Posts Tagged Frank Gehry

The best architecture of 2011: Rowan Moore’s choice

It was the year of pop-ups and postmodernism – and the playful Frank Gehry went sky high

In New York they managed to complete the vast 9/11 memorial fountains in time for the 10th anniversary of the events of 2001, while around them rises the strange spectacle of commercial skyscrapers sponsored at huge expense from the public purse. Also in New York, Frank Gehry completed his tower of flats in Spruce Street with a playful beauty that has not been seen in skyscraper design for a while. These days, it's fashionable to knock Gehry for being the father of iconic building, but this tower, and his New World Symphony in Miami, shows that he is what has always been: a proper architect who likes to enjoy himself.

Last year the Serpentine Gallery got the turkey award in this space with its pavilion by Jean Nouvel; now it gets into the top 10 with Peter Zumthor's version of its annual commission. Pop-ups, identified as craze of the year in 2010, are still popping up, with Assemble's Folly for a Flyover leading the field. Olympic projects, such as the stadium and the aquatic centre, are getting their final buff and polish. Both are looking good, if you overlook the temporary add-ons on the latter, and the pointless plastic wrapper planned for the former, supplied courtesy of the Bhopal-implicated Dow Chemical Company.

In other news, postmodernism continued its inevitable revival. The magnificent James Stirling was honoured with a show at Tate Britain, and the V&A is currently revisiting the age of Grace Jones and leopard-skin Formica.

In a strong field of turkeys, the catastrophic Museum of Liverpool breasts the tape ahead of Rafael Viñoly's Firstsite in Colchester, the underwhelming new home of the BBC in Salford Quays and the anti-urban Westfield Stratford City.

TOP 10

8 Spruce Street, New York

Dazzling, elegant fun from Frank Gehry.

The Hepworth Wakefield

David Chipperfield completed two of his sober, considered, light-filled art galleries in 2011, in Margate and Wakefield. The one in Wakefield is the more convincing of the two.

New Court, London

Financial prestige meets cultural super-sophistication in Rem Koolhaas's headquarters for Rothschild.

Brockholes Visitor Village, Preston

A very nice place for looking at nature, on the edge of Preston, by Adam Khan. It floats.

Folly for a Flyover, London

Assemble, maker of the 2010 hit Cineroleum, maintained its form with this temporary cinema/bar/performance space under an elevated section of the A12.

Aquatic Centre, London

Breathtaking inside. Will look good outside, after the Olympics, when they have removed the giant water-wings that contain temporary seating.

Olympic Stadium, London

Handsome in its simplicity, until they wreck it with a festive wrapper for the Games.

Lyric theatre, Belfast

Just plain good, by the Dublin practice O'Donnell and Tuomey.

Maggie's Centres

Three more in the series of high-design cancer centres. The one in Glasgow, by OMA, and the one in Nottingham, by Piers Gough and Paul Smith, stand out.

Serpentine Gallery pavilion, London

An arena for watching plants grow, by Peter Zumthor.

TURKEY

Museum of Liverpool

Confused, expensive, misguided and offensive to the adjoining "Three Graces". Otherwise OK.


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The best architecture of 2011: Jonathan Glancey’s choice

Frank Gehry completed his first Manhattan skyscraper and Mattel Toys launched Architect Barbie, but it was very much Zaha Hadid's year

Frank Gehry completed his first Manhattan skyscraper, 8 Spruce Street, and it proved to be a powerful and robust affair – swirling and muscular. Meanwhile, Mattel Toys launched Architect Barbie, an incarnation of the doll that wears those black-framed glasses so beloved of practitioners, as well as a dress embroidered with a city skyline. She has a pink case for drawings and a model of a pink Dream House to show clients. Is this what inspired Justin Bieber to announce that he would like to have been an architect?

It was very much Zaha Hadid's year. She won the Stirling prize for the Evelyn Grace Academy school in Brixton, London; attended the opening of her opera house in Guangzhou, China, with its grotto-like auditorium; and completed the Riverside Museum, Glasgow's charismatic new transport museum on the banks of the Clyde.

Hadid has been much influenced by radical 20th-century Russian architects, many of them little known elsewhere. So Frédéric Chaubin's revelatory book, CCCP: Cosmic Communist Constructions Photographed, was a highlight of 2011. Just look at that thrilling Georgian Ministry of Highway Construction, a Jenga-like tower of windowed oblongs from the mid-1970s. Such bravura design shows that radical work has continued to emerge from the time of the Russian revolution. Hadid remains its torchbearer.

The architecture world is a poorer place without the Hungarian Imre Makovecz, who crafted haunting, low-budget timber "building beings" in the days of Communist rule, before shaping the glorious Hungarian pavilion at the 1992 Seville Expo. Makovecz strived to create buildings that connected heaven and earth in a world increasingly given over to the slick and the inane.

Greenest: Piers Gough's Maggie's Centre in Nottingham, all playful facades and as green as Robin Hood's tights.

Shiniest: Gehry's New York skyscraper, a gleaming prong of stainless steel.

Reddest: The catchily named ArcelorMittal Orbit, Anish Kapoor and Cecil Balmond's tower for the 2012 Olympics.

Finest: Durham Cathedral, more 1111 than 2011, but recently voted Britain's best building by Guardian readers.


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Constructive criticism: the week in architecture

Burlington Arcade's independent traders face the (leather) boot, Frank Gehry eats humble pie and Scotland gets a bridge made entirely from recycled plastic

The protests at St Paul's Cathedral are getting all the attention, but for a certain echelon of London society, the real battle is going on at Burlington Arcade, whose proposed £5m redevelopment has galvanised conservationists, traditionalists and Michael Winner. For the uninitiated, Burlington Arcade is the posh people's equivalent of Diagon Alley from Harry Potter – a secluded, beautifully preserved 19th-century arcade whose historical opulence is matched by the retro luxury wares of the outlets, such as vintage fountain pens, handmade shoes, cashmere scarves and dragon bridles – well, maybe not the last one. The Grade II-listed building has been acquired by retail investment firm Meyer Bergman and the ominous-sounding Thor Equities, and the plan is to replace all those independent traders with high-end fashion brands such as Prada and Jimmy Choo.

Few people have seen the actual designs, but one suspects the Arcade brigade are not encouraged by the architect: New Yorker Peter Marino, who specialises in upmarket fashion stores. Not only has Marino stated that his work is not built to last, he likes to dress in black biker leathers, accessorised with sunglasses, leather cap, leather gloves and straps around his biceps. It's not yet clear if Burlington's top-hatted beadles will have to dress the same way, but Marino's look is a sign of how architects' style has moved on. Gone the days are when some Issey Miyake (à la Zaha Hadid) or a pair of Le Corbusier glasses qualified as sartorial flamboyance in design circles, now you've got to look like a missing member of the Village People. Take note, British architects, and up your game!

