Amale Andraos & Dan Wood - MIT Architecture...Amale Andraos & Dan Wood Conversation held in two...

7
68 PROJECT 69 Issue 2 CONVERSATIONS ANDRAOS & WOOD Amale Andraos & Dan Wood Conversation held in two parts at the office of WORKac, New York City, 29 September 2011 and 24 May 2013. Unless otherwise noted, all work courtesy of the architects. Editors How has your practice evolved, not only out of your education, but also out of the places where you’ve worked? In your case, maybe this is OMA specifically. Dan Wood Our thinking on this issue has evolved and changed. We may not agree. Amale Andraos I don’t think we disagree. [Laughter] Amale Andraos I think our project is frustrating because it’s not necessarily only an architectural project. It is an architecture and project. I’m not sure if one can define that as a project. The work is certainly at the intersection of architecture and. Editors Is it the “and” that continues to evolve over time? Amale Andraos The “and” so far has been urbanism, ecological urbanism, infrastructure (how to architecturalize infrastructure), nature (the relationship between architecture and nature); program is where we started. Dan Wood And politics, to a certain degree. Amale Andraos Yeah, if we can still aspire to be political. I think we would embrace that, though it’s been difficult. We aren’t big on the autonomy of architecture. It’s very much a project of engagement: trying to find new ways to operate with relative autonomy. Form is one of the many ingredients we might consider in a project. Strategy is often more important. We are very strategic about the moves that we make. I’m not sure if this constitutes a project. I think we have an urban project in terms of rethinking the urban, the rural and the natural, through mixing them up and rethinking the relationship between those entities. Architecture seems to somehow fit into that larger project. Editors You said that your project and the idea of the “and” is evolving. Have you thought about how or why that happens? Is it on a case by case basis for a particular project or a particular studio? For instance, in your first studio at Princeton, the project was in Panama. You seemed to get into eco- urbanism almost by accident. The two things seemed to come together at the right moment. Dan Wood That’s a bit of the evolution. I don’t think we would ever present it as an accident now, even though, who knows what the truth is? I think that there is a project of not having a project right now. For people like Bjarke [Ingels] it’s all about the story: this leads to that, which leads to that, and so on until the final solution has evolved out of a certain number of circumstances or strategies that came together at a specific moment that defined that particular project. That’s the narrative, but of course when you look at the work there’s a definite project of stepping, stacking—there are a lot of formal projects. I think that WORKac is moving away from that kind of narrative, because a lot of things come up in our work time and time again. Often there’s just not enough within the situation to drive the project in terms of our own interests or in terms of what we might think is interesting. So a lot of the time we’re bringing our own agenda. Amale Andraos Even if it’s not a project, it is an agenda. We clearly have an agenda. Dan Wood I think that’s the critical part of our project. Amale Andraos We brought a completely new agenda to the PS1 competition that brought it into a new zone. We tend to do that. Dan Wood That’s a project where it’s very hard to have the Bjarke narrative. You need to have shade, you need light, you need sun; therefore we did... a farm? Not really. You can’t make a Bjarke story out of that. When we started the office in 2003 I had already been out of school for eleven years and we had no idea what we were going to do. After ten years of working at OMA—four years for Amale—OMA was the mindset. We were steeped in that way of thinking. So our five year plan with WORKac was to say yes L’Assemblée Radieuse, Libreville, Gabon, 2013. Rendering.

Transcript of Amale Andraos & Dan Wood - MIT Architecture...Amale Andraos & Dan Wood Conversation held in two...

Page 1: Amale Andraos & Dan Wood - MIT Architecture...Amale Andraos & Dan Wood Conversation held in two parts at the office of WORKac, New York City, 29 September 2011 and 24 May 2013. Unless

68 P RO J E C T 69Issue 2

CO

NV

ER

SAT

ION

SA

ND

RA

OS

& W

OO

DAmale Andraos & Dan Wood

Conversation held in two parts at the office of WORKac, New York City, 29 September 2011 and 24 May 2013.

Unless otherwise noted, all work courtesy of the architects.

EditorsHow has your practice evolved, not only out of your education, but also out of the places where you’ve worked? In your case, maybe this is OMA specifically.

Dan Wood Our thinking on this issue has evolved and changed. We may not agree.

