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  • links for 2008-11-13

  • Gordon Bunshaft vs. Robert Venturi

    Every school of thought wages battles during its reign in order to maintain dominance, to be popular and cool. Most recently Wired.com posted an article indicating Blogs are so 2004. All the ‘cool’ kids had graduated up to Twitter instead. Moving targets being what they are (a barrier to entry) Jeffrey Zeldman took this as a dumb attempt to tastemake at the expense of established bloggers. More specifically it was a misguided attempt to file a provocative story on a short deadline. All the same Zeldman’s negative reaction follows a familiar pattern of righteous indignation, and attempts to question the authority of the author. Ah, History where would we be without ye.

    After writing the original blog post about my attempts to read through Learning from Las Vegas I came across a little contoversial nugget near the end of the book. Venturi, Scott Brown and Izenour put a number of proposals for projects and plans in the last third of the book to demonstrate some of the implementation of philosophy they had developed as an architectural and landscape design outfit. Yes, they had learned from Las Vegas, and Levittown. Now they had to show what they learned. In so doing a number of design projects and competitions came up where Requests for Proposals went out and design firms entered into competition.

    One of these projects was for a speculative office building just south of the Mall in Washington DC. The group judging submissions was called the Washington DC Fine Arts Commission and ultimately they had final say on the esthetics of any finally chosen design. At this point all is fine and well until Venturi begins to start to complain about the role of Architectural Review Boards or similar bodies like the Fine Arts Commission. Whereas Zoning boards have straightforward rules and laws governing the building site and proposals for buildings on those same sites, all bets are off with the Architectural Review Board. ARB’s and similar purveyors of taste are in Venturi’s opinion not bound by rules, statutes, laws or best practices. Instead the Architectural Review is an Aribtrary Review meant to impress a vague sense of taste and decorum onto something another creative enterprise (the design firm) has placed much effort.

    How then can a Review Board who hasn’t a business interest to protect or a legal precedent to uphold have so much power and weild it so clumsily? In the article on this project Venturi went to great pains to explain to members of the Fine Arts Commission that the building’s plan and program were fully agreed upon by his client and in the process money and contracts were being exchanged with lawyers present. These were things hard to undo. But that was immaterial to this review board who proceeded to tear apart the fundamental design and request changes be made for no other reason than to satisfy the whims of the review board. Venturi notes that this is the worst possible situation any architect can find themselves in when it comes to getting things done on schedule and on budget. A review board can severely alter the economics of any project through its request for changes.

    That in fact is exactly what happened as the review board met no less than 5 times to look at this one project. Due to scheduling conflicts and members of the review board having other jobs, the schedule can become quite delayed. This affected the budget as costs for materials inflated in price. Similarly, the site plan changed in the middle of the process and robbed the original site of valuable square footage that made the project economically feasible. By the end of the process the project never got built. The actions of a review board helped sink the whole enterprise.

    Worse yet, in Venturi’s recollection of the process was the bullying and insults targeted at Venturi’s original design proposal. This brings me to my original reason for writing this article. One prominent member of the Washington DC Fine Arts commission was a big name architect from the illustrious NY City firm of Skidmore Owings and Merril (SOM). This company single-handedly brought the avant garde to the masses in commercial and private buildings the world over. Gordon Bunshaft had broken new ground in the Modern movement or International style of architecture with a number of commissions in Chicago and NYC. He was a genius by all accounts and very well aware of it. Along with this authority came an overarching ego that was going to level all threats to the established order of which he was a part. Enter postmodern architecture in the form of Venturi, Scott Brown & Associates.

