Center for Architecture Gallery Hours and Location
Monday-Friday: 9:00am-8:00pm, Saturday: 11:00am-5:00pm, Sunday: CLOSED
536 LaGuardia Place, Between Bleecker and West 3rd Streets in Greenwich Village, NYC, 212-683-0023

CURRENT EXHIBITIONS

Building Connections 2011

On view 10.01.2011-02.11.2012

Archtober Lounge

On view October, 2011

New York New Work

On view October, 2011

Buildings=Energy

On view 10.01.2011-01.21.2012

UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS

OHNY Opens Doors to its Ninth Year

It’s been nine years since openhousenewyork (OHNY) started making architecture more accessible to the public, and each year I eagerly anticipate the weekend. For me, it is not only exciting that buildings open their doors to the public, making NYC feel more welcoming and inviting, but it also gives me a chance to explore neighborhoods I do not usually visit. This year, I focused on West Harlem/ Hamilton Heights, touring Curtis + Ginsberg Architects’ PS90; taking the AIANY ENYA tour of the 135th Street Marine Transfer Station (site of the current ideas competition, The Harlem Edge | Cultivating Connections); exploring the Harlem Stage Gatehouse, by Ohlhausen DuBois Architects with WASA/Studio A and Harvey Marshall Berling Associates; and The Gadson Gallery, housed in a circa 1900 brownstone on W.134th Street. In walking from site to site, I passed through the City College campus, came across the relocated Hamilton Grange, and strolled along Convent Avenue. It is events like OHNY that allow me to slow down and really appreciate the city.

My biggest criticism of OHNY is that this year the organization introduced a $5 fee for some of the walking tours, in addition to the OHNY Passport (for a $150 donation, individuals can cut lines at popular sites). I understand the need for funding, especially in these economic times, but by requiring donations the spirit of OHNY changes. It no longer provides an accessible environment for open exploration. Granted, $5 is not a large sum of money, and volunteers have the same privilege as OHNY Passport holders, but I hope that next year the organization is able to find alternate ways to raise money, whether it’s through selling merchandise or by finding more sponsors. Or perhaps OHNY will be able to take Open House London’s lead and advocate for government funding. This is an important event for architecture and NYC, and I hope that more organizations show thier support.

10.09-11.11: The Association of Architecture Organizations (AAO) and the Architecture + Design Education Network (A+DEN), in conjunction with the Association for Community Design (ACD), hosted the Design in Action 2011 Conference in Philadelphia to explore the latest ideas in community design, outreach, and K-12 design education.

Ronald E. Bogle, Hon. AIA, President and CEO of the American Architectural Foundation and an AAO/A+DEN co-founder, recognized Jaime Endreny, Executive Director of the Center for Architecture Foundation, for the Learning by Design:NY program. Learning by Design:NY was a U.S. nominee (Institution Category) in the first Golden Cubes Awards of the International Union of Architects.

Kristen Richards

At the “Healthy Communities through Design” session, Rick Bell, FAIA, an AAO co-founder, and Sean Fischer, Ph.D., Deputy Director of the Built Environment program at the NYC Department of Health & Mental Hygiene, spoke about NYC’s Active Design Guidelines and the AIANY’s Fit-Nation collaboration with other U.S. communities.

Kristen Richards

New Yorkers busy in Philadelphia: James Corner Field Operations’ recently-completed the Race Street Pier in the shadow of the Benjamin Franklin Bridge has become one of Philly’s newest favorite spots.

Kristen Richards

The Barnes Museum, designed by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects, is readying for its grand opening on Philadelphia’s Benjamin Franklin Parkway next May.

Kristen Richards

Architecture for Humanity hosted its fall design conference, Design Like You Give a Damn: LIVE!, at the Center for Architecture 10.21-22.11. Sarah Bush, the Associate Development Director at Architecture for Humanity, pictured right with AIANY Executive Director Rick Bell, FAIA, was one of the organizers.

Rick Bell (left); Bridget Dodd (right)

This is the last week that the “New York New Work” exhibition will be on view at the West 4th Street train station. Stop by before the end of the month!

Rick Bell

“Design with the Other 90%: Cities” is an exhibition on view through 01.09.12 at the United Nations Visitors Lobby, organized by the Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. Dan Gottlieb and Penny Herscovitch, of Padlab in Los Angeles, designed the Safe Agua Water System for Santiago, Chile.

Rick Bell

Pro-union political activism (musically) takes to the street in front of the Center for Architecture.