Talking of architectural flamboyance, Frank Gehry has not been having a good time of it recently. Last week, the 82-year-old designer was forced to acknowledge criticisms of his ambitious design for the Dwight D Eisenhower National Memorial in Washington DC. In terms of memorial architecture it's a radical departure, proposing giant tapestries of woven stainless steel held up by huge stone columns, which effectively screen off the building behind them. The size of this $90m-plus project has caused much public consternation. Three of Eisenhower's granddaughters even issued a statement expressing concern about the "concept for the memorial, as well as the scope and scale of it." "The people are asking good questions," Gehry acknowledged, doubtless wondering if he shouldn't have just given them another Bilbao Guggenheim and have done with it.

Then again, Gehry's Abu Dhabi Guggenheim also hit trouble this week, when it emerged that the company building it had withdrawn the contract for the concrete work and was "reviewing its strategy". The government-backed gallery, which will sit next door to a branch of the Louvre and new museums designed by Jean Nouvel, Zaha Hadid and Norman Foster, has already had its opening put back from 2013 to 2015. There are now rumours it's to be cancelled altogether. These have been denied by the Abu Dhabi side, but the project seems to have stalled, at least temporarily.

On a more optimistic note, Europe's first road bridge made of recycled plastic opened this week in Scotland. Crossing the river Tweed in Peeblesshire, the 30-metre-long bridge was made from 50 tonnes of household recycling material, such as drinks bottles, and took just two weeks to put up. That's got to be better than shipping our plastic to China for recycling. Added to which, this thermoplastic composite material has several advantages over standard materials such as timber, steel and concrete: it never needs painting, it won't rust or rot, and it's 100% recyclable. The technology was developed in the US but it's being made in Wales by a new company named Vertech. As well as bridges, they hope to develop a range of recycled sheet materials to replace plywood and MDF in construction, which suggests an entirely recycled plastic house is now possible. Who'll be the first to do it?

And finally, looking much further into the future, who can resist an event called Thrilling Wonder Stories? This is the Architectural Association's third annual speculative sci-fi-inspired design jam, where architects are invited to think way out of the box, their imaginations cross-fertilised by "mad scientists, literary astronauts, design mystics, graphic cowboys, mavericks, visionaries and luminaries". They're not joking. Guests in London this Friday and Saturday (there's a parallel event in New York) include Vincenzo Natali, director of warped sci-fi movies Cube and Splice, author Bruce Sterling, taxidermy artist Charlie Tuesday Gates (hosting a live workshop) and special effects supremo Andy Lockley, the man who folded up Paris in Christopher Nolan's Inception, among other feats. It's the shape of things to come, you know.

• This article has been amended. The original stated that the bridge made from recycled materials was 9 metres long and in Wales. This has been corrected.


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Los Angeles: art’s brave new world

Hats off to the city that launched Andy Warhol, spawned Ed Ruscha and now boasts Frank Gehry's most beautiful building

Los Angeles. The first thing you notice is the light: it's like walking into a David Hockney painting.

But the work of art that makes the most poetic use of the silver and blue optical clarity of Californian sunshine is Frank Gehry's Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown LA. The way the curved sails of shining metal that shape this beautiful building glitter against the sky is a glimpse of paradise in the middle of the city. Gehry is a truly great architect and this public monument is his masterpiece – an even lighter and more dynamic creation than his Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao. Or perhaps it is simply that California is the true home of his art. His concave and convex, hard-yet-yielding forms seem to belong here, to blow in the breeze like the sails of the Beach Boys' Sloop John B.

LA is not a city with a reputation for a developed public life. It's more famous for car culture than for ... culture, and more renowned for strip malls than civic piazzas. Yet Gehry's generous civic building, loved by locals, could give London some lessons in architecture, with a heart and soul that pour life into a city, instead of sucking it out. Yes, I am once again referring to the Shard. Why is London letting an oversize tower wreck its skyline for no good reason, while here in LA an infinitely more imaginative contemporary building performs a creative instead of destructive role in community life?

The Walt Disney Concert Hall is a classic of modern architecture, a building that proves the social and cultural value of poetry, personal expression and beauty. Architecture does not have to be a corporate trashing of the common life. It can save the world, in the hands of a genius like Gehry.

Another genius who has been captivating me in LA is Ed Ruscha. Ever since the 1960s, Ruscha has created art with such indefinable cool that categorising it as pop, or conceptualism – or anything except a deeply brilliant triumph of precision and impersonal style – seems clumsy. He is the west coast's Warhol, the Gerhard Richter of the Pacific. I saw a painting by him yesterday called Annie, Poured in Maple Syrup. It was painted in 1966. The bold letters of the name Annie do indeed seem to be written in gooey syrup – yet the infantilist, supersweet lettering is painted with meticulous conviction in oil on canvas. I find this both a hilarious and eerie work. It seems to do everything pop art ever wanted to do, but better.

Well, not better than Warhol. There is a powerful display at Moca of his soup-can paintings, a reconstruction of the exhibition at the Ferus Gallery, LA, in 1962 when these irresistible paintings were first shown to the world. Warhol made a road trip across America to exhibit in LA. It was the city that gave him his first solo show – an exhibit purely of soup cans, painted as icons. The show was supported by film star Dennis Hopper among others. In LA, Warhol must have felt like he was coming home.


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Frank Gehry: Dizzy heights

It's Frank Gehry's first skyscraper – a twisting, rippling tower that is transforming the New York skyline. Jonathan Glancey talks to the 82-year-old architect about realising a lifelong ambition

'I'm getting tearful," says Frank Gehry when I ask him how he feels about finally making his mark on the Manhattan skyline. "My father grew up in Hell's Kitchen, 10th Avenue, on the city's West Side." Irving Goldberg was one of nine children in a very poor immigrant family; his son changed his name in the early 1950s. "He started work at 11," says Gehry. "He had a hard life. I'd like to share 8 Spruce Street with him. Hey, Pa! I got to build a skyscraper right by the Woolworth Building. That's me, Dad. Up there!"

What Gehry, evergreen at 82, has been building up there on the site of a former parking lot on the border of New York's financial district, close by Brooklyn Bridge, is an $875m (£543.3m), 870ft, 76-storey residential tower, clad in heroic, sculpted folds of stainless steel. It houses 903 rental apartments – none are for sale – with prices ranging upwards of $2,630 a month, and is due for completion in five months' time – although the builders who show me around say that some 200 flats have already been let.

Over the course of a day, 8 Spruce Street changes mood and colour with the sun and the sky. One moment it's pink, another gold; at others, it shines silver, or a broody pewter. Seen across the East River from Brooklyn, it animates Manhattan as no skyscraper has done since the Empire State Building opened 80 years ago, when Gehry was a toddler in Toronto. His father was then scratching a living as a slot-machine salesman.

There have been fine and charismatic New York towers since then: the serene Seagram Building dating from 1958 on Park Avenue, by Mies van der Rohe; Eero Saarinen's sleekly muscular, black-clad CBS Tower (1964) on Sixth Avenue; Philip Johnson's controversial 1980s postmodern "Chippendale" tower, crowned with an outsized split pediment, for AT&T on Madison Avenue. But these aside, Manhattan skyscrapers have been almost resolutely glum and workaday for too long: 8 Spruce Street brings back the dazzle and the ritz, the catwalk strut and sheer brio that have made the great New York towers so compelling.