    Venturi was visible in the publishing arena through articles written for architecture magazines and a few books. He was attempting to question the dominant style that had evolved from Le Corbusier, Walter Gropius, and Ludwig Mies Van der rohe. Throw in Louis I. Kahn, IM Pei and Phillip Johnson and Gordon Bunshaft as the heirs of the mantle of Moderne and now you can see this couldn’t end well for Robert Venturi. Nowhere in the article does Venturi go into any discussion of who Bunshaft is or what he had accomplished up until then. Instead he treats Bunshaft as a sudo faceless bureaucrat appointed to this arbitrary review board. Which makes this all the more impressive as you read Venturi’s account of how mean Bunshaft was through all the precedings of each review board meeting. If Bunshaft didn’t have score to settle with Venturi I would be surprised. The other possibility is maybe Bunshaft hated everything he ever saw in a review board meeting regardless of who the designer was. Here now is a sampling of what Robert Venturi recollects from meetings with the DC Fine Arts Commission back in 1968:

    “We felt the overall scheme was greatly improved,” said a letter from the Chairman:

    We now look forward to seeing an imaginative development of the architectural expression of the building. Unfortunately, the sketches that we saw showed a very bland and unrelieved treatment of the facade. In fact, there was little difference between the paving pattern and the building itself. Surely the architect can do better than this.

    Bunshaft said,

    … We disapprove the exterior one hundred percent. We don’t like it at all. It is very coarse, has no character of any sort . . . a sort of nonentity of architecture. I think the indication of signs and things is a deliberate effort to be anti- design, to sort of let everybody have a ball. The grayness of the building, coarseness of joining and detailing — I think you might say we think it is ugly and I think that’s about all we have to say.

    Venturi now was defending his right as architect to design the building himself:

    At the fourth meeting we tried to show that sophisticated architects had carefully designed the proportions and details of the facade to look ordinary because the extraordinary building in this neighborhood is at the end of Maryland Avenue with a big dome on top.

    Aline Saarinen noted that our elevations looked like wallpaper.

    Bunshaft continued:

    We all listened to [Venturi’s] spiel at the previous meeting. . . . I think the position in a nutshell is for an architect to make a very good building for that site not, in his career, to do a building that is different than the one he did before, or that is different from what is au courant. . . . Remember this is Washington.

    So things went all the way to one more full meeting before everyone got tired and just approved the final revision:

    [At the fifth meeting we presented the design that passed. It followed the spirit of the law. The Kafkaesque aura, the personal insults, the questionable professional ethics, and the superficial process of review perpetrated by this particular board are revealed in our account of our experience.]

    Which brings me to the final last evidence of what transpired. Let’s first start with the original model of the project:

    Transportation Square proposal

    Now let’s see the final submission:Transportation Square final submission

    This is an ugly building, the DC Commission of Fine Arts got what they deserved. But luckily for Robert Venturi this thing never got built. Gordon Bunshaft however got his big ugly Concrete Doughnut built right on the Mall to house modern artwork for the Smithsonian Institute. One only need look at the Hirshorn Museum to see the height of what Gordon Bunshaft considers ‘architecture’. In a turn of poetic justice Bunshaft’s own house on Long Island the Travertine House eventually was left to rot by the daughter of none other than Martha Stewart. The historical stature of Bunshaft and his accomplishments held no sway with Ms. Stewart and eventually led to the house being torn down. A fitting legacy ending to a man who dumped all over Robert Venturi during the review period for this project by the DC Fine Arts Commission.

  • A new word in the lexicon of foreclosures: TrashOut

    Woe to those who cannot afford a moving van before they are foreclosed upon. All your ‘stuff’ is going to the landfill like so much cheap stuff bought at WalMart. Made in China, dumped in California.
    Click to View the KCET story

  • On the verge of H.264

    It’s no secret Robert X. Cringely follows the strategic directions of Apple’s laptop/desktop design teams:

    Ctrl-Alt-Del Oct. 20, 2008
    The Eyes Have It Aug.1, 2008
    Let the Chips Fall July 12, 2007
    The Great Apple Video Encoder Attack of 2007 Mar 8, 2007

    In Robert X. Cringley’s recent posting on PBS.org brings up the topic of Apple’s attempt to incorporate H.264 into their product line. New buyers of the most recently introduced Mac laptops have rushed to measure the CPU load of their machines while playing back HD TV and Movie content downloaded from the iTunes store. CPU’s are now only idling along at 20% capacity versus the old 100%+ experienced in the previous generation of Mac desktops and laptops. Where is the secret sauce?