Rick Bell

10.12.11

10.12.11 We are almost half-way through Archtober and the AIANY Chapter, the Center for Architecture, and the many partner associations continue to celebrate the month with lectures, building tours, and exhibitions. Check out the Archtober blog for day-to-day updates. And be sure to stop by the Center to see this year’s President’s Theme Exhibition “Buildings=Energy.”

Also, next weekend is openhousenewyork. I know many of you are planning tours of your offices or built projects. Please e-mail me at eoculus@aiany.org and let me know. The next issue will include our annual photo montage from the weekend.

– Jessica Sheridan, Assoc. AIA, LEED AP

Adjaye Speaks Through Another Lens

Event: 2011 Rosenblatt Memorial Lecture: David Adjaye on Evolving Art and Exhibition Spaces
Location: Center for Architecture, 10.04.2011
Speaker:
David Adjaye, Hon. FAIA, OBE — Principal, Adjaye Associates
Introduction: Paul Rosenblatt
Organizer: AIANY Cultural Facilities Committee
Sponsors: Stan Reis Photograph; Springboard Design; Brooklyn Brewery

David Adjaye, Hon. FAIA, OBE, not only designs cultural facilities, but sees his design process as a collaborative effort with the many artists and art collectors he has come to know over the years. His practice, which straddles the two disciplines in many ways, is about to break new boundaries in the U.S. as he moves into construction documents for the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) in Washington, D.C.

Adjaye’s collaborations range from an installation created for the 2005 Venice Biennale with Olafur Eliasson, called “Your Black Horizon,” to the Carriage House on the Upper East Side, a home for a prominent art collector. He described the former, which has been relocated to Lopud, Croatia, as a “machine that records light.” At the end of a passage bringing visitors from the outside through a series of paths that grow darker throughout the progression, a chamber reflects recorded light levels in various places in the world within a 24-hour period. Even though light spills through one small datum line, visitors are disoriented by the flood of light.

For the Carriage House, completed in 2010, Adjaye explained that “the client’s ideal is to live in a museum.” Referencing work by Philip Johnson, FAIA, and Paul Rudolph, FAIA, as well as Marcel Breuer’s nearby Whitney Museum, Adjaye looked to preserve and expose the layers of NYC history contained within the site. He accomplished this by revealing the uneven thicknesses of the sheer walls; using a dry concrete mixture that creates “geological phenomena,” rough and worn down in areas; and by exposing the Manhattan schist at the base of the existing building. Walls shift away from floors to create light wells that penetrate the height and depth of the building, and asymmetrical windows create unexpected views both into other spaces in the house and out to the cityscape.

Continuing and expanding on Adjaye’s exploration of urban archaeology, the NMAAHC, designed by the architectural team Freelon Adjaye Bond/SmithGroup, will be the last building to complete L’Enfant’s original master plan on the National Mall. With its design, Adjaye is seeking to develop a narrative in the building itself. Noting that the site is adjacent to the Washington Monument — an obelisk complete with a pyramid on top — the shape of the building is an inverted pyramid, similar to those in ancient Benin. The rain screen curtain wall is comprised of elements that relate to both Urdu sculptures and the ironsmithing and carpentry guilds in Louisiana, and the varying apertures are intended to draw visitors through the buildings as well as direct their views out to the key monuments on the Mall and beyond. Expected to be complete in 2015, Adjaye, both in his body of work and in this building alone, aims to tell “a story shown through another lens.”

Archtober Celebrates Architecture in the City (Part 1 of 2)

Event: Archtober Building of the Day
Location: Varies, 10.01-31.11
Organizers: Archtober

To honor great design in NYC, each day of Archtober celebrated a “Building of the Day.” Here is a compilation of the buildings for the first half of the month. The next issue will feature the remaining buildings.

Archtober_1-3.jpg

(L-R): Center for Architecture, Andrew Berman Architect; The Morgan Library & Museum, Renzo Piano Building Workshop/ Beyer Blinder Belle Architects & Planners; 7 World Trade Center, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill.

(L-R): Center for Architecture; Richard Cadan; ©David Sundberg/Esto

Archtober_4-6.jpg

(L-R): Top of the Rock at Rockefeller Center, Gabellini Sheppard Associates; New York Public Library Fort Washington Branch Children’s Room, Sage and Coombe Architects; Hearst Tower, Foster + Partners

(L-R): Paul Warchol; Sage and Coombe Architects; Foster + Partners

Archtober_7-9.jpg

(L-R): IAC Headquarters, STUDIOS architecture; The New York Times Building, Renzo Piano Building Workshop in association with FXFOWLE; TKTS Booth and Revitalization of Father Duffy Square, Choi Ropia, Perkins Eastman, and PKSB Architects.

