banned by Boulder County

•November 10, 2009 • 1 Comment

Given the Boulder County’s Site Plan Review process, both the explicit and implicit rules within, there are a number of really great buildings that would never be allowed to be built in Boulder County.

banned houses

starting at the top left, clockwise:

house at Riva San Vitale, Ticino, Switzerland, by Mario Botta :  clearly violates  the height rule.  This house sits on the steeply sloping mountainside above a lake.  The design is meant to minimize the footprint of the house and, as a “tower”, presence the experience of the slope, the lake and the mountains beyond.  It is actually not that tall, but from the lowest point on the downhill slope, the upper part would have to conform to the angle of the slope.

Villa Malcontenta, Italy, by Palladio:  is not “compatible with surround topography”.  Like most of Palladio’s villas, this design is set off against the flatness of the land.  It is a mark of occupation, like a stick in the ground, taking in the landscape but clearly not merging with it.  Traditional villas occupy the land and maybe even dominate it.  But they also give scale and proportion to the land.

Villa Savoye, France, by LeCorbusier:  color not acceptable.  This house is a bit restless, looking to possibly move across the landscape.  But, by doing so, it makes the connection between the land and sky, it establishes this place of occupation in the sun and on the land.  It is not a ‘natural’ element of the landscape, but white, and sufficiently abstract to draw attention to the beauty of the landscape.

Gugalun House, Switzerland, by Peter Zumthor: incompatible with Wildfire Resistant materials and construction.  The is a forest house, extending a vernacular building built of the products of the place, wood boards and planks, logs and panels.  It is as flammable as the surround forest, as fragile, but also as timeless.

Don’t get me wrong, I am all for protecting Boulder County’s magnificent wilderness views.  But sometimes the landscape is actually improved by a building, brought into focus, given a scale.

alps

Boulder County is not a wilderness.  It is occupied.  It has been mined, traversed, settled, abandoned, and re-inhabited all over the county.  If we had more respect for the land, for a sense of a common occupation of the land, we may not need the burdensome regulations.

However, so many people’s desire to build the biggest possible house on the tallest possible peak or ridge has corrupted the entire prospect of making meaningful architecture.  Maybe we do need to keep the regulations in place until there are enough good architects and responsible owners and builders.

In the meantime, since there is a process that requires individual, site-specific review of every new building, maybe the reviews could do the same – close, individual consideration of overall impact, location and siting, not generic rules applied without consideration to locale.

Regulations of this sort are always difficult to administer, even worse to create.  The ultimate authority on these sits with our elected County Commissioners – to approve or not all projects.  Is the will of the people clear on these issues?  Try coming to an approval meeting and see the range of comments from the public on any given project.

photo credit:  Gugalun House by Marloes Faber, Swiss alps photo from Wayfaring travel guide

Pops and scrapes, new Boulder regulations, Part I

•November 9, 2009 • Leave a Comment

The City of Boulder has passed sweeping new regulations that will effect a large number (around 13,000) of single-family homes across the city.  These new regulations become active at the first of the year and the impact on building projects will be significant.  Much of the discussion and controversy over these regulations concerned a reduction in the allowable building area (Floor Area Ration, FAR) that is to be applied on a sliding scale with smaller lots getting a greater percentage of allowable building area.  However, it is the physical location and topography of the given lot that may have a much greater influence over the allowed building area, not the FAR.  Over the next few weeks, we are going to post some analysis and review of what these new regulations will mean  for the different neighborhoods of Boulder.

eastwest

East-West running streets in Boulder, typical of mesa areas:  south Boulder along Vassar and Lafayette , Chautauqua south of Baseline, Mapleton Hill, north Boulder north of Iris.  The streets predominantly run east-west because of the east-west running topography.  Not coincidentally, these lots are larger than typical (yellow is over 8,000 sf, orange over 10,000 sf).  As the existing solar shadow ordinance is preferential for this orientation because the shadows cast either into the street or onto the owner’s property, the new regulations laid over the solar ordinance have a smaller impact in these areas.

north south

North-South running streets in Boulder, typical flat topography:  south Boulder between Table Mesa and Viele Lake, Martin Acres, University Hill, Newlands.  These streets run predominantly north-south  and more strictly adhere to a rectangular grid.  These lots tend to be smaller (dark blue is less than 6,000sf, cyan is 7,000 sf).  The ability to add on to these properties is greatly limited by the existing solar ordinance because the house’s shadow is cast upon the lot’s northly neighbor, quickly violating the ordinance with an added second story.  The additional new pops and scrapes ordinance (Compatible Development) has much greater impact on these areas of the city as the lots are already smaller and more challenged by the solar ordinance.

Over the next fews posts we are going to look at how the new and existing regulations combine for unintended consequences and produce results that prejudice some areas of the city over others, and influence the type of architecture that may be sympathetic with the regulations.  Surprisingly it is not the limited FAR that most directly and negatively impacts most properties, but the associated new regulations that cause the most difficulties.  Along with the new sliding scale FAR regulations the City ordinance contains:

1.  Maximum building coverage regulations

2.  New ways of calculating floor areas for basements (this makes a huge impact on walk-outs)

3.  Sideyard bulk plane regulations

4. Sideyard wall articulation requirements

Like all real estate, the most important thing is “location, location, location”, and so it goes for these regulations.  It is not the restrictions themselves, but how they impact specific properties in the real world, with topography, orientation, architectural styles, etc. that will have consequences unknown.

