Thom Mayne: Architecture is a new way to connect to the world

81,507 views ・ 2007-05-17

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:26
I don't know your name. Audience Member: Howard. Howard.
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Thom Mayne: Howard? I'm sitting next to Howard. I don't know Howard, obviously,
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and he's going, I hope you're not next.
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(Laughter)
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Amazing. Amazing performance.
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I kind of erased everything in my brain to follow that.
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Let me start some place. I'm interested --
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I kind of do the same thing, but I don't move my body. (Laughter)
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And instead of using human figures to develop ideas of time and space,
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I work in the mineral world. I work with more or less inert matter.
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And I organize it. And, well, it's also a bit different
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because an architect versus, let's say, a dance company
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finally is a negotiation between one's private world,
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one's conceptual world, the world of ideas, the world of aspirations,
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of inventions, with the relationship of the exterior world
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and all the limitations, the naysayers.
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Because I have to say, for my whole career,
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if there's anything that's been consistent, it's been that you can't do it.
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No matter what I've done, what I've tried to do,
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everybody says it can't be done.
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And it's continuous across the complete spectrum of the various
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kind of realities that you confront with your ideas.
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And to be an architect, somehow you have to negotiate between left and right,
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and you have to negotiate between this very private place where ideas take place
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and the outside world, and then make it understood.
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I can start any number of places, because this process is also --
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I think -- very different from some of the morning sessions,
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which you had such a kind of very clear, such a lineal idea,
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like the last one, say, with Howard,
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that I think the creative process in architecture,
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the design process, is extremely circuitous. It's labyrinthine.
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It's Calvino's idea of the quickest way between two points
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is the circuitous line, not the straight line.
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And definitely my life has been part of that.
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I'm going to start with some simple kind of
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notions of how we organize things.
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But basically, what we do is, we try to give coherence to the world.
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We make physical things, buildings
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that become a part in an accretional process; they make cities.
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And those things are the reflection of the processes,
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and the time that they are made.
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And what I'm doing is attempting to synthesize the way one sees the world
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and the territories which are useful as generative material.
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Because, really, all I'm interested in, always, as an architect,
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is the way things are produced because that's what I do. Right?
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And it's not based on an a priori notion.
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I have no interest at all in conceiving something in my brain
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and saying, "This is what it looks like." In fact, somebody mentioned --
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Ewan, maybe it was you in your introduction --
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about this is what architects --
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did somebody say it's what business people come to,
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it's what the corporate world comes to
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when they want to make it look like something at the end of the line? Huh. Wow.
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It doesn't work that way for me at all.
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I have no interest in that whatsoever.
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Architecture is the beginning of something, because it's --
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if you're not involved in first principles,
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if you're not involved in the absolute,
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the beginning of that generative process, it's cake decoration.
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And I've nothing wrong with cake decoration and cake decorators,
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if anybody's involved in cake decorations --
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it's not what I'm interested in doing. (Laughter)
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And so, in the formation of things, in giving it form,
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in concretizing these things,
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it starts with some notion of how one organizes.
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And I've had for 30 years an interest in a series of complexities
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where a series of forces are brought to bear,
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and to understand the nature of the final result of that,
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representing the building itself.
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There's been a continual relationship between inventions,
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which are private, and reality, which has been important to me.
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A project which is part of an exhibition in Copenhagen 10 years ago,
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which was the modeling of a hippocampus --
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the territory of the brain that records short-term memory --
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and the documentation of that, the imaginative and documentation of that
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through a series of drawings which literally attempt to organize that experience.
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And it had to do with the notion of walking a kilometer,
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observing every kilometer a particular object of desire,
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and then placing that within this.
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And the notion was that I could make an organization
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not built on normal coherencies, but built on non-sequiturs, built on randomness.
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And I'd been extremely interested in this notion of randomness
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as it produces architectural work
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and as it definitely connects to the notion of the city,
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an accretional notion of the city,
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and that led to various ideas of organization.
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And then this led to broader ideas of buildings
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that come together through the multiplicity of systems.
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And it's not any single system that makes the work.
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It's the relationship -- it's the dynamics between the systems --
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which have the power to transform and invent
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and produce an architecture that is -- that would otherwise not exist.