    Cringley expected NTT of Japan to provide a special custom made encoder/decoder chip specifically geared for the H.264 codec. However nowhere in the current tear downs of the the MacBook and MacBook Pro has anyone identified a free standing chip doing the offloading of H.264 decoding. Now he’s speculating the chip might have been licensed as a ‘core’ by nVidia and incorporated into the new fully integrated chipset that drives all the I/O on the motherboard. Somewhere in there maybe even in the 16 cores of the video processor some kind of H.264 decoding acceleration is going on. But it’s not being touted very widely by the Apple marketing machine.

    Cringely suspects there’s a reason to soft pedal H.264 acceleration on the new Macintoshes. While iTunes has been in the past nothing more than a means to an end (you want to sell iPods? Well get the content to play on them first!), the burgeoning field of online content distribution may be the next big end. Netflix has shown that even in a snail mail distribution  network, there is potential for a profit to be made. But as I’ve heard coworkers repeat in the past, where’s the profit of letting someone OWN the content. There is a feeling amongst a number of internet bloggers, consultants, and insiders that Hollywood wants to rent, not let you own the creative output of their studios. Whether it be music, TV or film you have to pay in order play. A one time ownership fee is a hard way to make a living. But future payments for each viewing, now that’s a guaranteed revenue stream.

    What’s standing in the way of the stream is the series of tubes. The interwebs as they exist in the U.S. today make the Netflix distribution network far more workable and profitable than any attempt to push 5GB of HD versions of SpiderMan 3 into your Apple TV. The network will not allow for this to work on any scale right now. So the first step in the plan is to get H.264 decoding to work effortlessly on Mac products then sit back and wait and hope somehow the network will evolve to the level that Steve Jobs thinks it should.

    What would lead Steve Jobs to think the network is going to rush in and save the day? How many articles do you read on Slashdot regularly about how far behind the U.S. is when it comes to Internet infrastructure? Why does anyone at Apple think this is going to work? It’s quite a stretch, and I don’t see it happening in my lifetime. Good Luck Apple.

  • Provocative article on Fibre Channel Storage

    Over at the Register there’s an article on a report about the Future of Fibre Channel in the Data Centre (British spellings of course). The trends being spotted now are duofold.

    1. Internal disks on storage arrays are moving to Serial Attached Storage (SAS) whose interface speeds continue on a blistering increase with each new generation.
    2. Optical Fibre Channel interconnects are deemed too difficult to manage along with the attendant switches and directors. Between software and hardware far too much expertise is required or needs to be added to existing Data Center staffing.

    Following these trends to their logical conclusions a recent development called Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) us usurping the mindshare that FC over fibre optics once had. Costs and expertise have dictated the cheaper less complicated interface be used wherever and whenever possible. The prediction now is that Serial Attached Storage will be the next big thing, the next wave of migrations within the Data Center. The possibilities extend to SAS over Ethernet as the eventual target of these consolidations and migrations. So FCoE may be a bridge to SASoE. As Data Center migrations go, it may be the case new installs adopt the new technology with older FC based systems eventually being left to migrate when they reach their operational lifespan (10 years for a Data Center hardware/software combo?).

  • Learning from Las Vegas, Learning from Levittown

    I’ve known about Robert Venturi for a number of years. I was accidentally exposed to the historical fact of Post Modernism being an architectural movement by a professor while I was studying art in College. I was flabbergasted. I had never thought all of what I knew up to that time as Post Modern had started in the U.S. as an outgrowth of architecture and the person who championed the idea was Robert Venturi. Now many can argue Post Modernism cannot be described as the result of any one person’s activities. There’s a lot of philosophers working prior to WW2 and after that could be called “Post Modern”. There are a number of film theorists, cultural critics, academics who could all be credited as helping evolve the ideas of Post Modernism. But being naive at that point in my life and believing in the ‘Modern’ tradition of Art History where things having a beginning, middle and end, crediting one person with Post Modernism made complete sense. And because I had never heard of Robert Venturi and had never once suspected Architecture might have been the first ‘medium’ to move in the direction of Post Modernism, I had to find out more.

