Video Link: https://vimeo.com/232722093
How do you spend Friday evening? Do you join those jamming NYC’s cultural institutions or those crowds over populating film theaters? When it hosts a pair of NYC's most interesting and provocatively creative thinkers, the Center for Architecture—one of NYC's premiere cultural institutions—can certainly lift your spirits. This series of dialogues about design joins an architect with a critic, journalist, curator, or architectural historian to discuss current architecture design issues. Friday night is not “Friday Night” without the appropriate beverage. We’ll provide a custom-crafted cocktail—one inspired by the architect's work and created especially for this event. Join us in growing the tradition of Delight Night in New York's Weekend Cultural Scene—Blight Night it is not.
Copies of UNFOLDED: How Architecture Saved my Life: Bartholomew Voorsanger by Alastair Gordon will be available for purchase during the event.
Speakers: Bartholomew Voorsanger, FAIA, Principal, Voorsanger Architects PC Alastair Gordon, Contributing Editor, Architecture and Design, Wall Street Journal
Bartholomew Voorsanger, FAIA, received a BA with Honors from Princeton, a Masters from Harvard, and from 1964-1967 became an associate with the Montreal urban planner Vincent Ponte. In 1968, he joined I.M.Pei before launching his own firm in 1978. The firm quickly gained recognition for projects published around the world and received numerous design awards. Commissions range from small interiors to multi-million dollar residences and large-scale institutional buildings such as the World War II Museum in New Orleans. Voorsanger became a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects in 1985 and is currently Chair of the Architectural Foundation in New York.
Alastair Gordon is an award-winning critic and author who has written regularly about the built environment for the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. His critically acclaimed books include Naked Airport, Weekend Utopia, and Spaced Out. He teaches critical writing at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design, and is Editorial Director of Gordon de Vries Studio, an imprint that publishes books about the human environment.
Organized by: AIANY Architecture Dialogue Committee
http://architectsandartisans.com/2017/09/the-life-of-olgivanna-lloyd-wri...
While much has been written about the life and the innovative organic architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright, little scholarly attention has focused on Wright’s third wife, Olgivanna, the individual who sparked a renaissance in Wright’s career from the time of the couple’s first meeting in1924. There’s a new book about her out from ORO Press, by Maxine Fawcett-Yeske and Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer, and A+A recently interviewed Fawcett-Yeske via email:
Who was Olgivanna and why was she important? Olgivanna Lloyd Wright, third wife of America’s innovative architect, not only sparked a renaissance in her husband’s career but possessed a creative spirit distinctly her own.
Olgivanna Milijanov Lazovich Hinzenberg met Frank at a ballet performance in Chicago in 1924. While it was love at first sight, it was four years before the two could marry as both were seeking divorces at the time of their meeting. In their life together, Olgivanna created an environment in which Frank could flourish. Inspired by her love and worldliness and steadied by Olgivanna’s practicality and resourcefulness, Frank imagined some of his most breathtaking designs, from Fallingwater to the Guggenheim Museum. It was through Olgivanna’s creative genius that the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture, also known as the Taliesin Fellowship, was formed. It was a school of architecture like no other. Apprentices “learned by doing,” working alongside Mr. Wright and realizing many of the designs that came out of this collaboration. Olgivanna oversaw all administrative aspects of the school as well as the holistic curriculum that, in addition to architectural design, taught apprentices about the arts, public speaking, etiquette and decorum, and much more. Mrs. Wright was also an author and composer. She wrote five books on philosophy and about the life she and Frank shared. She composed over forty musical compositions that enriched the lives of the apprentices as well as audiences who came to the music and dance festivals at Taliesin in Wisconsin and at Taliesin West in Scottsdale. In many ways, Mrs. Wright was her own kind of architect—crafting melodies and sonorities deserving of recognition among the works of other composers of the mid-twentieth century. She was also an architect of the human spirit, an advocate of architectural apprentices for whom music, art, literature, dance and philosophy are “organic” and fundamental to the structural design of the mind, body, and character.