Gehry has long been associated with sensational arts buildings: the epoch-making Bilbao Guggenheim, and the striking Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles, the city where he lives and works. Eight Spruce Street, referred to on street hoardings as "New York by Gehry", is a very different kettle of fish. "New York's a wonderful city," says Gehry, "but it's a tough place. Buildings, like the people there, work hard for their living." Commissioned in 2003, this – like most Manhattan skyscrapers – is a design built to a demanding budget, and one required to pay back the investment made in it many times over. It is architecture as big business writ sky high.

Gehry has worked hard to walk tall in Manhattan. To date, in 59 years as an architect, he has managed no more in the city than a 10-storey office block in Chelsea, looking like the sails of ships cutting through a low-lying cumulus cloud; a titanium-walled cafeteria for Conde Nast's headquarters in Times Square; and the fit-out of an Issey Miyake store in Tribeca.

There have, however, been unbuilt projects aplenty: a serpentine tower for the New York Times; a highly sculpted new Guggenheim museum overlooking the East River; and Atlantic Yards, a vast stretch of mixed-use development over a Long Island railroad yard in Brooklyn peppered with 16 towers. Gehry showed me a colourful model of the latter scheme when I went to see him in LA three years ago. Now he's off the job; the developers have taken fright and gone for a cheaper practice. "I asked a developer what value the name Frank Gehry had in New York," the architect says now. "You know what he said? 'A big zero.' Like I said, it's a tough city."

It is – though 8 Spruce Street must surely make up for Gehry's losses here (it was also commissioned by Bruce Ratner, the developer behind Atlantic Yards). The tower is a revelation, though it appears to rise not from pavement level as you might expect, but through the top of a self-effacing six-floor brick block, housing a new elementary school and a service floor for the New York Downtown Hospital. Why? The brick block, also by Gehry – proving he can do straight-up-and-down architecture when called to – is part of a trade-off between the developer and the city planners. Ratner could have his tower, but the school and hospital floor had to be part of the deal.

'I was thinking of Michelangelo'

On its south side, the tower rises in what appears to be one sheer sheet of stainless steel; it might have been cut with a laser. Impressive, yet as you walk around the block – wham! – the tower rockets waywardly up from its humdrum base, flanked by a huddle of bars, corner cafes and local businesses, in overwhelming pleats of stainless steel draped now loosely, now tightly, over the frame of the building. Imagine the Statue of Liberty as an apartment block, and you get an inkling.

My initial impressions were of a vertical river bed, a titanic cyborg, muscles and veins bulging under robotic skin, and of the disquieting drawings of HR Giger, the Swiss surrealist who created Ridley Scott's Alien. Or, perhaps, the artist Christo has agreed to wrap a Manhattan skyscraper in an outsized Issey Miyake gown. This might sound fanciful, but seen for the first time, 8 Spruce Street is a visceral shock to the system.

"What was I really thinking of?" Gehry says. "Michelangelo and Bernini." Really? "Really. Those guys drew bookloads of folds and fabrics, so beautifully. I've looked at these a lot over the years. Michelangelo does softer lines; Bernini's are harder. I love the architectural quality of those folds, and these are what inspired the skin of the building."

This undulating skin, fabricated from 10,500 individual steel panels, gives many of the individual flats a baroque quality; there are bay windows where the folds billow up and across the facades. Set at any number of angles around the three draped sides of the tower, these offer a dazzling variety of views across New York.

"Originally, I wanted to have the folds going all the way around," Gehry explains. "But the marketing folk said that 15% of people didn't want apartments with wrinkles. So that's why there's a straight side. But, then, they started to rent out the wrinkly apartments, and asked for more of them. By then I'd begun to like the straight side. The models we made showing the tower completely wrinkly just didn't look tough enough for New York."

I had thought that the straight side was a symptom of cost-cutting. Surely all those towering folds of stainless steel and the building's complex floorplan on the other three sides must have been expensive? "No. We got the curtain wall with all the curves at the same price as doing it straight. It's all the 3D computer stuff we've developed. Fifteen per cent of construction cost is usually wasted in design changes on site, caused by the fact that architects are still doing 2D drawings for 3D buildings. We do 3D modelling that shows exactly how the whole building fits together, and we don't need many design changes. That way we've come in on budget."

Ideally, Gehry would like to have spent more money. "I wanted to do it in titanium. It would have been beautiful on a grey New York day. But the panels would have been too soft for the cleaning equipment going up and down the tower. I'd have needed much thicker sheets of titanium than I've used before, and then the cost would have been prohibitive."

I wondered, too, if the way the building appears to stop all of a sudden at the 76th, without a crown or spire, was another way of saving money. "I started with something on top," Gehry admits. "I toyed with the thing, but it ended up looking pretty trivial, trying too hard to be something, against the Woolworth Building [Cass Gilbert's superb neo-gothic terracotta and steel skyscraper, opened in 1913]. I have too much respect for the Woolworth Building to do a hoopty-do thing."

A cartoon guest on The Simpsons

Up inside the spireless tower, the Gehry-designed show apartments are much of a piece, views aside, with their white oak floors, stainless steel kitchens, swooping furniture and sinuous, brushed stainless steel door handles. For the most part, city professionals will rent these – although the rents are not especially high for this patch of Manhattan. So, while the tower is imbued with a great visual sense of freedom, an anything-goes spirit, its future population looks set to be pretty homogenous. Those living here will, soon enough, be able to enjoy a 50ft seventh-floor swimming pool opening on to a deck, as well as a gym, spa, library, children's playroom, screening room and an underground car park.

With a Manhattan skyscraper to his name, Frank Gehry is increasingly part of the myth and legend of modern America. It's not just that his wildly energetic and boldly sculpted buildings are world-famous; this humorous, emotional and still-ambitious man has become larger than life. He has guested as a cartoon version of himself in The Simpsons. His master sergeant in the US army in the early 1950s was Leonard Nimoy, the future Mr Spock, who would surely find 8 Spruce Street "highly illogical". And, already famous enough to be the butt of satire, 8 Spruce Street featured in an April Fool's spoof in the New York Times this year: the heat reflected from its shiny surface was so great, the article claimed, that it had caused fires in neighbouring buildings.

"I don't want to do architecture that's dry and dull," Gehry says. "When you talk to New Yorkers, like the guys you met in the Irish bar across the way from 8 Spring Street, like my dad, you want to show them something like Bernini or Picasso, not some dumb thing that bores the pants off everyone." Gehry pauses. He's laughing now. "Do you think they'll let me have a go in London?"


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Roger Scruton is on shaky ground slating modern architecture

The philosopher should heed his admired Wittgenstein and keep schtum on subjects he knows little about

Philosophers through the ages have rarely had much to say about architecture. Perhaps they've been wise to keep quiet, for architecture can only truly be understood by experiencing its physicality, rather than whatever theory might underpin it.