    Thank god there are Libraries on College campuses. I went to the Library, walked into the stacks and found the architecture section. I did some shelf reading of titles and authors and didn’t really do a good job of tracking down Robert Venturi, but the name and the mystique stuck with me for a very long time. Through my days as an undergraduate in College I knew eventually I had to find out more about this guy. Before I knew it, I had graduated and eventually got into Graduate School for more studying of Art. My first year as a Graduate student was okay, I let myself get sucked up into some political battles, but the big bright light of the year was Summer classes. Our little school conducted workshops in the summer and visiting professors are great in an art program. We had a guy from Kansas City teach a class on interactive multimedia and we were using cheap, and easy Apple Hypercard to learn the basics. What was even better was this fellow’s encyclopedic knowledge of all things Post Modern (from Umberto Eco, to Stuart Malthroup) and his ability to recall things that were similar to one another. For this guy everything was kind of like one another. Whereas in philosophy and criticism, you dissect things based on their differences. Similarities and analogies and metaphors are what I’m all about so I really liked this guys approach to things. And when he did his slide lecture he didn’t just show us interactive multimedia. No, no, no. He gave us comparisons of things that had similarities to interactive multimedia which really opened up the possibilities of what could be created in an interactive format.

    And then when we got on the topic of books, this guy brought up the name of an architect who produced a crazy book that was kind of a multimedia experience (for the time it was made in 1972 it was avant garde). It was Robert Venturi all over again. He had put together a book called “Learning from Las Vegas” which was the product of a study made of the architecture of Las Vegas (Fremont and the Strip). I didn’t know the details, all I saw was 3 slides at most showing diagrams and maps and anthropological photo studies of types of buildings. I had never seen anything like it. And I vaguely remembered the name: Robert Venturi. Once I recalled fully that his name had come up once before in a similarly startling fashion, I absolutely had to find out more about him. So I kept an eye out when I would visit used book stores and eventually one day in Charlottesville, VA I happened across a smallish book on Robert Venturi with some photos of buildings he had designed. And I had to say compared to other architecture books of the Modern or International style, Venturi’s buildings as buildings were not like other people’s buildings. They were enigmatic in a kind of subtle way. There may be a signature ‘style’ but I couldn’t find it and say in my mind “Oh that’s got to be a Robert Venturi building”. Which eventually piqued my curiosity so much I read the whole text of the book to find out more about this architect. I discovered a little bit about his background, where he studied and so forth. But I also found out publishing books was something he did every so often too. While he occasionally taught he wasn’t just an architecture professor or just a consultant. He was a real architect being commissioned to design things or propose projects. He was real and working and not just a theorist. And he was driven to write about architecture too. Very curious indeed.

    But what about that crazy book, “Learning from Las Vegas”? It didn’t occur to me to really seek it out until I bought that used book and looked at the bibliography and found Venturi’s list of books up to that time. Everything in that used book seemed to point to the work “Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture” as the magnum opus of Robert Venturi. I made a point then to follow the rules of Modern Art History and start at the beginning. I may have been more interest in Las Vegas, but I had to know what proceeded Las Vegas. Eventually I found a copy of “Complexity and Contradiction” in the Library. It had a few thumbnail sized photos for examples, a few thumbnails sized illustrations but it was mostly text. It wasn’t very good reading, it was somewhat academic. I later found it was essentially a more complete fully worked up vision of his graduate Dissertation. But it was interesting in a few ways. He took historical examples of famous architecture and really paid more attention to the details of the buildings. A made up and exaggerated example of this would be something like say the Palace of Versailles. Now comes the fun part where I make fun of Venturi.

