to incorporate a thematic or general problem, which is a way to speak about architecture without having to do a glorified monograph.” For the CCA’s 1973: Sorry, Out of Gas exhibition (2007–08), the curators looked at innovations that were spurred by the 1973 oil crisis: investigations into wind and solar technologies; research initiatives, such as the University of Minnesota’s Underground Space Center; alternative modes of urban life; and pioneering in the field of sustainability. But the exhibit’s underlying theme contained a critique of the current green movement, which Zardini feels is needed today: “Architects are telling you their buildings are sustainable, even though the environments they place the buildings in are not. The idea of sustainability, in reality, is not a technical problem but it’s more a political, social, and economic issue.” by K T a Paul Makovsky Exhibitions under Zardini’s direction often have an underlying moral argument. Sense of the City (2005–06) called for an architecture that is more than just pretty pictures. Actions: What You Can Do With The City (2008) demonstrated that you can produce change in a city from the bottom up, a message that seems especially relevant in today’s Occupy Wall Street world. “All of our exhibitions are an effort to investigate the gray zone of our society, trying to make architects more conscious of the complexity of the problem that they’re part of, instead of pretending, every time, to be the solution, while reducing complex social and political problems to simplicities,” Zardini says. The CCA’s current exhibition, Imperfect Health: The Medicalization of Architecture, explores the field’s approach to wellness. “Architecture has never really produced a real solution to medical issues,” Zardini notes. “It could contribute to producing a less polluted environment but perhaps it’s an even larger task to take care of people.” / “We try to incorporate a thematic or general problem, which is a way to speak about architecture without having to do a glorified monograph,” says the CCA’s Zardini. SENSE OF THE CITY 2005–2006 Dedicated to the theme of urban phenomena and human perception, this exhibition challenged the idea of evaluating architecture and urban design based solely on aesthetics. Instead, it encouraged a sensory approach, through touch, smell, sound, and sight. “It was against the last twenty years of architecture,” Zardini says. “The point was to not to think of architecture as a beautiful image in a glossy publication, but to rethink it in different ways—and through a sensory approach, criticize this obsession with iconic, formalist building.” METROPOLIS 01.2012 ZAR_01_12.indd 2 73 12/19/11 8:13 AM ACTIONS: WHAT YOU CAN DO WITH THE CITY 2008–2009 Here, the CCA presented 99 actions that would instigate positive change in cities around the world, using suggestions from international architects, artists, and collectives. Examples included offering rent-free space for short periods of time to Brussels nonprofits; creating an online database of edible fruit and vegetable plants in Bristol, England; and setting up beehives on a Toronto hotel rooftop to produce neighborhood honey. The exhibition design concept was by Andrea Sala, with typography and display brochures by Project Projects. 74 ZAR_01_12.indd 3 ENVIRONMENT: APPROACHES FOR TOMORROW 2006–2007 The exhibition brought together the French landscape architect Gilles Clemént and the Swiss architect Philippe Rahm. Clemént raised the issue of the destruction of our environment and suggested different ways to reintroduce biodiversity into leftover and abandoned spaces. Rahm’s Interior Weather installation (above) explored the notion that form and function follow climate—in an enclosed, brightly lit room, the temperature, humidity, and light conditions were measured by sensors. Courtesy the Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal “All of our exhibitions are an effort to investigate the gray zone of our society, trying to make architects more conscious of the complexity of the problem that they’re part of, instead of pretending, every time, to be the solution,” Zardini says. METROPOLISMAG.COM 12/19/11 8:14 AM IMPERFECT HEALTH: THE MEDICALIZATION OF ARCHITECTURE 2011 The show looked at the often conflicted relationship between health and architecture. Zardini uses the case of the Bloomberg administration’s Active Design Guidelines for New York City as an example. “The guidelines promote movement, so you need more stairs, and that’s fine.” Zardini says. “You’ve clearly reduced the problem of obesity to find a solution, but you didn’t take into consideration the care of the elderly.” He says that architects tend to look for the perfect solution, which can be hazardous: “Asbestos was considered the best solution for architects to use everywhere until it was discovered that it was highly dangerous to our health.” METROPOLIS 01.2012 ZAR_01_12.indd 4 75 12/19/11 8:14 AM