In an opinion piece in the Times, the philosopher Roger Scruton launched a rabble-rousing attack on celebrity architects – such as Daniel Libeskind, Frank Gehry, Richard Rogers, Norman Foster, Zaha Hadid, Peter Eisenman and Rem Koolhaas – who build monuments for themselves, and indulge in overblown discourse to justify buildings that will be torn down in 20 years' time.

These "stars", thundered Scruton, author of The Classical Vernacular: Architectural Principles in an Age of Nihilism and I Drink Therefore I Am: A Philosopher's Guide to Wine, "have equipped themselves with a store of pretentious gobbledegook with which to explain their genius to those who are otherwise unable to perceive it". Scruton continued: "New architecture ... is designed to stand out as the work of some inspired artist who does not build for people but sculpts space for his own expressive needs." Such buildings called to the philosopher's mind "vegetables, vehicles, hairdryers, washing machines or backyard junk". All this "is designed as a waste: throwaway architecture, involving vast quantities of energy-intensive materials, which will be demolished within 20 years".

This is amusing stuff, but neither truthful – truth being the goal of the philosopher – nor helpful. Professor Scruton has presumably never heard Foster speak, nor conversed with Hadid. The former is a lucid and analytical mind and Hadid – for all her scintillating and voluptuous buildings – is, like Foster, remarkably down to earth. This is their great strength as architects: again, their trade is as physical and commonsensical as philosophy can be metaphysical and arcane.

The point – one that Ludwig Wittgenstein, a thinker admired by Scruton, understood well – is that certain ideas, such as aesthetics, cannot be put adequately into words and are best expressed through demonstration, which is exactly what architects do. Equally, Scruton is on very shaky foundations when he accuses contemporary architects of sculpting space for their own expressive needs. What of Borromini, Guarini, Vanbrugh, Hawksmoor and any number of baroque masters? Their magnificent, theatrical creations were no less expressive than those of Gehry and Hadid. And they too were curbed by the demands of clients, budgets and other practical considerations: neither now nor then have architects been free to let rip in the way Scruton imagines.

As for endurance, Scruton might like to tour any number of Foster buildings – some 40 years old – that have stood the test of time. Yes, architects may make mistakes, but many contemporary buildings are built just as well and even better than those dating from Scruton's beloved 18th century, when shoddy workmanship and fast-buck building was common.

If modern architecture is so very bad, what would Scruton prefer we build instead? The philosopher proposes that new works should be by contemporary classical architects such as Robert Adam from Winchester and Quinlan Terry of Dedham, who "have learned how to construct buildings that fit so well into their surroundings that you notice them only in the way you notice friendly people in the street". While this is certainly not true of works such as Adam's outlandish neo-Egyptian 198-202 Piccadilly, it is also a flimsy recommendation in general. Did the Greeks intend the Parthenon to fit all but unnoticed into its surroundings? Was the dome of St Paul's the shrinking violet of 17th-century English architecture?

Architecture is a continuum – an art and science that has developed, sometimes in fits and starts, since it emerged in monumental form in Mesopotamia some 6,000 years ago. Its underlying philosophy is expressed in the design, making and experience of buildings themselves. Perhaps this is why it has attracted the thoughts of so few professional philosophers. Roger Scruton is a perceptive thinker and can write beautifully, but faced with buildings he finds incomprehensible he sounds like the Alf Garnett of architectural theory. In this case he might best learn from Wittgenstein, who helped design a house in Vienna in the late 1920s that was impossible to live in, and who famously said: "Whereof one cannot speak, one must pass over in silence."


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RIBA v Bieber and Barbie: the battle for architecture’s future | Jonathan Glancey

The Royal Institute of British Architects' latest report is downbeat, but the profession retains its allure. Even Justin Bieber wants to be one

Will there be such a thing as an architect in 2025? The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) isn't too sure. This week, its think tank, Building Futures, has published a report – The Future for Architects? – that will make rather disturbing reading for most British architects, and for anyone harbouring old-fashioned or romantic notions of what an architect might or should be.

The report hints darkly at the death of the typical, medium-size British architectural practice (ones with around 25-150 staff), and suggests that most work in the future will be carried out in emerging countries a long way from home. The firms that will survive will either be small scale, local studios or high-powered, business-minded international offices with multilingual staffs based around the world.

The former, the report suggests, will nurture the craft side of architecture, designing new houses or restoring old buildings, while the latter will act increasingly as multi-disciplinary design teams working on the skyscrapers, ever-bigger shopping malls, and massive urban developments of the future. Building Futures says that between 2010 and 2020, growth in construction will rise by 18% in the developed world, and a whopping 138% in the emerging world. On one level this is a simple reflection of economic growth in countries such as China; but it also reflects the general retrenchment of large-scale public projects, from school buildings to new hospitals, in Britain, a country scaling back on many fronts.

Some of the 40 architects interviewed by Building Futures say that the very word "architect" itself will soon be as outmoded as "wheel tapper" or "lollipop lady." They didn't use these exact terms, but they do expect to be called something like "creative consultant" rather than "architect" in the future.

Weirdly, this comes at a time when more young people than ever want to become architects. The RIBA report notes that between 2004 and 2009, the number of students signing up to Part 1 architecture courses in Britain rose by 23 per cent. Significantly, more than half are women. In the United States, Mattel Toys clearly believes that women architects are the way to go. The latest in their "Barbie I Can Be" line is Architect Barbie, the world's newest starchitect, launched this week. Naturally she sports thick, black-rimmed glasses together with a skyline print dress and – wait for it – a pink blueprint holder.

Teenage boys and girls on either side of the Atlantic might also be excited to learn that Justin Bieber, the 16-year old Canadian teen heartthrob, says his ideal job would be that of an . . . architect. A few years ago, Brad Pitt worked for a while with Frank Gehry on the design for a shocking wave of towering new apartment blocks in Hove: that's Sussex, not California. He, too, would have liked to be an architect, but he had to make a few films and these, presumably, got in the way of his dream career.

Thinking of Gehry and the lure of what have been called starchitects, the report states that there will still be a demand for their input, but that the stars charged with building design might extend more frequently to fashion designers, product designers and artists, the faces of household name brands.

Although it has become fashionable to think that other types of designers and even artists can usurp the role of the architect, this is rarely true. Take the Orbit – the great winding red tower at the centre of the 2012 London Olympics site. Although the artist Anish Kapoor is almost always credited single-handedly with its design, in practice he is working hand-in-hand with the engineer Cecil Balmond and the architect Kathryn Findlay, who are fleshing out the practicalities.

So, Architect Barbie and the daydream ambitions of Brad Pitt and Justin Bieber are not so easily dismissed. What they represent is the enduring dream of the architect as a kind of glamorous, intellectual, artistic star. A practical one, too. While there is a certain glamour in architectural practice, the truth is that much of the work involved is the stuff of hard slog. Whether or not Barbie would be up for the challenge, the image of the architect as hero and artist is clearly both enduring and marketable.