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And those systems could be identified,
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and they could be grouped together.
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And of course, today, with the technology of the computer
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and with the rapid prototyping, etc., we have the mechanisms
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to understand and to respond to these systems,
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and to allow them to adjust to the various accommodations of functionalities
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because that's all we do.
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We're producing spaces that accommodate human activity.
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And what I'm interested in is not the styling of that,
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but the relationship of that as it enhances that activity.
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And that directly connects to ideas of city-making.
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This is a project that we just finished in Penang
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for a very, very large city project that came directly out of this process,
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which is the result of the multiplicity of forces that produce it.
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And the project -- again, enormous, enormous competition --
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on the Hudson River and in New York
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that we were asked to do three years ago, which uses these processes.
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And what you're looking at are possibilities that have to do
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with the generation of the city as one applies a methodology
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that uses notions of these multiple forces,
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that deals with the enormity of the problem, the complexity of the problem,
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when we're designing cities at larger and larger aggregates.
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Because one of the issues today is
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that the economic aggregate is driving the development aggregate,
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and as the aggregates get larger we require
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more and more complex investigation processes to solve these problems.
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And that led us directly to the Olympic Village.
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I was in New York on Monday presenting it to the IOC.
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We won the competition -- what was it, nine months ago?
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Again, a direct reflection from using these processes
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to develop extremely complicated, very large-scale organisms.
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And then, also, was working with broad strategies.
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In this case, we only used 15 of the 60 acres of land,
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and the 45 acres was a park and would become the legacy of the Olympic Village.
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And it would become the second largest park in the boroughs, etc.
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Its position, of course, in the middle of Manhattan -- it's on Hunter's Point.
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And then the broader ideas of city-making
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start having direct influences on architecture,
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on the elements that make up the broader scheme,
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the buildings themselves, and start guiding us.
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Architecture for me has been an investigation of a multiplicity of forces
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that could come from literally any place.
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And so I can start this discussion in any number of places,
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and I've chosen three or four to talk about.
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And it has also to do with an interest in
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the vast kind of territory that architecture touches.
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It literally is connected to anything in terms of knowledge base.
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There's just no place that it doesn't somehow
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have a connective tissue to.
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This is Jim Dine, and it's the absence of presence, etc.
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It's the clothing, the skin, without the presence of the character.
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It became kind of an idea for the notion of the surface of a work,
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and it was used in a project where we could unravel that surface,
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and it was a figurative idea that was going to be folded
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and made into a very, kind of complex space.
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And the idea was the relationship of the space,
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which was made up of the fold of the image,
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and the dialectic or the conflict between the figuration,
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and the clarity of the image
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and the complexity of the space, which were in dialog.
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And it made us rethink the whole notion of how we work
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and how we make things,
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and it led us to ideas that were closer to fashion design as we flattened out surfaces,
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and then brought them back together as they could make spatial combinations.
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And this was the first prototype in Korea,
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as we're dealing with a dynamic envelope,
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and then the same characteristic of the fabric.
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It has a material identity and it's translucent and it's porous,
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and it allows us for a very different notion of what a skin of a building is.
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And that turned right away into another project.
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This is the Caltrans building in Los Angeles.
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And now we're seeing as the skin and the body is differentiated.
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Again, it's a very, very simple notion.
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If you look at most buildings,
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what you look at is the building, the facade, and it is the building.
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And all of a sudden we're kind of moving away,
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and we're separating the skin from the body,
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and that's going to lead to broader performance criteria,
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which I'm going to talk about in a minute.
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And you're looking at how it drapes over
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and differentiates from the body.
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And then, again, the building itself,
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middle of Los Angeles, right across from City Hall.
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And as it moves, it takes pieces of the earth with it. It bends up.
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It's part of a sign system,
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which was part of the kind of legacy of Los Angeles --
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the two-dimension, three-dimension signing, etc.
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And then it allows one to penetrate the work itself.
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It's transparent, and it allows you to understand, I think,
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what is always the most interesting thing in any building,
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which is the actual constructional processes that make it.
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And it's probably the most intense kind of territory
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of the work, which is not occupied,
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because architecture is always the most interesting in some mechanism
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when it's separated from function,
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and this is an area that allows for that.