    Versailles is famous as being the palace of Louis XIV (cat toes). And for having a really strong design of buildings and the grounds together, a tour de force of complete architecture for the ages. Instead of looking at the layout of the buildings and the grounds Venturi might look at or collect every example of a lighting fixture at the Palace of Versailles. Or he might get examples of every handrail on every staircase at the Palace of Versailles. What on the surface seems like an insult to the Art Historian is a very careful attempt to look at the practicalities of a building that is being lived in. It’s boring, it’s inane, it’s facetious, but it is meant to really call into question the overwhelming influence of the Modernist program on Art History and Architectural Design. Modernism would be so wrapped up with form and light and the ‘program’ of the building, everything that could be called the ‘not so subtle’ aspects. Venturi recognizes that part exists, but Architecture is not ONLY form, light and program. It is that, plus. At MIT’s School of Engineering the principle followed on any project, proof of concept or DEMO is not what features go in and which ones are eliminated (Less is More for instance). No, no, no. The principle is much more liberal and expansive. If you cannot decide between two things because each one has beneficial though not essential differences then you must INCLUDE them both. This is the idea of both/and. Venturi’s philosophy of inclusion is the seeming polar opposite of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s principle of essential qualities expressed in the saying, “Less is More”. Venturi’s feeling is that philosophical conclusion can only lead to monumental architecture that is more sculpture and monument than shelter and living quarter.

    Which brings us to the Yale School of Architecture and Fall of 1970. Venturi wanted to conduct a special field work course where a ‘study’ was conducted of the Levittown housing development. The title was named provokingly, “Learning from Levittown”. As a pre-fabbed postwar suburban housing development, Levittown was showered with disdain, resentment, and disapproval from all corners of the professional architecture world. It was a commercial project meant to make money fast, fast, fast and meet the huge demand for houses after WW2. It was a huge success in both respects and it spawned a wave of similar projects all over the U.S. Unlike carefully designed masterpieces like Frank Lloyd Wright’s Usonian style ranch houses. These borrowed in a very loose way all the parts of the Usonian house that made good economic sense. Venturi felt that the whole bias and chauvinism against the suburb was an impediment to all architects who followed the party line and felt Suburban = Bad. Instead Venturi entered into this project with the idea that Levittown was as valid and valuable to study as Chartres Cathedral. But Why?

    Pragmatism gets a bad rap no matter what field it is practiced in. Whether it be medicine, art, or politics nobody has great praise for the folks who just want to get stuff done and move on to the next thing. That’s not to say they are pragmatists are sloppy, impatient, or easily bored. Instead pragmatism when applied to things like architecture acknowledges how long Man has lived and practiced Architecture. Some things have been sorted out. Unlike Frank Lloyd Wright, maybe we don’t need to design every light fixture, chair, waste basket, sink handle and toilet that goes into every building we design. Maybe the architect’s role is to design the building and allow people to then live their own lives as they see fit. Similarly Venturi talks about the exigencies of cost. Architects like Wright were famous for cost overruns, delays in schedule and after the building was given the certificate for habitation, numerous problems with leaks, structural issues, etc. The pragmatism of Venturi surrounding the cost of a building was centered on providing what the customer wanted at the cost they wanted and then within that budget adding the subtleties of decoration that would identify the building as a Venturi building.

    In studying Levittown, Venturi wanted to acknowledge that suburbs and merchant builders associations exist too. The program of this type of architecture is worthy of study in order to ‘deconstruct’ the conventions followed in the design. Through analyzing the historical references made in the design one could try to understand what it was that attracted so many people to these houses in the first place. Once the desire was nailed down, then an architect could use those same references in future projects to more closely match the project to what the customer was looking for. It’s boring, but not without interest through the details,  through the decoration, not through the adventurous program of the building. One expects an adventurous program at a theme park, a jungle gym, an obstacle course. For every day living the history has numerous examples of ‘what works’. And that should followed, then provide the architectural design that enhances or helps make the building more original looking. People first, design second and hopefully costs will fall inline.

  • Warning Signs

    There are certain behaviors that help identify passive-aggressive behavior. [3]

    A passive-aggressive person may not have all of these behaviors, and may have other non-passive-aggressive traits.

  • links for 2008-10-02