Amale AndraosI don’t think we disagree. [Laughter]

Amale AndraosI think our project is frustrating because it’s not necessarily only an architectural project. It is an architecture and project. I’m not sure if one can define that as a project. The work is certainly at the intersection of architecture and.

EditorsIs it the “and” that continues to evolve over time?

Amale AndraosThe “and” so far has been urbanism, ecological urbanism, infrastructure (how to architecturalize infrastructure), nature (the relationship between architecture and nature); program is where we started.

Dan WoodAnd politics, to a certain degree.

Amale AndraosYeah, if we can still aspire to be political. I think we would embrace that, though it’s been difficult. We aren’t big on the autonomy of architecture. It’s very much a project of engagement: trying to find new ways to operate with relative autonomy. Form is one of the many ingredients we might consider in a project. Strategy is often more important. We are very strategic about the moves that we make. I’m not sure if this constitutes a project. I think we have an urban project in terms of rethinking the urban, the rural and the natural, through mixing them up and rethinking the relationship between those entities. Architecture seems to somehow fit into that larger project.

EditorsYou said that your project and the idea of the “and” is evolving. Have you thought about how or why that happens? Is it on a case by case basis for a particular project or a particular studio? For instance, in your first studio at Princeton, the project was in Panama. You seemed to get into eco-urbanism almost by accident. The two things seemed to come together at the right moment.

Dan WoodThat’s a bit of the evolution. I don’t think we would ever present it as an accident now, even though, who knows what the truth is? I think that there is a project of not having a project right now. For people like Bjarke [Ingels] it’s all about the story: this leads to that, which leads

to that, and so on until the final solution has evolved out of a certain number of circumstances or strategies that came together at a specific moment that defined that particular project. That’s the narrative, but of course when you look at the work there’s a definite project of stepping, stacking—there are a lot of formal projects. I think that WORKac is moving away from that kind of narrative, because a lot of things come up in our work time and time again. Often there’s just not enough within the situation to drive the project in terms of our own interests or in terms of what we might think is interesting. So a lot of the time we’re bringing our own agenda.

Amale Andraos Even if it’s not a project, it is an agenda. We clearly have an agenda.

Dan Wood I think that’s the critical part of our project.

Amale AndraosWe brought a completely new agenda to the PS1 competition that brought it into a new zone. We tend to do that.

Dan WoodThat’s a project where it’s very hard to have the Bjarke narrative. You need to have shade, you need light, you need sun; therefore we did... a farm? Not really. You can’t make a Bjarke story out of that. When we started the office in 2003 I had already been out of school for eleven years and we had no idea what we were going to do. After ten years of working at OMA—four years for Amale—OMA was the mindset. We were steeped in that way of thinking. So our five year plan with WORKac was to say yes

L’Assemblée Radieuse, Libreville, Gabon, 2013. Rendering.

Page 2: Amale Andraos & Dan Wood - MIT Architecture...Amale Andraos & Dan Wood Conversation held in two parts at the office of WORKac, New York City, 29 September 2011 and 24 May 2013. Unless

70 P RO J E C T 71Issue 2

CO

NV

ER

SAT

ION

SA

ND

RA

OS

& W

OO

D

to everything. We decided we weren’t going to teach or just do theoretical work. We were going to take whatever came our way and use that to try to find out what we were interested in and what the project was.

Amale AndraosIn 2003 we decided that “say yes to everything” as a method could be a kind of rebound after OMA. PS1 really came completely out of our personal interest in the visionary, and in the relationship between the urban, the rural, the natural and our extra architectural love affair with Michael Pollan. Also, our thinking on 49 Cities [(New York: Storefront Books, 2009)] led to PS1, in a weird way. That certainly set us on a trajectory.

Dan WoodRight. PS1 was our first big project that had an agenda in such a clear way. So that was the end of the “say yes to everything” idea, where we really kind of took charge and just collected the things that we were interested in and put them in a project that had no other real requirements. That led to the next five years, which were really up and down because of the recession. But throughout that time we really tried to hone the project. I would say that all of that subsequent five years of work culminates in Gabon [the Assemblée Radieuse in Libreville, Gabon], which is like the next hinge.