It's not all doom and gloom. Alex de Rijke, founder partner of dRMM, and one of the architects spoken to by Building Futures, says "we're a medium size team of 26 architects based in London, and we're thriving. What we can offer is adventure in design as well the ability to see through projects on any scale. We're small enough to be intimate, big enough to deal with major challenges and, by nature, we're collaborative; we work perfectly naturally with engineers, contractors, clients and artists in all media. I don't see us as the past."

De Rijke speaks from a position of strength. His forward-looking practice is justly celebrated for its fresh approach to schools and housing. "Things are certainly changing", he says, "but what I'd question is the role not of architects as such, or whatever we call ourselves in future, but the profession. Our job is invention and design; I'm left wondering if it'll be bodies like the RIBA that'll go rather than us." As the global nature of the construction industry changes, can a locally based institute keep pace and retain relevance?

"The Future for Architects?" is best seen and read, perhaps, as a wake-up call for British architecture and construction. As RIBA's Building Futures director Dickon Robinson says, "This report seeks to stimulate a discussion about the challenges and opportunities which architects in the broadest sense face, in the hope that the ensuing debate will put them in the best position to succeed." But when you have the likes of Brad Pitt, Justin Bieber and Barbie knocking on your studio door, how can anyone say there's no future for architects?


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Maggie’s centres: how one woman’s vision is changing cancer treatment

Maggie Keswick Jencks was a designer with a passion for gardens. As she was dying of cancer, she created the blueprint for cancer care centres that recognise how design can help recovery. Here friends and family recall a remarkable woman

When Maggie Keswick Jencks was 47 she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Five years later she started to have severe back pain and, after two misdiagnoses, went to her local GP's surgery in Dumfries where she was told the cancer had spread to her bones, liver and bone marrow. In a home video, made for her mother, she described what happened next. She and her husband were told to see a visiting Edinburgh consultant. They waited in an "awful interior space" with neon lighting and then the nurse told them to come in. They asked: "How long have we got?" To which the doctor said: "Do you really want to know?" "Yes we really want to know."

"Two to three months."

"Oh…!"

And then the nurse explained. "I'm very sorry, dear, but we'll have to move you out into the corridor, we have so many people waiting." They sat in a "windowless corridor trying to deal with this business, having two to three months to live. And as we sat there, various nurses who I knew came up and said, very cheerfully, 'Hello dear, how are you?' 'Well,' managing a laugh, 'I'm fine!'"

This was the story that became Maggie's spur – the NHS corridor that would lead to her big idea. There might be no cure for Maggie's cancer but here was something that could be changed. Why shunt people with cancer into miserable surroundings? Didn't people need respect, time and space? With the support of her young nurse, Laura Lee, Maggie would devote the rest of her life to planning a cancer caring centre. She had a feel for what was needed and the drive and money, as daughter of the director of the Scottish trading company Jardine Matheson, to do something about it. She understood the need to feel in charge (not a helpless passenger in a hospital production line). She realised people might want to find out more about their treatment options. And she knew a beautiful space was needed in which to digest even the worst of news. She envisaged a room with a view – and a library. And she argued for an "old-fashioned ladies' room – not a partitioned toilet in a row". This would supply "privacy for crying, water for washing the face, and a mirror for getting ready to deal with the world outside again". She knew that, in a crisis, everything counts, even – or especially – the little things.

"Little" does not describe what has happened in the 15 years since her death: her idea has taken off. Today, there are 15 centres – seven up and running, seven in the pipeline (opening before 2012) and one online (a V&A display this month celebrates the achievement). Yet Maggie's centres are anything but pushy: they are only ever built at the invitation of NHS Trusts and, usually, in the grounds of hospitals with oncology departments. Unsurprisingly, hospitals recognise they need them and architects are queuing up to build them. And the existing centres have tremendous architectural prestige (Frank Gehry, Zaha Hadid, Page and Park have all designed one). But they are about far more than architecture for architecture's sake. Above all, they remind us that it is not frivolous to care about design. And this year the British Medical Association is also, at last, acknowledging architecture's importance as an ingredient in recovery. It is calling on healthcare organisations to "prioritise design in future building projects" after a new report showed that "architectural environment can significantly affect patients' recovery times." We are – to some extent – what we see.

I visited London's Maggie's centre for the first time last summer. Designed by architects Richard Rogers and Ivan Harbour of Rogers Stirk Harbour, it is audaciously beautiful. When you approach it from Fulham Palace Road, you notice it has turned its back on the ugly facade of Charing Cross hospital. It is painted orange in defiance of London's greyness and bad news in all its forms. And its extraordinary roof looks as though it has levitated. The whole building is serenely irrepressible. What is so winning is that it feels like home (although more elegant than any I know) and yet is an in-between space. It is not a retreat or a hospice or a clinic – it is a drop-in centre and it is free. It offers information, advice on nutrition, relaxation classes and a psychologist for anyone needing to talk about the most intractable subjects (depression, fear of dying, dread of cancer returning and other issues not easy to address in a hospital environment).

On the day I visited, the building was full of sunlight. I loved its attention to detail: the bowl of fruit on the kitchen table, the sunhats on pegs in the hall, the lack of signs bossily telling you where to go. And this is the key: you decide what to make of a Maggie's centre. You can walk in and out unnoticed if that is what you prefer. It is perfect for company – or contemplation. I visited at a time when one of my friends was dying of cancer in another country and kept thinking what it would mean to her to have such a place on her doorstep. While I was there, I also found myself thinking about Maggie, as anyone with even a scrap of curiosity visiting her centres must. I wanted to know more about her.

Photographs show a slender, vivid woman with dark curly hair and a dreamer's face when not smiling to camera. One can see the pluck in Maggie, especially in a picture taken at a Scottish picnic, just after her diagnosis – a blaze of a smile on her face, no shadow in sight. I had four people in mind to help me bring her into view: her husband, the writer and landscape architect Charles Jencks, her former nurse, Laura Lee, one of her many friends, Anne Chisholm, and her daughter, Lily. But what I could not predict was that meeting Lily would turn out to be as close to encountering Maggie as could be imagined. Friends exclaim at the likeness between them. And this pleases Lily. She is also following in both her parents' footsteps in having taken up landscape architecture as a career. She designed the garden for Frank Gehry's Hong Kong Maggie's centre and is now working, with Rotterdam architect Rem Koolhaas on the garden for Glasgow's second centre.

Whenever she pictures her mother, she recalls her wearing a green velvet floppy hat "like one of Jamiroquai's". She has the hat but never wears it. "My friends try it on all the time." She ought, she says, laughing, to share it with her elder brother, John (who runs a film production company), as it is "iconic". When I ask about the last two years of her mother's life, she remembers how hard it was to talk about cancer. In some ways, it still is. Lily is 30 now but was 13 then – a "nightmarish" age: "You can't hide anything from a 13-year-old." No one told her what had been said in that Dumfries surgery. But she knew. "Yet, as you know, my mother went on to live for another two years."