Her life before Wright? Her full name was Olga Ivanovna “Olgivanna” Milijanov Lazovich Hinzenberg Lloyd Wright. She was born in Cetinje, then the capital of the small principality of Montenegro. Her father, Iovan Lazovich, was the first chief justice of the Montenegrin Supreme Court. Her mother was a general in the Montenegrin Army. Olgivanna’s mother, Melitza, was the daughter of Duke Marco Milijanov (1833-1901), a general credited with preserving Montenegro’s independence from Turkish rule in 1878. Melitza was the youngest of three daughters of the Duke. In the absence of any sons, Milijanov took Melitza into the army and trained her as a soldier. Thus Olgivanna came from a strong and diverse aristocratic background—a mother skilled in social rebellion and military tactics and a father dedicated to peace and justice.
Olgivanna’s father had gone blind by the time of her birth, so during her early childhood in Montenegro, Olgivanna served as the eyes of her father. She read everything to him—newspapers, legal documents, books on poetry and philosophy, at the same time developing a worldview of her own that was far advanced for her years.
At the age of nine, Olgivanna went to Russia to begin more formal schooling. She lived with her sister Julia (who was studying to be a physician at that time). Julia was married to Russian nobleman Constantin Siberiakov, whose family owned gold mines in the Ural Mountains.
At the age of 20, Olgivanna married Russian architect Vlademar Hinzenberg. Also while in Russia, Olgivanna was introduced to Greco-Armenian mystic and philosopher, Georgi Gurdjieff, with whom she studied for several years. In 1917, at the time of the Bolshevik Revolution, Olgivanna fled Russia along with Gurdjieff and his followers. During that same eventful year, Olgivanna’s daughter with Hinzenberg, Svetlana, was born.
Olgivanna lived for a time in Tiflis, in Georgia near the border of Turkey, along with Gurdjieff and his followers. After several other sojourns, the group finally established the Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man in Avon, France at Fontainebleau in 1922. Gurdjieff believed in developing the “complete person”—mind, heart, and body. His curriculum was holistic and strict, incorporating dance, exercise, personal hardship, physical labor, and psychological discipline. Olgivanna remained a loyal student, and under Gurdjieff’s tutelage, she acquired basic skills she had not learned in her privileged upbringing. She did laundry, cooked, painted and repaired the Study House, fed the livestock and cleaned the barn, and in the evenings assisted with teaching the dance movements that were central to the development of each pupil’s self-awareness. As word of Gurdjieff’s teaching spread, many individuals came to the Institute for personal growth and healing. When writer Katherine Mansfield, suffering from the later stages of tuberculosis, arrived at the Institute, Gurdjieff assigned Olgivanna to look after her. Indeed Mansfield’s final days were spent in the care of Olgivanna Hinzenberg. When Gurdjieff finally deemed it time for Olgivanna to go out into the world on her own, she emerged as a dancer, musician, educator, and philosopher in her own right.
Her life with Wright? Much of the previous writing about Olgivanna and Frank’s lives focuses on the tumult of the years when Frank was seeking his divorce from Miriam Noel, while other sources underscore the unique aspects of the Taliesin Fellowship and the apprenticeship experience.
One of my favorite stories from the autobiography is about the bi-annual migration of the Wrights and the apprentices between Spring Green, Wisconsin, and Scottsdale, Arizona. After a long and exhausting drive that on one particular trip took the entourage to the Grand Canyon for some sightseeing, the Wrights stopped, well after dark, to camp for the night. Upon rising the next morning at sunrise, Frank called to Olgivanna, “Get up and look!” “I leaped out of bed, throwing a blanket over my shoulders, and as I stood beside him I saw to my horror that we had laid our sleeping bags no more than four feet from a sheer drop-off of the Grand Canyon. If we had driven our cars a few yards further . . . a terrible thought. We had been so tired the night before that we had done no exploring, and did not notice the precipice that plunged more than a mile down into the Colorado River. We look cautiously over the edge. Far beneath us the river wound like a gray snake. We quietly put on our warm, heavy clothes and sat down by the blazing breakfast fire. The sun was rising now above those prehistoric rock-hewn plateaus and the colors unfolded over the canyon in fantastic beauty.” “After all,” my husband said, “this is what we came for. And it was all worth it.”