Amale AndraosPS1 also led to a number of very real projects. It led to all of the Edible Schoolyards and it led to a lot of theoretical projects like “Infoodstructure,” which is a video that we did; it led to “Plug Out” and a series of competitions and installations that continued that investigation. There was also an urban scale dimension, which led to the New Holland Island Cultural Center Master Plan in St. Petersburg where there’s a complete integration between landscape, architecture and preservation. But there was also a series of competitions that looked at architecture, landscape and food. Our competition entry for a building on the National Mall was to do an alternative to the landform building; how do you integrate architecture and landscape without ending up with a buried building? The conference center for Libreville is an integration of architecture and landscape in what is still a very wild setting around the building. It’s a celebration of systems and ecosystems and how that becomes part of a new kind of representation.

EditorsI appreciate the way that you talk about the series of five year plans. You don’t suggest that there are a series of projects (with a lowercase p) and that those projects led to an interest. There was just work, and it almost didn’t matter what that work was. It only mattered that you were engaged and thinking and working together.

Dan WoodYes.We were so interested in program in the first few years, and that really came out of the clients and issues of the sites.

Amale AndraosIt was one hundred percent engagement. But in a way, that’s also just the way we work: the project with a small p, which provides options or opportunities to find something that resonates for us after trying out a number of different paths. It’s much more of a horizontal weaving of

PF1, MoMA PS1 Young Architects Program, Long Island City, NY, 2008.

Page 3: Amale Andraos & Dan Wood - MIT Architecture...Amale Andraos & Dan Wood Conversation held in two parts at the office of WORKac, New York City, 29 September 2011 and 24 May 2013. Unless

72 P RO J E C T 73Issue 2

CO

NV

ER

SAT

ION

SA

ND

RA

OS

& W

OO

D

interests. If you only explain it with the clarity of a big p “Project”, then you’re missing out on some of the discoveries that you might make in the process.

EditorsHow do you see your representational techniques and your material interests intersecting with the polemical quality of your work? Do you think it heightens the polemic? Camouflages the polemic? Does it make the polemic more palatable?

Amale AndraosThat’s an interesting question. Even when our projects are kind of serious or satirical they look very fresh and pink and optimistic. I think there is a little bit of a naivete to the representation. It’s very fresh. I’m not sure if that’s strategic, but that’s how it is.

Dan WoodYeah. It’s interesting. The representation is a bit divorced from the work. Obviously, we’re always trying to get the point across in a fairly straightforward manner, but the way that it looks always comes out more colorful than we might have originally expected.

Amale Andraos We like clarity. That’s not very trendy. [Laughter] But there’s something about the beautiful era of modernism that we’re nostalgic for. And working

in emerging countries or developing countries, we’re able to plug into that interest. There isn’t much anxiety about articulating or projecting the future and maintaining a high level of optimism. Of course, we’re Generation X, and our faith in progress is not absolute. But there’s at least a desire.

Editors But you’re saying that clarity is more of a desire in emerging countries, where the context is not as clear?

Amale AndraosThere is definitely a desire for clarity, and I think that architecture can play a pivotal role in that, for better or worse.

EditorsI was once told that there are two ways to conceptualize the diagram: one is that the diagram explains the project. The other is that the diagram must be explained; the diagram becomes the generator of all of the interest within the project. Does your project in Gabon operate under this second understanding of a diagram?

Dan WoodIt’s true the diagram is not the project. Sometimes it’s very hard to explain to students that the diagram of the project is important, that it helps to clarify the project and is able

to give structure to a large part of the project. But a project that is just a diagram will always fall flat. One of my favorite quotes, which I always share with students, comes from Jasper Johns. He wrote, “Do something, do something to that, and then do something to that.” It’s really those second and third operations that maintain the interest and complexity of a project. Gabon, for example, appears to be totally clear; it’s a tilted cylinder with three gardens equally spaced and all the program divided evenly within it. It’s very easy to explain to somebody, but once you get into it you realize that it’s not a cylinder, it’s a cone, so every floor is slightly shifted. And it’s not just a cone, it’s a sliced cone, which begins to generate some very complex geometry. So already the very clear outside shell is made more complex. And then the gardens themselves are the most complex geometrical shapes we’ve ever attempted. We like the way that one can immediately understand the organization but one can’t immediately understand the building. That’s very important: a project has to have some interest or excitement that you won’t understand until you get inside the building.