She is gentle and unjudgmental about her mother and herself. She understands how hard it was for Maggie to know what to say. Lily remembers her coming into her bedroom to show her hair falling out in clumps. She tried to be honest. She wanted Lily to understand. Yet the need for reassurance was mutual. Lily remembers a car journey to family friends during which Maggie asked her daughter how she looked. Lily said "healthy and full of life". It was only when she heard her mother repeating this verdict, with obvious pleasure, that "I realised how sick she actually was". And there was no Maggie's centre to help them navigate (let alone what is now being piloted in Maggie's Dundee – a support programme specifically directed at teenagers).

As a mother, Maggie was "sensitive" and "careful to spend special time with us alone and was always trying to be aware of our feelings – in case that space got lost in everyday life". Lily remembers cycling with her mother at a time when the effort to be on a bike must have been great but she gave no sign of it. She also remembers how Maggie's bed was often strewn with papers when she was very sick. It is only now she realises they were her precious blueprints for the first centre. "She was very concerned about them," Lily recalls.

It is a tribute to Maggie that her family, her nurse and many friends (some of them architects) have all, after her death, become involved in the centres, as if to keep faith with her. Laura Lee was a young nurse working at the breast chemotherapy suite at the Western General in Edinburgh when they met. She is now CEO of the centres. She is warm and engaging. It is easy to see why Maggie loved her. She does her job impressively too. "The landscape of cancer is changing," she explains, "because more people are surviving. Those with a recurrence live longer. The need for these centres has never been greater because people are living with cancer as a part of life." Laura explains that the centres are funded by investors and public fundraising and tells me about the many and inventive initiatives (such as an annual, sponsored 20-mile night hike through London). Everyone says that Lee is a dynamo without whom the centres could not flourish as they do. Laura remembers the moment at which her friendship with Maggie became "professional" and a shared mission: they travelled the UK and USA researching cancer care centres.

Looking back, Laura had no idea of the scale of what they were starting. Her first impression of Maggie and Charles as a couple was that they had tremendous presence. She found Maggie gentle, polite and "not at all passive". She wanted to know whether she should "go with the sense that her body was deteriorating and weak". She took an intense interest in her treatment. Understandably, her first reaction after the grim Dumfries prognosis had been to give up. But while she was retreating, her husband was in fast-forward, combing the world for cures. In her gallant essay "A view from the front line" (required reading for anyone interested in Maggie or in arming themselves against cancer), she describes the effort of will it took to fight on, and why it was hard: "deciding to give up the certainty of death for the uncertain prospect of a stay of execution: if I got into the fighting mode, and it failed, would I ever get back to this precariously balanced acceptance?" But there came a moment for Maggie and Charles when they, simultaneously, realised they would do everything they could to prolong her life. And Maggie wanted to win more time for her young children's sake as well as for her own.

The breakthrough was discovering that Dr Robert Leonard, at the Western General, was conducting a trial in advanced metastatic breast cancer (high-dose chemo and stem-cell replacement), for which Maggie was suitable. This – and her whole-hearted and intelligent involvement in diet and complementary treatment alongside it – would win her almost two more years. Maggie tended to be positive. She once wrote that the goal for people in her situation – not easy to achieve – was to try not to "lose the joy of living in the fear of dying" – words that have become a catchphrase at her centres. Laura thinks that her focus was always on the luck she had in life. When first diagnosed with breast cancer, she saw the cancer almost as a paying of dues for her privileged life.

Maggie was born in 1941. Her background was not only privileged, it was exotic – divided between Scotland, Shanghai and Hong Kong. Her father was a remarkable tycoon who, during the communist takeover of Shanghai, unlike most Europeans stayed on to help feed a starving population. He was rich but also philanthropic. And he spoke fluent Chinese. Maggie was an adored only child and might easily have been spoilt. But she never was. She was raised a Catholic (becoming, according to her husband, more of a Buddhist/Catholic later in life). She was educated at Woldingham in Surrey and at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, where she read English. Anne Chisholm met her at university and remembers her as "light on her feet, buoyant, vividly alive. While the rest of us were creeping around in various stages of lumpishness, here was this dazzling creature – much more stylish than any of us, she could lift a room." Maggie would cook Chinese delicacies in the pantry at her college. The oriental drifted into her dress sense too. She would train a Chinese scarf across her chin, securing it with a knot (in the rum fashion of the time). She was clever, funny, a good listener and a performer (acting in student productions with Esther Rantzen as co-thespian). She sang well and could quote yards of poetry by heart. She was an attractive mixture: an empathetic extrovert.

In 1965, after leaving university, she and a friend launched a boutique, Annacat (named after their dogs). The look, according to Chisholm, was "daughter of Mary Quant". Jencks remembers it more as "Victorian freestyle" (like some outlandish swimming stroke). At that time, Maggie became "a celebrity with the smallest of cs" (in a photograph by David Bailey, she looks the embodiment of the Swinging 60s). But fashion would prove too insubstantial for her. In 1970, she joined the Architectural Association and met Charles Jencks, an American architectural writer and landscape architect teaching there. He remembers how vivacious she was. But he adds: "The thing about Maggie is that she was vulnerable." She was insecure about her looks, did not believe in the beauty others saw in her. She'd spend ages trying to get her clothes right – and be late for dinner. She tended to be late generally. But people warmed to her because as her husband says: 'More than almost anyone I've met, she had a liking for people and they felt that in her."

In 1978, the year in which she married, she published a scholarly book on Chinese gardens. Scotland was always important to her – but China was to be the defining influence. Jencks remembers she made several solo research trips to China, once bringing back for him memorably inconvenient souvenirs: Chinese bullet-hole rocks (called "Scholars Rocks") and "according to ancient custom" a pet cricket in a tiny wooden box which she kept in her blouse and which, during its brief life, drove him crazy. Charles and Maggie understood each other well. Anne Chisholm says Maggie "adored Charlie and his ideas". And she acknowledged that she would not have produced her book without his help. She described herself as a "creative ditherer" – a perfectionist. As she wrote in her acknowledgements, "without his constant badgering and insistence, I should still be on Chapter One." Chinese gardens are seldom written about (Japanese gardens tend to steal the show) but Maggie put these gardens firmly on the map and lectured about them around the world. She described Chinese gardens as "cosmic diagrams, revealing a profound and ancient view of the world, and of man's place in it".

And, strange as it might seem, the passion for Chinese gardens has influenced the Maggie's centres. The sense of the cosmic diagram, the belief that architecture – and gardens – have meaning is essential to understanding Maggie, her husband and the way the centres have evolved. Charles Jencks is a man of tremendous charm and playful erudition (he has dubbed the game of looking round the house he shared with Maggie in London's Notting Hill as "hunt the symbol".) He describes the home, which has become a postmodern landmark, as cosmic. And it is extraordinary to visit it because nothing in it is idly itself. The stairs are an "abstract realisation of the solar year". Maggie's kitchen represents Indian summer. Even the loo has its story. It is wonderful in a way. But it must be exhaustingly inexhaustible to live in it. Apparently, Maggie once said: "I understand, Charles, everything has to symbolise something but symbolism stops at my door." He followed her prohibition to the letter – literally. We inspect Maggie's door – with a carved letter M and open book. And then he shows me her desk which, to his delight, shows her breaking her own rule. She painted it in Johnston tartan: greens and blues with a yellow stripe – as symbolic as could be.

