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Old Posted Jun 26, 2012, 4:09 PM
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When architects are corporate toadies - New Haven, CT

Kevin Roche’s architectural legacy on display in National Building Museum show


June 19th, 2012

Read More: http://www.washingtonpost.com/entert...coV_story.html

Quote:
In the mid-1980s, I was condemned to spend several years in New Haven, Conn., at the time one of the saddest and ugliest cities in the world. Preeminent among the many ugly things in New Haven were two buildings designed by Kevin Roche: a factorylike stadium, which placed parking above the arena, and a fortresslike office tower with massive turrets at each corner, which was so bluntly arrogant in its blank, alien form that it made all the city seem its prisoner.

- With partner John Dinkeloo, Roche’s firm became the successor to Eero Saarinen’s office after Saarinen died in 1961 at age 51. They saw through to completion several of Saarinen’s most revered projects, including the Gateway Arch in St. Louis and Dulles International Airport. But when Roche began working under his own name in 1966, his output didn’t have the sculptural exuberance or high-minded utopian imagination of Saarinen. Responding to the robust economy and the emergence of giant American corporations, with their seemingly bottomless appetite for new office space, Roche responded with technocratic fervor, rewarding his clients with giant, geometrical enactments of their organizational structure. He made architecture look like a flow chart.

- It’s hard to be objective about an architect when you have long hated even one of his buildings. It’s also hard being objective about the architecture of the 1960s and ’70s, which seems like a very bleak period, the heyday of brutalism and too many vitiated efforts to purify or dress up the dying modernist box. There has been a push recently to reassess the architects of this period, including meticulous renovations that have forced reappraisal of some buildings once thought irredeemably hideous. And, of course, taste changes, so perhaps the ’60s and ’70s will seem as fashionable in a few years as mid-century modern is now.

- The building museum exhibit, a smaller version of a show organized by the Yale School of Architecture, stresses the architect’s environmental sensibility, arguing that he was ahead of his time in thinking about building systems and how buildings relate to the world around them. One of Roche’s best buildings, the 1963-68 Ford Foundation Building in New York, arrayed offices around a huge internal garden, one of the early examples of the giant terrar­iums that have become standard in hotel lobbies and corporate space.

- Clients loved him, and in many cases, remained faithful to his firm over decades. Among Roche’s institutional patrons is New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, a landlocked, land-hungry beast that he has been helping expand and modernize since 1967, most recently with a newly designed American Wing, which opened this year. Even his corporate spaces, which responded to the needs of the company and the basic human needs of its employees, were often innovative. A 1970-75 corporate headquarters for the pharmaceutical company Richardson-Vicks in Connecticut was nestled into a wooded environment with as much care as possible to keep the landscape intact. Parking was placed above and below the building, which was built not by clear-cutting the landscape, but from one end to the other, to minimize impact on the forest. With their windows and offices arrayed to maximize light and views, and with their forests and moats and artificial lakes, Roche’s corporate buildings are often a delight to work in.

- Even the ghastly things he built in New Haven have a certain logic. The Knights of Columbus Building, which looks like a giant stack of identical stereo components, was designed to place stairways and toilets in its four corner turret towers, keeping the main office floors open from unnecessary obstructions. The arena, which has been torn down, solved a basic parking issue with a brute but rational solution. A high water table meant that parking couldn’t be placed underground, so with one quick slice through the Gordian knot, Roche placed it above, accessible by spiral ramps.

- It’s also possible that hostility to Roche’s work stems from a more fundamental and problematic hostility to his corporate clients. Roche helped define the “corporate” look: the sleek shiny glass walls, the capacious campuses with carefully manicured glimpses of nature. In the 1960s and even into the ’70s, it appeared that corporations were our friends, a ready and reliable route to prosperity, with promises of pensions, health care and career-long loyalty. But they were amoral entities, and the fact that they have mostly absolved themselves of any sense of local responsibility, any loyalty to their employees and any moral niceties beyond the duty to maximize profit shouldn’t be held against an architect such as Roche. As the classic argument goes: If he hadn’t been building them good buildings, somebody else would have built them bad ones.

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