Amale AndraosWe use both types of diagrams. In our process we definitely use the diagram as a generator to conceptualize and clarify relationships for ourselves. Here we use the diagrams operationally. Then there are presentation diagrams with arrows, but those aren’t the tools or the sequence that we use to develop the project. They’re just an explanation of the project.

Dan WoodIf you’re able to generate a good diagram at the beginning it’s a good project. But it’s probably not a great project if you’re just left with that diagram at the end.

Amale AndraosBut it is interesting to make that distinction with students, especially these days...Plug Out, New York, NY, 2009. Aerial rendering.

Locavore Fantasia, New York, NY, 2009. Aerial rendering.

Page 4: Amale Andraos & Dan Wood - MIT Architecture...Amale Andraos & Dan Wood Conversation held in two parts at the office of WORKac, New York City, 29 September 2011 and 24 May 2013. Unless

74 P RO J E C T 75Issue 2

CO

NV

ER

SAT

ION

SA

ND

RA

OS

& W

OO

D

Dan WoodYeah. There are a lot of arrows out there today.

EditorsDo you see yourselves now starting to consciously write more or to teach more, or starting to devote some of your energy to articulations of your work in other terms?

Amale AndraosWe’ve been teaching a little bit everywhere. At Princeton we organized a lecture series, “Shades of Green,” and we interviewed the lecturers. It’s coming out as part of Actar’s next Verb. Writing certainly forces you to articulate positions all the time. Dan has been writing articles about other architects’ projects. It’s definitely something we look to do more of. It’s part of a normal evolution. If you’re not only interested in the professional practice aspect of architecture, you’ve got to find an edge: some new way of operating. Writing and teaching are good places to do that. Teaching also allows you to be part of a community of peers and critics, so it’s always an adventure.

Dan WoodWe’re trying to do a blog for Gabon..

Amale AndraosAnd we can still do it…

Dan WoodWe can still do it! Its all set up, we just haven’t written anything yet. But all of this is really important because it’s about establishing a culture for the office, especially as the office grows and new people come. We can’t sit down with everyone and impart the culture of the office to each of them. So it’s very important that it seep in from the outside, so that when people start here they can be exposed to everything we’ve done.

Amale Andraos The other thing, which can be difficult to maintain, is a pleasure in the process. In the end, as architects, we really have nothing. Either you go after a project and you don’t get it, or you get it but you never know what’s going to happen. Or you get it, it happens and then it’s gone. You have nothing to hold on to. So the process is really all we have.

EditorsThat makes sense relative to what you said about your office’s growth spurt. Are there other growing pains related to that? Changes in the way you work because there are so many new people?

Dan WoodIt’s interesting in the context of the office having a project. That project has to be shared by the office. It’s not enough for just Amale and me to have a project; it’s the office that’s producing the work together. At some point you have to delegate. It’s interesting that that’s an issue now because we’re at a certain size. During the “say yes to everything” days, someone could come into the office and it didn’t matter who you were or what your background was, it was all just absorbed in each particular project. Now it’s important to refer to both the work that we did before and the work that we’re doing now.

Amale AndraosYeah. Now it’s much more about our way of doing things, architecturally.

Dan WoodRight. So it’s only an issue because the office now has more of a…

Amale Andraos…a certain boldness. The relationship to the figure is more clear. All of these things are much more defined now than they once were. So if you

L’Assemblée Radieuse, Libreville, Gabon, 2013. Interior garden rendering.

Urban Aqualoop, Shenzhen Biennale, Shenzhen, China, 2009. Rendering.

Page 5: Amale Andraos & Dan Wood - MIT Architecture...Amale Andraos & Dan Wood Conversation held in two parts at the office of WORKac, New York City, 29 September 2011 and 24 May 2013. Unless

76 P RO J E C T 77Issue 2

CO

NV

ER

SAT

ION

SA

ND

RA

OS

& W

OO

D

come to us with a background in surface, or nuts and bolts, it will be difficult. So it’s a very interesting moment.