Life was never boring for Frank and Olgivanna. They seemed always to be on the brink of some new and exciting adventure.
Her life after Wright? The death of her husband on April 9, 1959, left Olgivanna with complete responsibility for the business operation of the Taliesin Fellowship. Meanwhile, her music began to pour forth, page after page. In addition, Mrs. Wright maintained a demanding schedule of speaking engagements— speaking across the globe about her husband and his concept of “organic architecture.” After many years of indefatigably keeping her husband’s name alive, Olgivanna Lloyd Wright died on March 1, 1985.
Your inspiration for the book? I initially came to know of Olgivanna Lloyd Wright through her music. An avid admirer of Frank Lloyd Wright’s organic architecture, I was pleased to have the time during a trip to Phoenix in June of 2003 to tour the Wright’s home at Taliesin West in Scottsdale. At one point, while the tour was in the kiva, the guide mentioned that we were going to watch a brief video about Mr. Wright’s signature “destruction of the box,” Wright’s affinity for dissolving the corners in room design to create more openness. The tour guide mentioned in passing that the music we would hear on the video was composed by Frank’s wife. As a musicologist my interest was piqued. While the excerpt we watched was very brief, what I heard was this highly expressive cello solo, subsequently surrounded by rich orchestration. I was determined to find out more about the woman who had composed this music. In the months that passed, I corresponded with Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer, the Director of the Frank Lloyd Wright Archives, and, as it turned out, the person who worked closely with Mrs. Wright in her musical endeavors. As I learned more about Mrs. Wright’s music and began to transcribe the works from their manuscript form, over forty compositions comprised of chamber music as well as dance dramas the length of full-scale operas, I became more and more engrossed in the life experiences that fostered these intriguing compositions. Exploring the life of Mrs. Wright inspired my two trips to Montenegro where Olgivanna spent her early childhood and where her parents and grandparents had played significant roles in the history of this small Balkan country. Later, during one of my research trips to the Frank Lloyd Wright Archive at Taliesin West, I discovered from Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer that Olgivanna had actually written an autobiography, rough, unpublished, and read by very few people at that time. As Bruce and I discussed the autobiography, it became clear to me that before I prepare selected works editions of Olgivanna’s compositions and before I write Mrs. Wright’s biography, her words should be allowed to speak for themselves. So began the work of compiling and editing what would become Crna Gora to Taliesin, From the Black Mountain to the Shining Brow: The Life of Olgivanna Lloyd Wright.
The intent of the book? The intent of the book is to give voice to Olgivanna Lloyd Wright, to allow her narrative to speak for itself, and to reveal the many dimensions and accomplishments of this remarkable woman.
What do you want the reader to do, think, feel after reading it? Why? The reader will definitely laugh and cry along with Olgivanna as she tells her story. Remarkable in her tenacity, resourcefulness, and undeniable strength, her life was lived to the fullest extent.
by Michael Welton
LA+ is a new interdisciplinary journal from the University of Pennsylvania School of Design. LA+ takes a broader approach to landscape architecture looking at various issues facing the landscape architecture profession from a macro level.
The first edition, Wild sets the tone for the new journal with articles from Richard Weller, Paul Carter, Timothy Morton, Claire Fellman, Orkan Telhan, Nina-Marie Lister, Steve Pine and many others who grapple with a broad range of topics including Rewilding, World Park, Wild Crossings, Wild Ocean, Firescaping and more. This edition challenges the reader to think about landscape in a broader context that many landscape architects in design practices have little time to explore. This edition is not a formulaic landscape or academic journal, it explores the topic (Wild) from various points of view including that of a landscape architect, artist, writer, scientist, urbanist, climatologist and other professionals. This interdisciplinary approach allows the reader to read views that go beyond the normal consensus and look beyond the view of the landscape architect or academic. Although there is a wide range of disciplines in this edition of LA+, I hope that in future editions there will be more diversity in the origins of the writers, which I am sure will occur once the worldwide profession gets hold of the first edition.