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And then the skin starts transforming into other materials.
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We're using light as a building material in this case.
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We're working with Keith Sonnier in New York,
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and we're making this large outside room,
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which is possible in Los Angeles, and which is very much reflective
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of the urban, the contemporary urban environments
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that you would find in Shibuya or you'd find in Mexico City
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or Sao Paulo, etc.,
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that have to do with activating the city over a longer span of time.
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And that was very much part of the notion
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of the urban objective of this project in Los Angeles.
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And, again, all of it promoting transparency.
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And an image which may be closest talks about the use of light as a medium,
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that light becomes literally a building material.
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Well, that immediately turned into something much broader, and as a scope.
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And again, we're looking at an early sketch
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where I'm understanding now
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that the skin can be a transition between the ground and the tower.
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This is a building in San Francisco which is under construction.
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And now it turned into something much, much broader as a problem,
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and it has to do with performance.
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This will be the first building in the United States that took --
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well, I can't say it took the air conditioning out. It's a hybrid.
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I wanted a pure thing, and I can't get it.
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It's a wrong attitude, actually, because the hybrid is probably more interesting.
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But we took the air conditioning out of the tower.
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There's some air conditioning left in the base,
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but the skin now moves on hydraulics.
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It forces air through a Venturi force if there's no wind.
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It adjusts continually. And we removed the air conditioning.
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Huge, huge thing. Half a million dollars a year delta.
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10 of these -- it's just under a million square feet --
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800 and some thousand square feet --
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10 of these would power Sausalito -- the delta on this.
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And so now what we're looking at, as the projects get larger in scale,
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as they interface with broader problems,
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that they expand the capabilities
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in terms of their performance.
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Well, I could also start here.
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We could talk about the relationship
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at a more biological sense of the relationship of building and ground.
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Well, our research -- my generation for sure,
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people who were going to school in the late '60s --
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made very much a shift out of the internal focus of architecture,
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looking at architecture within its own territory,
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and we were much more affected by film,
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by what was going on in the art world, etc.
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This is, of course, Michael Heizer.
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And when I saw this, first an image and then visited,
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it completely changed the way I thought after that point.
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And I understood that building really could be
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the augmentation of the Earth's surface,
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and it completely shifted the notion of building ground in the most basic sense.
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And then -- well, he was probably looking at this -- this is Nazca;
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this is 700 years ago -- the most amazing four-kilometer land sculptures.
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They're just totally incredible.
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And that led us to then completely rethinking how we draw, how we work.
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This is the first sketch of a high school in Pomona --
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well, whatever it is, a model, a conceptual, kind of idea.
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And it's the reshaping of the Earth to make it occupiable.
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So it puts 200,000 square feet of stuff that make a high school work
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in the surface of that Earth.
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There it is modeled as it was developing into a piece of work.
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And there it is, again, as it's starting to get resolved tectonically,
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and then there's the school.
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And, of course,
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we're interested in participating with education.
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I have absolutely no interest in producing a building
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that just accommodates X, Y and Z function.
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What I'm interested in are how these ideas
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participate in the educational process of young people.
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It demands some sort of notion of inquiry
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because it's a system that's developed not sculpturally.
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It's an idea that started from my first discussion.
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It has to do with a broad, consistent logic,
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and that logic could be understood as one occupies the building.
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And there's an overt -- at least,
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there's an attempt to make a very overt notion of a building
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that connects to the land in a very different way
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because I was interested in a very didactic approach to the problem,
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as one would understand that.
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And the second project that was just finished in Los Angeles
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that uses some of the same ideas. It uses landscape as a major idea.
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Then, again, we're doing the headquarters for NOAA --
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National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Agency --
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outside of Washington in Maryland.
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And this is how they see the world.
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They have 22 satellites zipping around at plus or minus 100 miles,
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and the site's in red.
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And what we really want to do -- well, the architects,
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if there are architects out there, this is the Laugier Hut;
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this is the primitive hut that's been around for so long --
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and what we wanted to do is really build this,
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because they see themselves as the caretakers of the world,
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and we wanted them to look down at their satellite,
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how they see their own site, that eight-acre site,
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and we wanted nothing left. We wanted it to stay green.