Dan WoodIf you come to us and you are interested in the typical architectural issues, it’s going to be hard for you: craft, materials…

Amale Andraos…tectonics; we can’t really do that.

Dan WoodBut other than that, there haven’t been issues with getting bigger, because we’ve always acted bigger than we were. That was one of our rules from the very beginning. Even if we had three people in the office we were thinking on a large scale. And we have a history of working with very large teams. So now it actually feels more exciting. This is where we wanted to get. A lot of our old ways of dealing with big teams have come back to us. It’s kind of second nature.

EditorsEach of your five year plans seems to have culminated in a project of a different scale: PS1 at one scale, Gabon at another. Is that a trajectory that you’re hoping to continue?

Amale Andraos We’re interested in scaling up the ideas, in scaling up complexity and scaling up the number of issues that we can engage. That doesn’t necessarily correlate with the actual scale of the project. I also think it can’t be linear. On the one hand we have Gabon, and on the other we

have the “Edible Schoolyard” projects. We’re doing an installation with a fish farm in the San Diego Children’s Museum. Operating at these different scales will have to continue because there’s an information flow that happens where your brain is constantly shifting. But also Gabon might happen, but then we might shrink back to apartment renovations for a while. Who knows? It’s very difficult to predict. Even though our ambition is to say, “well, we’ve already done that, and now we want to do this,” we definitely are comfortable with the larger scale. But I think that there has been too much “bigness” in the last decade.

Dan WoodRight. Herzog and de Meuron were doing much “bigger” projects, with the Bird’s Nest, whenever that was, ten years ago. But a lot of their newer work is just different. It might be more interesting: more preservation stuff, really working with existing buildings. It’s an interesting model. It’s hard to say for us. Gabon is a commission that is just amazing. We may never be in this exact situation ever again, because we’re doing it this fast, with this many people, and with this much intensity.

Amale AndraosBut I also think that bigness has exhausted itself given our agenda and our interest in environmental questions. We’re fascinated with what’s been happening in Japan in terms of smallness and the extra small: compression. When I teach I’m always saying, “compress, compress!” The sense of scale has somehow gotten lost, because the body doesn’t really exist anymore, with computers, et cetera. So there’s also something about not doing small for small’s sake, but a certain density at the level of architecture.

EditorsIn regard to your Villa Pup project you’ve said that the scale of a project doesn’t necessarily determine the scale of the project’s ideas. So that’s one conceptual pursuit that you have in relation to scale. On the other hand, you have also mentioned a more physical or spatial idea of scale.

Dan WoodRight. Those are not just compression exercises for reasons of budget; it is always an issue. Gabon, for instance, went from 110 meters in diameter to 97 after we won the competition.

EditorsSo you’re well versed in how to make that compression happen.

Villa Pup, 2008. Collage.

Villa Pup, 2008. Collage.

Page 6: Amale Andraos & Dan Wood - MIT Architecture...Amale Andraos & Dan Wood Conversation held in two parts at the office of WORKac, New York City, 29 September 2011 and 24 May 2013. Unless

78 P RO J E C T 79Issue 2

CO

NV

ER

SAT

ION

S

Amale AndraosYes. Every time I visit a modernist jewel, I’m always shocked at how small it is. You think, people must have been smaller.

Dan WoodWe were just in Paul Rudolph’s apartment, which is maybe too much compression.

Amale AndraosThere are, like, twenty levels in his two-story apartment. It’s just amazing.

Dan WoodIt’s like the school [Paul Rudolph Hall at Yale]; his house is like a mini version of that. And the stairs are, like, eleven inches wide.

Amale AndraosForm ran its course. Bigness ran its course. It’s just not good enough anymore. Just because it’s big, that doesn’t make it exciting

EditorsAre there more instances of things that you would consider having been exhausted in architecture today? Does that apply to a larger set of things that you see going on in the discipline?

Dan WoodYeah, there’s something that’s been a debate in the profession for thirty years...

Amale AndraosWhat’s the debate?

Dan WoodIt’s the split between the autonomous project...

Amale Andraos...and the engagement project. Right. The autonomous project has appeared in many different ways, as have projects of engagement. I think a lot of us are trying to get beyond that dichotomy. There are some interesting writings about how the autonomy project was never actually autonomous.