Richard Weller’s World Park looks at numerous initiatives across the world to create large scale connectivity and how these can be achieved by understanding the gradations of contiguous systems ranging in scale. Using clear graphics Weller provides an overall picture of World Park and the North-South Corridor(North to South America) and the East-West Corridor (Europe to the Far East Asia).
Nina-Marie Lister provides an interesting review of strategies to improve connectivity via crossing systems across highways (overpasses & underpasses). Lister concentrates on the TransCanada Highway near Banff, Alberta, Canada and also the ARC International Wildlife Crossing Infrastructure Design Competition that included submissions from design firms such as Balmori Associates, HNTB, OLIN and others. Lister concludes that “…redesigning of the road for two clients – animals and human-wildlife-crossing infrastructure presents a timely opportunity to communicate the problem and solution to the public.”
Wild also includes conversations with Dan Jenzen & Winne Hallwachs concerning biological diversity and connectivity. The conversation is very forthright with Dan Janzen providing interesting views on corridors and financing of controversial conversation ideas. This edition of LA+ also includes a conversation with Richard T.T. Forman renowned ecologist providing another great thought provoking conversation about ecology and the understanding of ecological systems.
LA+ is a high quality publication with well thought out layout, color palette, and design that compliments the well written articles.
LA+ is available from ORO Editions for $24.95 and annual subscription.
http://worldlandscapearchitect.com/review-la-wild/#.Wa7cGIplBBy
A compelling hybrid: half candid biography, half evaluation of a distinguished practice. The personal trajectory–from New York orphanage, to rebellious youth, brilliant student and accomplished architect–is inspiring, and it increases one’s admiration for how Voorsanger overcame a rocky start and a succession of personal tragedies, to create some of the most original work of the past two decades. There are points in this narrative where the story seems to jump tracks and back with disturbing abruptness, but one admires Gordon’s skill in telling a complex story in a highly readable fashion.
The title is more than a satirical take on self-help books; Voorsanger’s intensity and dedication to his craft has been driven by his need to surmount emotional crises. His largest work to date is the National World War Two Museum, which has become the primary destination for visitors to New Orleans. Four steel pavilions enclose a courtyard–a strategy that allowed the institution to grow incrementally, and gives attendees a much needed break as they revisit the brutal events of that conflict. The pavilions are subtly inflected to create a sense of imbalance, conveying the ferocity of combat and the sense that the fate of the world was at stake.
There are several other museums, built and unrealized, but the standouts in this narrative are houses located on spectacular Western sites. Voorsanger was long an energetic outdoorsman, and his passion for mountains and deserts feeds into houses that seem to grow from the land. Roofs are as jagged as rock formations, and similar folded geometries animate houses in less dramatic locations, notably one that embraces a Napa Valley vineyard. Rugged and welcoming, these houses capture the spirit of the West, its natural beauty and informal patterns of living.
In contrast to monographs that are too bulky or arcane to appeal to a wide audience, Unfolded is elegant, portable, and written in plain English, providing an introduction to the art of architecture that should enjoy a wide readership.—Michael Webb
http://www.formmag.net/2017/07/book-review-living-architecture/
Hong Kong is relentlessly vertical, a city of towers and skyways, elevators and ladder streets, built on a mountainside — a city without ground, according to the architects Adam Frampton, Jonathan D. Solomon, and Clara Wong. In their guidebook to the three-dimensional circulatory networks of downtown Hong Kong, they draw a city that has radically abrogated its relationship with the ground plane. 1
It’s a beautiful, insightful book, but its sense of gravity is all wrong. For no matter how deeply you lose yourself in the aerial labyrinth, how many escalators you ascend from sea level, how many building portals you pass through, inevitably the mountainous terrain of Hong Kong Island rises up at a faster rate. The levitating pedestrian bumps into the hillside and is brought back to earth. In Hong Kong, the ground is everywhere.