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There's actually three baseball fields on it right now,
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and they're going to stay there.
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We put one piece directly north-south,
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and it holds the dishes at the ears, right?
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And then right below that the processing, and the mission lift,
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and the mission control room, and all the other spaces are underground.
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And what you look at is an aircraft carrier
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that's performance-driven by the cone vision of these satellite dishes.
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And that the building itself is occupied in the lower portion,
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broken up by a series of courts,
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and it's five acres of uninterrupted, horizontal space
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for their administrative offices.
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And then that, in turn, propelled us to look at
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larger-scale projects where this notion of landscape building interface
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becomes a connective tissue.
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The new capital competition for Berlin, four years ago.
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And again we just finished the ECB --
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actually Coop Himmelblau in Vienna just won this project,
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where the building was separated into a series of landscape elements
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that became part of a connective tissue of a park,
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which is parallel to the river, and develops ideas of the buildings themselves
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and becomes part of the connective fabric --
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the social, cultural and the landscape, recreational fabric of the city.
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And the building is no longer seen as an autonomous thing,
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but something that's only inextricably connected
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to this city and this place at this time.
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And a project that was realized in Austria, the Hooper Bank,
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which again used this idea of connecting typology,
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the traditional buildings, and morphology,
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or the relationship of the development of land as an idea,
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into a complex, which is a piece of a city where we can see part of it
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is literally just this augmenting,
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this movement of the land that's a very simple idea of
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just lifting it up and occupying it,
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and other parts are much more energetic and intense.
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And talk about that intensity
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in terms of the collisions of the kind of events they make
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that have to do with putting a series of systems together,
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and then where part of it is in the ground, part of it is oppositional lifts.
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One enters the building as it lifts off the ground,
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and it becomes part of the idea.
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And then the skin -- the edges of this --
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all promote the dynamic, the movement of the building
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as a series of seismic shifts, geologic shifts. Right?
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And it makes for event space and then it breaks in places
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that allow you to peer into the interior, and those interiors, again,
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are promoting transparency for the workplace,
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which has been a continual interest of ours.
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And then, again, in a more, kind of traditional setting,
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this is a graduate student housing in Toronto,
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and it's very much about the relationship of a building
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as it makes a connective tissue to the city.
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The main idea was the gateway, where it breaks the site,
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and the building occupies both the public space and the private space.
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And it's that territory of -- it's this thing.
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I visited the site many times, and everybody, kind of --
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you can see this from two kilometers away; it's an exact center of the street,
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and the whole notion is to engage the public,
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to engage buildings as part of the public tissue of the city.
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And finally, one of the most interesting projects -- it's a courthouse.
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And what I want to talk about -- this is the Supreme Court, of course --
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and, well, I'm dealing with Michael Hogan, the Chief Justice of Oregon.
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You could not proceed without making this negotiation
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between one's own values and the relationship
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of the character you're working with and how he understands the court,
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because I'm showing him, of course, Corbusier at Savoy,
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which is 1928, which is the beginning of modern architecture.
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Well, then we get to this image.
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And this is where the project started. Because I'm going,
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I'm interested in the phenomenon that's taking place in here.
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And really what we're talking about is constructing reality.
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And I'm a character that's extremely interested
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in understanding the nature of that constructed reality
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because there's no such thing as nature any more. Nature is gone.
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Nature in the 19th-century sense, alright?
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Nature is only a cultural edifice today, right?
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We construct it and we construct those ideas.
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And then of course, this one, our governor at the moment.
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And we spent some time with Conan, believe it or not,
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and then that led us to, kind of, the very differences of our worlds
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from a legal and an artistic, architectural.
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And it forced us to talk about notions of how we work,
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and the dynamics of that, and what other sources of the work is.
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And it led us to the project, the courthouse,
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which is absolutely a part of a negotiation
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between tradition and pieces of the traditional courthouse.
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You'll find a stair that's the same length as the Supreme Court.
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Here's a piano nobile, which is a device used in the Renaissance.
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The courts were made of that. The skin is this series of layers
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that reflect even rusticated stonework,
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but which were embedded with fragments of the Constitution,
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which were part of the little process,
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all set on a plinth that defined it from the community.
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Thank you so much.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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