| Architect builds strength into innovative
temporary shelter (By Kim Campbell)
NEW YORK — It
sounds like something a kid might dream up: a structure made of shipping
containers and paper tubes. But the Nomadic
Museum on Pier 54 in Manhattan was designed by a grown-up — one
who is being recognized for his contribution to architecture.
The
temporary museum on the Hudson River — built
to house a traveling photography exhibition — will be an introduction for many
Americans to Shigeru Ban, the Japanese architect known for his work with
recyclable and reusable materials, particularly paper.
With its
cardboard columns and cathedral-like ceiling, the museum offers a hint of Mr.
Ban's range. He has created emergency housing for earthquake survivors and was
part of a team that was a finalist in the bid to redesign the World Trade
Center site. This month
he was presented with an award from the University of Virginia
— one of many he's earned since starting his firm in 1985.
Besides
his use of paper, Ban's legacy may be his ability to make buildings portable, a
characteristic that addresses both the needs of those left homeless by natural
disasters and an increasingly transient society.
When
approached by photographer Gregory Colbert to design the Nomadic Museum,
Ban applied a technique he'd used on a smaller scale — one that allows the
building to be dismantled and shipped to its next stop using some of the 148
containers that make up its walls.
Along
with that efficiency comes a distinguishable
aesthetic. "He's someone who really creates spaces that ... feel
uplifting. They open you up," says Mr. Colbert, whose exhibition,
"Ashes and Snow," on display in New York until June 6, consists of more than
100 photographs of Colbert and others from around the world interacting with
animals in natural settings.
Ban's
work reflects his desire not to waste anything as well as his concern for
balancing expensive projects for wealthy clients against simpler ones for
underserved people. Architects are typically expected to concentrate on the
needs of clients with deep pockets. Ban says he's not happy unless he's
focusing on both ends of the spectrum.
"I
try to [keep] my mental balance by working [with] minority people as well as
privileged people," he says in a phone interview from Paris. He is working on a satellite branch of
the Pompidou Centre, to be built in the town of Metz.
In the
next month, he also expects to start construction on 100 new homes in a village
in Sri Lanka
where fishermen were displaced by the recent tsunami. He's using locally made
brick and wood from the country's rubber trees. And he's found a way to make it
easier for residents to build the structures themselves: The bricks fit
together like Legos, so bricklayers aren't required.
"He
has opened up and made public a new avenue for architects," says Karen Van
Lengen, dean of the University of Virginia School of
Architecture and chair of the selection committee for the Thomas Jefferson
Medal in Architecture, recently awarded to Ban. "His humanitarian work has
been a whole new area for architects to enter into.... He's trying to develop
systems that can be used from place to place."
A decade
ago, Ban created the Voluntary Architects' Network, a nongovernmental
organization to provide the needy with housing. He's worked on many
humanitarian projects, from helping Rwandan refugees improve their temporary
shelters without cutting down scarce trees, to combining
his paper tubes with local resources to build emergency housing for earthquake
survivors in Japan, Turkey, and India. After the earthquake in Kobe, Japan,
he helped design not only housing but a temporary church using paper-tube
columns.
"I
always design the temporary building as a permanent building," he says.
"The paper church I designed in Kobe
... was meant to be a temporary church, but it is still there after 10
years."
The
tubing Ban uses — or "evolved wood," as he's called it — is
water-resistant, sturdy, and made of recycled paper. He first used it in the
mid-'80s, when faced with a project in which he couldn't afford wood. But the
architect has said he doesn't want to be known just for using paper (he's also
experienced with glass, bamboo, and more traditional materials like concrete
and steel).
His
humanitarian work is perhaps generating the most attention. It was one of the
things that stood out to the selection committee at the University of Virginia.
And it was Ban's work on the church and temporary housing in Japan and Turkey that caught the eye of
photographer Colbert while he was traveling.
"He
understood and is inspired by creating spaces that are shared in a very
democratic way," says Colbert. "It's not just supposed to be for the
elite."
Colbert wanted
a structure that was unlike a typical museum with its wall-mounted descriptions
of each work. Instead, he's tried to stimulate all of the senses, with lights
turned low, evocative music, and a provocative building that requires visitors
to walk down a wooden path to view the photos suspended between columns on
either side. The photographer describes it as a kinetic piece of architecture,
because it will change shape as it reaches each stop on its world tour, in part
to accommodate more people. (After New York,
"Ashes and Snow" travels to the Santa Monica
pier in Los Angeles.)
Even the steel shipping containers will be rented in each location.
"I'm
not religious, but I find that it's spiritual," says Alfreda
Mautner, an artist who lives nearby, who was visiting
the museum for the second time on a recent afternoon. "I feel everything's
connected here."
Ban says
he wasn't aiming to give people a religious experience, but that the spacing
he's chosen for the inside is much like that of a cathedral. When people go
into a church or cathedral, they are often amazed by the space at first, he
says, but then as they start to pray they focus more on what they're doing.
Likewise,
with the Nomadic Museum, "You may be amazed by this
space," he explains, "but ... I was hoping the people can start
concentrating [on Colbert's] work, and the image of the space is disappearing
and it's becoming the backdrop of his photos."
This article was sourced from The Christian Science Monitor
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