The photographs in this slideshow examine zones of contact between the multilevel metropolis and the mountain. Rocks and soils that in other cities would be buried or obscured are here integral to the setting. The terrain that weaves between streets, through public spaces, and beneath buildings reminds observers of the tenuous relation between the city and its geology. To guard against landslides, the most precipitous grades are stabilized by engineers and classified within a government database that contains 60,000 registered slopes. This is a serious enterprise, with official plates identifying the geotechnical compliance of each slope. Engineering solutions vary from simple block retaining walls to more elaborate structures with anchors, scaffoldings, high tensile wires, and ferro-cement. They constitute a topographic image of the island.
The most precipitous grades are classified within a government database that contains 60,000 registered slopes.
These slopes are frequently put to civic use. Usable land is so scarce that community functions are shoehorned into the engineered hillsides: miniature pocket parks, vertical gardens, seating nooks, bus stops, even ultra-compact municipal storage depots. For flatlanders who are accustomed to cities built on floodplains, this is a novel arrangement. When analyzed in the traditional plan view, Hong Kong’s pocket spaces do not fit conventional templates for good urban legibility, accessibility, repetition, structure, or form. Often, you cannot see from one element to the next, nestled above or below. And yet, the assemblage works. It meets the higher goals of urban design: distinctiveness, variation, and responsiveness to place.
With infrastructure now stretched in urbanist discourse to refer to benches, cell towers, and almost anything multiplied across the city, the term has lost some of its potency. We ought to consider the root of the word — infra meaning below — and look carefully at the structures of the city that are underfoot. Hong Kong’s system of 60,000 registered slopes is a genuine landscape infrastructure that underlies the city, and that grounds the social and physical experiences we have there.
Notes
We are delighted to announce the launch of the new publication by Oro Editions, "Building Saigon South: Sustainable Lessons for a Livable Future." The book is written by John Lund Kriken, and Ellen Lou of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP— the internationally renowned architecture, interior design, engineering, and urban planning firm— and Tim Culvahouse, Editor in Chief of the American Institute of Architects, California Council.
Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City’s district of Saigon South has been designed by SOM in collaboration with the Phu My Hung development group to maintain a modern, livable, human-scale and sustainable urban environment— a master plan accepted, imitated, and used as an example of sustainable development throughout Asia and the rest of the world.
"Building Saigon South" shares effective design solutions created for residents who represent a collective range of income levels, in an eco-positive public space, making for a civically and economically dynamic and vibrant district.
SOM’s master plan presents the overall vision and development framework to allow Saigon South function as a self-contained community. It also offers flexible planning principals to address a range of potential development scenarios in this flourishing Vietnamese City.
About the Author John Lund Kriken FAIA is an architect and consulting partner at the San Francisco office of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and a professor at UC Berkeley’s College of Environmental Design. He has served on the board of the San Francisco Art Commission during the tenure of three mayors, holding similar positions with the San Francisco Planning Commission, Intersection for the Arts, the Fort Mason Center, San Francisco Planning and Urban Research (SPUR), the Bay Conservation and Development Commission (for thirty-five years), and the San Francisco chapter of the Greenbelt Alliance.
Tim Culvahouse is Editor-in-Chief of the American Institute of Architects, California Council and past chair of the board of the non-profit Public Architecture. He is the editor of The Tennessee Valley Authority: Design & Persuasion, published in 2007 by Princeton Architectural Press. His articles have appeared in a wide range of journals, including 306090, ANY, Art Papers, Design Book Review, Harvard Design Magazine, Modulus, Perspecta, Residential Architect, and World Architecture.
