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I've meandered now
from the downtown ferry terminal up to the Pike Place Public Market. This
collection of fully functioning 19th and early 20th Century concrete and
wood buildings literally form a vertical edge between the downtown core
and the waterfront. I've purchased some fresh baked bread, Spanish cheese,
and a little basket of out-of-season raspberries and am now sitting in
a public eating area in the center of the main arcade. The cold air permeating
the market has not deterred the weekend crowds. The place is filled with
grocery shoppers, children, tourists, suburban teenagers, musicians, panhandlers,
young urbanites eating Chinese take-out, old Asian men eating pizza, an
elderly balloon artist painted like a clown, knots of people admiring
flowers, fish mongers throwing salmon, hucksters calling out specials
and people just walking, looking and enjoying this intensely urban show.
I love this place,
as does everyone in this region. Why? Is it that the market serves as
a tangible conduit for people to make an emotional connection to this
city and region? Partly, perhaps. Or is it more fundamental than that?
Do we respond so viscerally to this place because it takes the everyday
experience of shopping and, by its social and physical setting, reveals
more truly the actual nature of "market"? The directness of
social experience, the personal contact with the merchants or craftspeople,
the barter, the banter, the exchange of information, the visual experience
of hand-painted pricing, the careful arrangement of produce or crafts,
the presence of the crowds of shoppers all serve to connect us to the
fundamental essence of the institution of "commerce". It is
real. And because it is so real and true we connect to it and then respond
to it emotionally. We simply feel more here than at the automated check-out
of the supermarket or the mall. I suspect that all markets of this classic
variety arouse similar emotions.
This example of an
institution revealing its true nature and thus creating an emotional and
memorable response is more than applicable to our profession. It is not
clear to me that we, as a profession, see or value this. It is difficult
to listen to the voices of every one of the social and material components
of a circumstance and produce a design that allows them to sing in harmony.
It is much easier to pick up on a narrowly focused topical abstraction
or a technological marvel and run with it, while ignoring the tangible
realities of religion, place, materials, and even institutions.
My concern is that
instead of moving towards an architecture that exhibits a deeper comprehension
and reflection of the ever-present variety of this planet, we are instead
moving towards architecture that very often arrogantly and myopically
disrespects everything except it's own abstract theory or novel technology.
This is a loss, because the very elements that can help us create a vital
and unique architecture are and have always been with us, and I feel that
it is our current rigid focus on form that keeps us from designing an
architecture that emanates not only from historical theory or technology
but also from culture, place, climate and materials.
This was literally
brought home to me when I received the December 2001 issue of Architectural
Record. Depicted on the cover was a beautiful computer generated drawing
of a building that floated with no context, almost no sense of materiality
and even seemed to defy gravity. This stunning drawing led me to conjecture
that our profession's current fascination with the computer's novel and
almost magical ability to manipulate spaces blinded us to the reality
of all of the other physical and emotional circumstances that contribute
to the making of architecture. It is my belief that in the long run we
will find a deeper and more profound use of the computer, and will use
it as a tool for creating designs that more thoroughly reveal and reflect
the nature of our visual and emotional experiences, just as this bustling
market reveals, connects and engages us to the fundamental realities of
"commerce."
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