Maggie's centres have their "meaning" too – but of a more instantly graspable sort. "They are," Jencks says, "to do with the way living and dying are part of one thing." There is, he goes on, nothing new about the overlap between health and culture. He cites Hospices de Beaunes and Stonehenge (now thought by some to have been a healing centre) in the sweep of his argument. And in his delightful new book The Architecture of Hope, you can see that each Maggie's centre is different – it is up to visitors to settle on individual meanings. Maggie would have loved unravelling the thinking behind each centre: Frank Gehry's homely centre in Dundee looks as if a child made its roof out of folded foil (you want to pat it); Zaha Hadid's in Fife, with its shark-like exterior made of sparkling silicone carbide grit, allows its visitors to move, in a boldly metaphorical way, from darkness to light; Page and Park's ingenious Inverness centre has a green copper roof and a design based on the idea of a dividing cell. And six new centres are planned to be built before 2012 – Wilkinson Eyre's tree house, which goes on site in Oxford next year, is my favourite: leafily escapist.

But the place that is perhaps Maggie's most personal memorial is not one of her centres at all. It is Portrack, the 18th-century country house in Dumfriesshire she inherited from her parents where, with Charles, she designed a garden now dedicated to her memory. It is a most awe-inspiring place with 60ft manmade mounds and vast lakes, a dramatic discourse between water and land and a swirling exchange of shapes (the lakes were Maggie's design). And it is this place that keeps coming up in conversation. Anne recalls seeing Maggie at Portrack, in her last year and watching her "running up one of the mounds as if she was 20 years old, with nothing wrong with her". Lily can still picture her mother, out in the garden, sketching. And Laura remembers sitting with Maggie at the top of one of the hills, with the sun on their faces. They didn't talk about death, she says, they did not need to, it was understood.

Maggie died on 8 July, 1995. "I remember running away from the hospital," Lily says. "I couldn't believe birds were still singing, the world turning. I remember watching, in disbelief, as someone crossed the road as if nothing had happened." Every morning, she would wake and, for a second, not know her mother had gone – and then the news would hit her again. Even now, she gets upset about it – although she never can predict when she will be ambushed. She would like to be able to ask her mother's advice about the big decisions in her life. She minds that, when she has children herself, they will not have a grandmother. She remembers now how tiring grief was. And, although that has lifted: "I don't think the pain goes away, you just get used to it. There is a hole inside of me but I know it is part of me."

It is winter when I return to the London centre. I walk through Dan Pearson's garden which is planted with 100 birches and runs parallel to one of London's most polluted roads – it seems an act of faith in itself. Some shy hellebores are flowering and Hannah Bennett's smooth sculptures stand out like polished melons – not stepping but sitting stones. Inside, there is a fire in a wood-burning stove and waiting logs, stacked neatly behind glass, are a heartening sight. It is marvellously peaceful. Lily tells me she is often asked, by visitors at the centres, about her mother. "People are really happy to meet me which is so touching. They want to know what Maggie was like." And oddly enough, one of the visitors, while I am there, looks up from the computer – she must have heard me talking – and asks whether I knew Maggie. I hesitate. I am tempted to say: "Yes."


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Building an audience for architecture

From The Fountainhead to Blade Runner, the way films portray buildings and architects has nothing to do with reality, right? You'd be surprised

Howard Roark is, up to a point, a plausible name for an architect, but I am less convinced by Stourley Kracklite. Roark, played by Gary Cooper in King Vidor's schlockfest The Fountainhead is a picture of toned muscle and angst, handy with a rock drill and brutal in his wooing. In contrast Kracklite, played by Brian Dennehy in Peter Greenaway's The Belly of an Architect, has a waistline that authentically overwhelms his belt in the manner pioneered by the 20-stone James Stirling.

Both films have always fascinated me. In the case of The Fountainhead, it's not so much Roark – a tortured genius somewhere between Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright – who's the special attraction, although it's hard not to warm to an architect who, rather than see his work compromised, breaks into a building site and lays the dynamite charges to blow it up. Even if you might not want to actually hire him, he gets your attention. But what is really seductive is the idea that The Fountainhead's villain-in-chief is an architecture critic. The silkily evil Elsworth Toohey is portrayed filing copy from his bathtub and inciting the masses against Roark. If only.

Kracklite, even without the same mercurial menace as Gary Cooper, was equally fascinating as a kind of awful warning of the worst things that can happen to a curator. I saw The Belly of an Architect when, not unlike Kracklite, I was curating an architectural exhibition in Italy. In his case, it was on Étienne-Louis Boullée in Rome; in mine, the Venice Architecture Biennale, although I am happy to say I managed to get through the experience without being poisoned, which was more than Kracklite achieved.

Cinema and architecture have a relationship that goes back a long way, and is both superficial and profound. Half a century before Brad Pitt began hanging around Frank Gehry's studio and working on sustainable low-cost houses for New Orleans, Alfred Hitchcock was obsessed by architecture. He filmed it, he designed it, he evoked it. North By Northwest is full of architecture, starting with Saul Bass's titles, which begin as an abstract grid that is gradually revealed as the glazed facade of the UN building in Manhattan. Later in the film, you see a lot of the UN's interiors, which through the lens look much like the kind of buildings Zaha Hadid is designing today (North By Northwest is one of her favourite films). Later in the narrative, there is the Vandamm house in North Dakota that looks more like Frank Lloyd Wright than Frank Lloyd Wright, but which was actually a set built by Hitchcock.

Camille Paglia pointed out Hitchcock's continuing architectural obsessions years ago. The architecture critic Steven Jacobs has documented them in detail. Jacobs has examined, shot by shot, Hitchcock's key scenes, used them to draw floorplans and published the results in a book entitled Hitchcock and the Wrong House. It's a remarkable exercise that demonstrates the unpredictable interaction between spaces that can only exist in the film world and those that are more physical and can be realised in the architectural world.

We know what the flat in the Maida Vale terrace that is the setting for Dial M for Murder ought to look like on the basis of the exterior shots. Jacobs's drawings show that the simple orthogonal plan, implied by how the spaces looked through a camera lens, would actually have been overlaid by wedge-shaped projections to achieve the shots that Hitchcock wanted.

What makes it so fascinating as a study is that it shows the precise point at which physical reality overlaps with dreamlike images. There are other connections between film and architecture worth pursuing, too. They are both activities that require introversion and extroversion of their practitioners. To make a film, just as to design a building, takes a creative impulse, as well as the business acumen to assemble the finance, and the personality to impose one's will on construction workers, actors and crew.