Ellen Lou is a licensed architect and certified city planner. She leads the Urban Design + Planning group for SOM's San Francisco office and has directed many world- renowned urban design and planning efforts in the United States. She has lectured and served as visiting instructor at MIT, Stanford University, North Dakota University, CA Academy of Arts, and UC Berkeley. She is a board member for San Francisco Urban Planning and Research, as well as San Jose Downtown Architecture Review Committee.
To learn more about the design work of SOM and the built urban environment of Vietnam's Saigon South, please visit:
Oro Editions SOM
UACDC and the UA Office for Sustainability/UA Resiliency Center are pleased to announce that the Conway Urban Watershed Framework Plan: A Reconciliation Landscape for Conway, Arkansas has won a LafargeHolcim Award for North America. According to the Switzerland-based LafargeHolcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction, the biennial international awards “recognizes innovative projects and future-oriented concepts—and is the most significant global competition for sustainable design. The Awards encourages architects, planners, engineers and project owners to go beyond conventional notions of sustainable construction in their work and to harmonize economic, ecological and social concerns.”
The Conway Urban Watershed Framework Plan: A Reconciliation Landscape was sponsored by US EPA Region 6 and the Arkansas Natural Resources Commission under their 319 NPS program with the City of Conway. The Framework Plan mitigates severe water management problems in the sub-watershed encompassing the urbanized area of Conway. The Plan employs green infrastructure to deliver ecosystem services. The approach provides a novel set of transferable planning tools for urban watersheds that combine a Sponge City Gradient, a Water Treatment Technologies Spectrum, the 17 Ecosystem Services, and Six Adaptive Infrastructure Types.
The project will published as a book by ORO Editions/San Francisco in October, 2017.
The LafargeHolcim Foundation has asked that the selection remain confidential among team members until October when prizes will be conferred at a private event to be held in Chicago on Thursday, October 12, 2017. Here, we we will learn of the ranking among the eight or so North American prizes and the project’s eligibility to advance to the global prize selection program. This is the second LafargeHolcim Prize won by the project team in the program’s 14-year history.
https://www.lafargeholcim-foundation.org/Awards
The "Joy Ride, An Architect’s Journey to Mexico’s Ancient and Colonial Places” published by ORO Editions, dinner and lecture hosted by the Huntington’s James Folsom on July 27th was a great event, held in the California Gardens and restaurant. After dinner guests and family enjoyed an illustrated lecture in Rothenberg Hall by the architect, author and artist David C. Martin.
The lecture talked of his inspirational trips to Baja, California, illustrated by dramatic watercolors of the Missions and Plazas discovered off road, as he traveled by jeep with his wife Mary and their family. These spaces became the inspiration for designs he created and built as design architect with AC Martin, his renowned family firm downtown LA.
The Joy Ride book signing was in the auditorium plaza of the theater. Sixty books were sold, proceeds to go to the Huntington. Guests included:
Mary Klaus Martin and David Martin’s family The Boone family of philanthropists - Marylou Boone, Nick and Suzanne Boone. Blaine Fetter and Linda Boone Fetter Nancy Power Tina Beebe Denise Demergue John and Joan Hotchkis, philanthropists Sally Drennon Lyn Rothman Ben Donenberg Stephen and Mus White Sofia Borges Director of MADWORKSHOP
photo is L-R: James Folsom and David Martin Sofia Borges, John Uniack, Mary Martin and David Martin Marylou Boone and Nick Boone
from: http://spacing.ca/national/2017/08/01/book-review-binning-house/
Author: Matthew Soules (ORO Editions, 2017)
Spending time in the Binning House is like being enveloped in a gentle super-reality, not a parallel reality, but a simple amplification or re-positioning of specific characteristics that are always, already present. This Binning House reality pivots around the concept and experience of dynamism in its multiple guises. Are the walls at an angle or not? Did one move from the inside to the outside or the reverse? What is this mural? These experiential provocations generate a deep oscillation that has the effect of emphasizing how everything is always in motion. Somehow this has a tendency to render the rustling of the Japanese maple in the garden and the shimmering of the ocean as more intense, more real: a super-reality.