Dan WoodIt used to be that the autonomous project was the “serious” project. That was the academic project.

Amale AndraosCertain schools, like Yale and Princeton and Columbia, still operate according to that initial dichotomy. You could still put these schools in these alliances and alignments. The dichotomy still operates only because of the people who are still teaching. We’re in a generation that comes after the people who uphold that dichotomy, and I think we’re going to break through to a new paradigm. Our generation is certainly trying to find new ways to operate in the world and in practice, not just in the lab. If you’re like [Mark] Wigley, and you describe architecture as a field rather than a discipline, suddenly the notion of autonomy disintegrates. That doesn’t mean you’re not in that field. There’s a lot to mine in the autonomous project, but it just isn’t exciting anymore. In the same way, there was this pure faith in progress, there was a pure faith in a certain form of resistance, but by now we’ve seen its limitations.

AN

DR

AO

S &

WO

OD

You’re always working within a power structure, one way or another. So a third possibility would be more interesting.

EditorsThat’s interesting: the notion that the field can accept or embrace diffuseness.

Amale AndraosBut that doesn’t mean you can’t have an agenda. You can, even if that agenda is not always as rigid. Similarly, I think form for form’s sake, for pure pleasure, has also run its course. How could you outdo Zaha [Hadid]? Why would you? So we’re also post-form. It’s just not enough anymore; it’s had its exuberant moment.

EditorsIt seems that if autonomy was once considered the serious project, today it’s been used as an opportunity to introduce humor into architecture. You’ve spoken before about humor in your work. In your project of engagement, it seems like it would be more difficult to use humor when you deal with serious issues. How do you use humor? Is it a means of driving your concepts? Is it used in representation? Or is it just rhetorical?

Dan WoodIf someone is starting a speech, no matter how serious it’s meant to be, he or she will often still start with a joke. In a sense, that’s how we look at it. It’s a way to deal with very difficult issues. You can deflect some of the initial discomfort through humor. In a sense, we find that humor can actually make a project more serious sometimes.

EditorsIt seems that the intent is to get people to say, “Oh, I hadn’t thought of that before.”

Nature-City, Foreclosed, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, 2012. Rendering.

Page 7: Amale Andraos & Dan Wood - MIT Architecture...Amale Andraos & Dan Wood Conversation held in two parts at the office of WORKac, New York City, 29 September 2011 and 24 May 2013. Unless

80 P RO J E C T 81Issue 2

CO

NV

ER

SAT

ION

SA

ND

RA

OS

& W

OO

D

Amale AndraosWithout being didactic though. Without saying, “You are going to take this route because I want you to see this thing.”

Dan WoodIt’s more like what you said: “I hadn’t thought of that before.” That, for me, is an ideal reaction to a project. It’s a lightness and it’s also the humor of surrealism. Surrealism is taken pretty seriously by a lot of people, but it’s almost always funny at the same time. It’s funny to see something in a context you don’t expect. That’s the essence of every joke as well. This runs through all of our work, and in a sense that’s a project: a sharp contrast between one thing and something else that you didn’t expect. For us, that leads to a whole bunch of things, including the realization that things could be different. You can live differently in the city, or you can experience a different view. You can engage with the outside world in a different way. It’s hard to explain, but somehow this utopian notion that in the future—or even right now—something could be different from the way it was yesterday, or the way it was five minutes before. That contrast can be very funny because you’re not expecting a farm in the city, for instance. Humor. It’s an “architecture ‘and’.”

Amale AndraosYeah. Humor. I find that you have to keep it up. But it gets harder.

Dan WoodFunny.

Amale AndraosBut “funny”? I never liked funny.

Dan WoodI like funny.

Amale AndraosOh, I know. Dan likes funny.

Dan WoodIf it bends, it’s funny. If it breaks, it’s not funny.

Amale AndraosIt’s the possibility to imagine something different. The other thing is that we’re interested in the future, and the possibilities of the future.

EditorsAs in a real future?

Amale AndraosYes, a real future. We can imagine a real future. So there is an optimism. There are the critical and funny aspects of the work, but then there’s also optimism about life. We don’t want to give up on the idea of utopia. There’s a certain lightness to it.

Nature-City, Foreclosed, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, 2012. Model.