(L-R): Albert Vecerka/Esto; David Sundberg/Esto; Paul Rivera/ArchPhoto

Archtober_10-12.jpg

(L-R): Sheila C. Johnson Design Center, The New School, Lyn Rice Architects; The Museum of Arts and Design, Allied Works Architecture; Betances Community Center and Boxing Gym, Stephen Yablon Architect.

(L-R): Michael Moran, Richard Barnes, Noah Sheldon, Lyn Rice Architects; Hélène Binet; Frank Ouderman

Center for Architecture Gallery Hours and Location
Monday-Friday: 9:00am-8:00pm, Saturday: 11:00am-5:00pm, Sunday: CLOSED
536 LaGuardia Place, Between Bleecker and West 3rd Streets in Greenwich Village, NYC, 212-683-0023

CURRENT EXHIBITIONS

Building Connections 2011

On view 10.01.2011-02.11.2012

Archtober Lounge

On view October, 2011

New York New Work

On view October, 2011

Buildings=Energy

On view 10.01.2011-01.21.2012

Learning Again from Lower Manhattan

National September 11 Memorial.

Jessica Sheridan

After logging on within the first hour that the reservation system went live and finding the first date available wasn’t until October, my timeslot finally arrived to visit the National September 11 Memorial. At the end of my afternoon I left with mixed feelings about different aspects of the plaza, but I have to withhold full judgment until the vision is fully complete.

After entering the plaza from the southwest corner, the approach to the pools was surreal, with the neatly manicured strips of grass and regularly-planted trees straight ahead and the large HVAC plants to my left and construction to the right. Perhaps because I have witnessed the large hole in the ground at the site for so many years, when I got to the first pool, where the south tower stood, my first impression was that it was smaller than I expected. However, walking around the first pool took quite some time and through the journey itself the enormity of their size really solidified for me.

My biggest criticism of the memorial is that, with the sound of the waterfalls and the flow of water into the center of the pools, my eye was really drawn away from the names of the victims. The pools are so large that the human scale is diminished, and the only thing that drew my focus to the victims and their names were small, pink origami cranes wedged into the engravings and dots of water where visitors had reached into the pool and left their mark next to their loved ones (truly touching and intimate). Also, I had expected to see the sky and surrounding buildings reflected at the basin of the pools, which I thought would be poetic, but because the stone is so dark and the water is constantly moving, all I saw was water moving from the perimeter into a dark void. I had trouble connecting to the meaning behind it.

One of the most successful structures on the plaza is Snøhetta’s Memorial Museum Pavilion. I think it really anchors the two pools on the site and with the angled glazing it reflects both the pools and the surrounding buildings, including 1 WTC, in a way that makes you see both in a different light.

I look forward to revisiting the site as construction continues at different times of the year. It will be interesting to see how the other buildings will reframe the pools as they grow from the ground. Until complete the site will remain in flux, but that should give us all time to adjust to its new future.

09.28.11

09.28.11: Are you ready for Archtober? In just a couple of days the city will be aflutter with architecture events, building tours, and general celebrations for the profession. Be sure to check out www.archtober.org for more information, and save Saturday for the Center. On 10.01.11, three exhibitions will be opening: “Building Connections 2011,” “Smarter Living — The 2,000-Watt Society Exhibition,” and “Buildings=Energy,” the President’s Theme exhibition exploring how the design and related professions can positively impact energy changes in our cities.

– Jessica Sheridan, Assoc. AIA, LEED AP

Note: The digital edition of the summer issue of OCULUS magazine, “2011 AIANY Design Awards,” is online now! Click here to read.

Be sure to follow Tweets from e-Oculus and the Center for Architecture.

And check out the latest Podcasts produced by AIANY.

Center for Architecture Gallery Hours and Location
Monday-Friday: 9:00am-8:00pm, Saturday: 11:00am-5:00pm, Sunday: CLOSED
536 LaGuardia Place, Between Bleecker and West 3rd Streets in Greenwich Village, NYC, 212-683-0023

CURRENT, UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS

Building Connections 2011

On view 10.01.2011-02.11.2012

Archtober Lounge

On view October, 2011

New York New Work

On view October, 2011

Buildings=Energy

On view 10.01.2011-01.21.2012