In this fourth book in the West Coast Modern House Series from UBC SALA, architect and author Matthew Soules takes a phenomenological tack in his narrative on the famed BC artistand his house. Again along with Leslie Van Duzer, Sherry McKay, Christopher Macdonald, book design by Pablo Mandel and photography by Michael Perlmutter, Binning House is a wonder as a revelation of both Binning the artist as well as the archetypal house he built in 1938. With a balance of erudite text and impeccable photography—along with the sumptuous colour palette selected for the book covers—the book is also complimented this time around by a series of meticulous section drawings done by recent UBC SALA graduate Lorinc Vass.
Having had the opportunity to live in the house for five years, Soules provides a unique perspective, having grown accustomed now to all its subtleties. This includes being confronted on a daily basis with the tilting walls in plan, such that no room is completely orthogonal—one wall always angled at 5 degrees to the others. It is an optical refinement akin to the entasis the ancient Greeks used in their temple architecture. And as a modern painter, Binning would’ve treated the six surfaces in each room as six canvases, allowing day-to-day life to play out on most of them. The great mural in the entry hall of the house is perhaps the cipher, the one wall he did treat as a canvas, allowing the others to angle away in their multitudes of perspectives.
Matthew also points out Binning’s decision to use semi-translucent glass in the interior walls of the house, separating the front hall from the living room and thereby creating a sense of transparency while simultaneously providing privacy throughout the modest 1500 square foot house. Furthermore, the glass doors opening into the backyard blur the sense of inside with the outside, another hallmark of West Coast houses. In 1938, these were all new idea to Vancouver architects and, visiting his house, Binning’s students would’ve been strongly influenced by these notions.
And if those walls could talk, there would be the tales of past architects and artists meeting within and without their confines to converse—gathered for their famous parties that collected the likes of Richard Neutra, who first arrived in Vancouver at the invitation of Binning in 1949. B.C. Binning is one of our region’s local treasures, as well as one of its best kept secrets—and for two decades, architecture students at UBC would’ve taken his drawing class, such that Binning influenced several generations of architects in the Lower Mainland.
With several pieces by him in the Vancouver Art Gallery’s permanent collection, his artwork also surrounds us in the built environment, such as the blue and green mosaic work of the then BC Electric Building (now Electra) next door to its neighbour the Del Grauer substation, also clothed in the same exquisite mosaic. Sadly, one sculpture is all that remains of the work he did for what was then the main branch of the Public Library downtown Vancouver, which at the very least provides us with a memory of his massive influence on our West Coast culture.
In Metro Vancouver, we can truly say that we are all still able to feel his influence around us, but not as personally as it must’ve been for Soules. At the book launch, he admitted feeling somewhat intimidated to have to convey his experience of living in this house. But he need not worry, as his is a respectful contribution to Binning’s legacy, a reminder that he was the progenitor of many of the tenets of modern architecture in our region, and his house is the physical manifestation of not just him, but that spirit of his time. The Binning House is zeitgeist.
And so in this latest edition of the SALA book series—and with only three more left—Binning House is among the best yet. From the insight into the life and times of Bert and Jessie, to Matthew’s appreciation of the first-hand experience of the house, the reader is given a rare glimpse of this architectural treasure. One can also appreciate through this book why there has been such a concerted effort to preserve the house, to ensure it does not fall victim to the ruthless Vancouver housing market (and goodbye Electric House). Such crusaders for the house as Adele Weder, Leslie Van Duzer, Sherry McKay and Chris Macdonald at SALA—along with Matthew, himself—should be acknowledged for the fine work they’ve done to preserve the home, as it is now named a National Historic Site of Canada.
Likewise, this book is now a part of the story to preserve this and other important West Coast modern houses, with many more stories still needing to be told, much like the Binning House here.
***
For more information on Binning House, visit the ORO Editions website.
Sean Ruthen is a Metro Vancouver-based architect and writer.
From: https://issuu.com/constructionbusinessmedia/docs/1707_archprod
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