What is not always clear is the precise nature of the comparison. Is the architect playing the part of director, or the star; the headline name that can get a development funded, in the same way that signing up Colin Firth or George Clooney can greenlight a film? It does happen occasionally when a developer looking for visibility or an easy planning consent, commissions Norman Foster or Frank Gehry, and bankers come up with the mezzanine finance to build a business park or a block of flats or a skyscraper on the strength of their involvement.

A more plausible analogy for the architect is with the screenwriter, whose work is rewritten until everything that made it distinctive has dissolved under layer upon layer of mush.

But just because a film has an architectural theme does not necessarily tell us much about architecture. Watching a lifesize replica of the spiral of the Guggenheim museum being obliterated in a storm of automatic gunfire in The International is more architectural product placement than spatial insight. Michael Caine's walk-on performance as an architecture professor in Inception is no more helpful as an insight into the mother of the arts than the random fact of Woody Harrelson's character in Indecent Proposal being an architect.

It's not simply a question of the distinction between arthouse and blockbuster. While a documentary such as My Architect may tell you a lot about the inner life of the son of an architect, it does not reveal much about architecture, perhaps because it was architecture that ultimately deprived Nathaniel Kahn of his father, Louis. In the Die Hard films, on the other hand, Joel Silver (who collects Frank Lloyd Wright houses) took audiences deep into the entrails of skyscrapers and airports, to demonstrate how buildings and complex spaces work, drawing a much less two-dimensional portrait of them than he achieved of his human characters.

In Heatwave, director Phillip Noyce provides another take on The Fountainhead. Richard Moir plays Steve West, an ambitious architect on the verge of his breakthrough project, a housing complex called Eden, in a rundown part of Sydney. "Why are you doing this?" asks Judy Davis, playing the community activist trying to stop the project from demolishing her neighbourhood. "Because if I didn't, somebody with half my ability would." Later, when West sees what the work has become in the hands of his ruthless property developer client, he echoes Roark: "It's not what I designed."

Some films can capture an architectural mood even before architects are aware of it. Blade Runner really did trigger an interest in dystopia, an exploration of the city of the future as messy and dark. It's not a film's namechecks or plotlines that can really tell us something new about architecture. Of course there is a certain narcissistic flutter when Maria Schneider, playing an architecture student, appears in The Passenger: would anybody else be discovered lurking in quick succession outside both the brutalist concrete of the Brunswick Centre in London and on the roof of Gaudí's La Pedrera in Barcelona?

But there is more to it than that. The real architectural quality of the film is in the climactic, uninterrupted, seven-minute continuous take that begins inside Jack Nicholson's hotel room in southern Spain, moves round the room and out through the window, to make a circuit of the square outside. It's the same sort of crystallization of space that the cinematographer Vittorio Storaro achieved in The Conformist, when Jean-Louis Trintignant is lost in the endless spaces of a fascist minister's office, and the screen is suddenly filled by a vast bust of Mussolini's head that is carried across the screen from left to right.

This is the kind of magic that architects always wish that they could work, but their buildings are static, and they can't impose their viewpoints on the people who experience their buildings. It doesn't stop them from trying.

Deyan Sudjic is an architecture critic. He narrates the film How Much Does Your Building Weigh, Mr Foster?, released on 28 January.


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Frank Gehry’s new building looks like five scrunched-up brown bags

On 17 December, when Frank Gehry unveiled the model of the building he has designed for the University of Technology, Sydney (UTS), the vice-chancellor, Ross Milbourne, told the press: "We've got the Opera House, and it's hard to say we are going to beat that, but from what I've seen we'll have an equally outstanding icon at this end of Sydney." Gehry broke in: "We don't want to beat that." Too late. The entire Australian media announced his building as a rival for the opera house.

The Sydney Opera House may be one of the best known structures in the world, but it is also a worse building than anything Gehry would want to put his name to. The original design by Danish architect Jørn Utzon was rejected by the Australian judges in 1956, only to be reinstated. By the time the opera house opened in 1973, it was more than 10 times over budget. Utzon struggled to protect his vision of a building made of sails until 1966, when he was obliged to close his Sydney office and return to Denmark, because the New South Wales state government would not meet his fees. Government architects took over the project.

In the 60s, there was no way of making Utzon's paper nautilus volutes. The roof shells were eventually realised in clunky ceramic tiles. The interior makes a nonsense of the black-opal seascape outside, and the auditoria don't work. The tinkering goes on. In 1999, Utzon re-designed the reception hall. He died in 2008, without ever having returned to Australia to see the finished building. Gehry has got to believe that UTS will be better clients in the 2010s than the various NSW governments were in the 1950s and 60s.

Utzon had spectacular Bennelong Point as his site; his white building would be visible against the ultramarine waters of the harbour from all points of the compass, not least from the giant span of Sydney harbour bridge. Gehry will have to make do with a car park on the corner of Ultimo Road and Omnibus Lane. This inner suburban area is one of narrow streets and mean houses interspersed with utilitarian structures of overbearing dreariness. When the project was first announced, Gehry was asked if he liked the site. He answered: "I like the problem." The most exciting aspect of his new building is its contribution to the raised pedestrian network suspended over the congested roadways around it, which predates Gehry's concept by 10 years. Gehry's bigger buildings are usually visible from high-speed traffic arteries; people wanting to understand the volumes of this one might have to travel past it on Sydney's despised monorail.

It makes small odds that the Australian press has already dubbed Gehry's building the "brown bag". When young Australian architects describe themselves as embarrassed by its "dowdy proportions", attention should be paid. UTS is already responsible for the most brutal buildings in Ultimo; it might now be making a mistake of a different kind. Imagine five brown paper bags with 15 windows cut in each side, scrunched up and then unscrunched and stacked together, and you've pretty much got it. The concept is so Frank Gehry that it could almost be self-parody, and that's before you realise that the pierced, flared and rolled east facade is clad in brick, in pretended hommage to "the dignity of Sydney's urban brick heritage". The earliest housing in Ultimo was built of sandstone, a material in which the achievement of flares and frills is relatively easy. When Gehry claims that in draping rectangular solids he is simply following the example of Michelangelo, he must know he is talking nonsense. He calls the building a tree house apparently because it has a core of public spaces from which more secluded spaces branch off. It looks more like an abandoned termites' nest.

Milbourne was inspired to approach Gehry by the Ray and Maria Stata Centre he designed for MIT, completed in 2004. In 2007 MIT brought a lawsuit against the Gehry partnership, claiming serious defects in design and execution. The matter has now been settled out of court. Gehry says that initial problems are only to be expected with complex and innovative construction. The western elevation of Gehry's UTS building is to be walled off by huge rectangular sheets of glass, which are expected to mirror fractured sections of the surrounding cityscape. With so much glass trapping the blinding Australian afternoon sun, and so much dazzle, the UTS building is likely to have costly problems of its own.

Gehry is building in Sydney because Australia is one of the very few countries in the world that is not experiencing a recession. UTS has an enviable billion dollars to spend on its 10-year programme of renewal; the new building will cost something in the region of A$150m (£96.5m). The Gehry partnership has the logistical expertise to get the building up on schedule and within budget. History will not be repeated.


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