As we are a strong proponent of very site-specific architecture, of design that is grounded in a place, the potentials of the new regulations may begin to feel like an unwanted collaborative partner in the design process.

See the City’s website on the history of the ordinance and its study materials:

http://www.bouldercolorado.gov/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=9051&Itemid=3865

 

recession’s architecture impact

•November 3, 2009 • Leave a Comment

I graduated with a Bachelor of Architecture in 1990.  Times were tough for architects, especially inexperienced ones without good contacts.  I managed to get and keep a number of jobs in a few years that kept me in the profession, retreating to grad school along the way.

However, so many of my fellow graduates, faced with a tough economy, low pay, student loans, layoffs and mind-numbing aggravation of the day-to-day tasks of young interns, either dropped out or were forced out of architecture.  The huge glut of baby-boomer architects in front of us meant few professional jobs where actual design experience could be had and even less chance of landing one of the rare, tenure-track teaching jobs.

So it was much to my, and many of my colleagues, surprise that being an architect became cool in the late 1990’s.  There were architects on television and the movies and the explosive growth of the culture of international star architects all felt like actions taking place on a very different planet than the one we lived.  Companies and institutions lost faith in open, anonymous competitions and these opportunities dried up for all but the few, usual suspects of the invitation-only “competition”.  Gone were the days that Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano,  Jorn Utzon, and others could make their careers winning open competitions and seeing the buildings to completion.

Rogers, Utzon

But I think none of this compares to the bleak landscape of recently-graduated and young architects today.  The prospect of finding any job at all in architecture or a related field is extremely limited.  Past recessions have seen slow-downs in a region or a type of project (residential or commercial), but the last 2 years have witnessed almost a complete stop to all construction.  (Employment in architecture firms is down almost 20%). The cynical older architects are happy to see this winnowing of the crop, a filtering of only the most dedicated.  However, most likely this recession will only further reinforce the reality that for the most part, architecture should be pursued by only those who are either independently wealthy or willing to work for wages that won’t keep up with school loan payments.

I get a lot resumes and work samples sent to me.  There is a tremendous amount of talent and drive out there that has no outlet in architecture.  There are thousands of great buildings that will not come to be, an unbelievable loss to our built environment.  When so much of our country fears the future, the prospects for architecture are indeed bleak.  Architecture proposes the new, it looks to the future.  Even the most world-weary and hip-tragic architect gets really excited about making buildings, proposing new ideas and forms. The recession hasn’t just stopped or slowed the amount of work available, it has fostered an environment of fear, where architecture seems an expensive amenity in a threadbare future.

Let’s hope that when things turn around, there will be some architects left who are are not so cynical or set-in-their-ways, that a new generation of buildings can designed and built that celebrate life on this planet not just mere existence.

Modern Art Wing, Art Institute of Chicago

•November 2, 2009 • Leave a Comment

The Art Institute of Chicago has recently opened the new Modern Art wing designed by Renzo Piano.  Piano’s Design Workshop is probably the most consistently innovative and interesting big-name international architecture office out there.  Every building they execute is marked by an acute attention to detail and they all seem to serve their clients rather than the architect’s ego.

P1020645

So, on a recent visit, I found myself really appreciating the building, but not loving it.  As mentioned, it is beautifully and simply put together – the spaces flow nicely, the materials are clearly and cleanly brought together.  Maybe most importantly, and in light of Denver’s Art Museum, it is clear that the building is there to serve the art that it displays, not the reverse.

P1020644

However, in its simplicity and lightness, it lacks the robust material quality that I think distinguishes the best of Chicago architecture.  For while the Chicago skyscrapers and the Chicago window of the early twentieth century championed a kind of structural determinism and rationality, it exerted this as the primary formal expression.  The Modern wing more like a series of screens, horizontal and vertical, that wrap the building.  So, while this is a great response to the program of the building, to the housing and display of art,  it does not have to be the primary driver of the building.

Gage Building

This is a photo of the Gage Building, near the museum on Michigan Avenue, designed by Louis Sullivan.  You can feel the frame and weight of this building, the decorative medallions seeming to hold up the middle piers.  This is what I think of when I  think of Chicago architecture – taut buildings that are both light and heavy, rational and expressive.

Piano’s addition is a very good building, a great addition to the museum and the city.  But it speaks more to an international, place-less design than one rooted in a city of a great architectural tradition.

Louis Sullivan imposter bank, Poseyville, Indiana

•October 28, 2009 • Leave a Comment

I recently was driving a round-about way to New Harmony, Indiana and passed through Poseyville.  Much to my surprise, right in the middle of town, what appears to be a bank by Louis Sullivan.

PoseyvilleBank02

No mistaking the ornament, both in their individual designs and how they ’strap’ the building.  However, having studied Sullivan in school and later while living in Chicago, while I was familiar with many of his late career bank designs, I had never heard of this one.  It is extremely similar in its long facade to the bank in Sidney, Ohio.

Sidney Bank 01

However, as you can see, the Poseyville bank is more of a shoe-box than a jewel box, simply repeating the long facade ornamentation to the main entry.  The individual ornamentations however are unmistakable:

PoseyvilleBank03

Poseyville bank

Sidney Bank 02

Sidney bank

Well, it turns out the Poseyville bank is not a Sullivan work at all.  Rather, it is a knock-off, by Edward Thole, built in 1924 (documented in the excellent essay “The Banks and the Image of Progressive Banking” by Wim de Wit in Louis Sullivan, The Function of Ornament. ( I highly recommend this essay as it gives cultural context to the intentions of the architect and clients of the bank projects.  Rarely are the needs and desires of the engaged clients presented or discussed in architecture books)

Maybe the Indianapolis Terra Cotta Company had the molds available for use?

Sidney bank image from the website maintained by Mary Ann Sullivan:  http://www.bluffton.edu/~sullivanm/sidney/sidney.html

In any case, it is an interesting building and though not a Sullivan original, a commanding presence in the small town and a fascinating attempt to convey strength and security for a bank without resorting to the usual Greek temple forms.

Crown Fountain, Millennium Park, Chicago

•October 26, 2009 • Leave a Comment

Millennium Park in Chicago has become a very interesting foil to the Art Institute.  The band shell/amphitheater by Frank Gehry is a bit disappointing (too 2-dimensional), but the Crown Fountain is one of the best pieces of public art in the city.  Designed by Jaume Plensa, the fountain is two 50 foot high glass block towers with video projections on their facing sides.  The projections are faces of people from the wide spectrum of citizens of Chicago.

In warm weather the fountains ’spit’ a stream onto a slate plaza, usually filled with kids playing in the stream.

On a recent trip to Chicago, the Midwestern rain had the fountains turned off, but the reflection in the plaza doubled each image, making a kind of visual skyscraper to join the others in the city.

Crown Fountain 02

north tower

Crown Fountain 01

south tower

photos by Mark Gerwing

Air Force Academy chapel

•October 19, 2009 • Leave a Comment

completed in 1963, the Air Force Academy Cadet Chapel was designed by Walter Netsch of SOM in Chicago. 

southwest, small

seventeen aluminum, steel and glass spires, reminiscent of fighter jet double delta wings are also a series of flying buttresses, linking this strikingly modern sanctuary to the history of western christian spaces.

interior 01, small

interior 02, small

The stained glass panels highlight the structural ‘ribs’ of the building, a geometry both simple and complex, and surely Netsch’s finest work.

The building is set upon a granite and concrete plinth with Colorado Springs’ Rocky Mountain foothills in the background, making is strangely scale-less and slightly otherworldly.

southwest, partial, small

photos by Mark Gerwing

abandoned house, western Kansas

•October 15, 2009 • Leave a Comment

built of the really beautiful local limestone, this house is small but quite grand

stonehouse06bwsmall

the house and the tree hold steadfastly to each other on the wind-whipped landscape

stonehouse02bwsmall

stonehouse05

stonehouse01

the worn softness of the stone is a strange contrast to the brittle sharpness and geometry of the metal roof.

the southwest corner is failing as the mortar wets and dries, cracking out under the stones

A stalwart little house

photos by Mark Gerwing

Anchor Bay, California

•October 12, 2009 • Leave a Comment

A couple of recently discovered sketches from a trip to Anchor Bay, California this time last year:

Anchor Bay 03small

Anchor Bay 01small

New Harmony, Indiana

•October 9, 2009 • Leave a Comment

On the border between southern Illinois and Indiana, along the Wabash River, sits New Harmony, Indiana.  Founded in 1814 by a group of religious separatists similar to the Shakers, the town consisted of 180 buildings, but was bought in its entirety by Robert Owen, a wealthy industrialist from Wales.  His communitarian society was an utopia experiment in social reform but was short-lived.

What they left was a remarkable series of buildings and realized urban plan:

cabins01

Throughout its history, New Harmony has attracted philosophers, theologians, scientists and most importantly reformists, interested in the ideas and promise of communal living.

That spirit is incorporated in the Working Men’s Institute building and in Philip Johnson’s 1960 interdenominational Roofless Church:

RooflessChurch02

This is a beautiful space and surely his best work, – a tall brick rectangular wall with the ‘church’ structure sitting to one side.  The space of this outdoor room is very striking, made the more so by a single, modulated opening looking out on the floodplain of the Wabash River.

RooflessChurch01

This building in a sense spans the cabins of the original founders and the Atheneum Visitors Center by Richard Meier (not built at the time of Johnson’s work).  The Atheneum is other-worldly, a graceful, pure white, vision.  I am sure it was not intentional, but it feels a bit like a nineteenth century steamboat pulled up to a dock, an apt allusion for a visitor’s center.

Atheneum01

New Harmony was intentionally separated from the mass of society and it still remains a bit isolated in rural southern Indiana.  I know of no other place that within the space of a few blocks you can wander around almost 200 years of remarkable American architecture.  Well worth a visit.