Monday, 12 March 2012

Week One Reading: Summary taken from; Bure, G. 2008. Paris / La Villette. In Bernard Tschumi. ed. G. Bure, 47-73. Birkhauser: Basel

With a new socialist government and the election of President Francois Mitterrand in 1981, high priority was placed on the promotion of French culture through architecture; in particularly the development of major public institutions. This meant an increase in competition for these major projects. Bernard Tschumi was attracted to the proposal to redevelop La Villette (an area in northeast Paris originally slated for a modern-day slauterhouse). It was a 135-acre site and intersection point of the Ourcq Canal and Saint-Denis Canal. The project gave Tschumi the opportunity to “engage theory and practise, the virtual and the real” (Bure, 2008, p.47) – he was a well known theorist and intellectual but totally unknown to the general public as he had not built anything. His approach to the design seemed very theoretical – “He made inquiries, dissected the project brief and reviewed the history of La Villette” (Bure, 2008, p.47). Many had an opinion on the park; these opinions were mostly negative, describing “deserted boulevards” and “vacant lots” (Jean-Jaures). Later, the Belgian writer and director Francois Weyergans described “feeling[s] of pleasure” and saw the park as “a place, that is, a space occupied by a body” (Bure, 2008, p.48). This reaffirmed Tschumi’s concept of “space, event and movement” and his interest in architecture as “a form of knowledge rather than a knowledge of form” (Bure, 2008, p.48). Tschumi envisioned an urban project, discarding Frederick Law Olmsted’s idea that “in a park, the city should not exist” (Bure, 2008, p.51). His concept of urbanism; made up of interacting points, lines and planes resulted from the culmination of his ideas from many of his works. He took from Joyce’s Garden and the idea of the “common denominator” as an organising principle for a heterogeneous set of information, and the concept of cinematically derived “actions” from his 1978 Screenplays series. (Bure, 2008, p.51). His new concept revolving around “simplicity of expression, combined with complexity of reasoning and multiple possibilities” (bure, 2008, p.54) earned him the position of chief architect for the La Villette redevelopment. 

Tschumi’s concept for the park remained the same, despite budget setbacks – the “lines” indicated circulation paths, four major “points” of the site linked by two main pedestrian axes; one a covered walkway with a wave-like roof, the other bordering the Ourq canal which opens up a series of vantage points over the park. These were broken up by a “sinuous cinematic” promenade, weaving through gardens – these gardens conceived as successive frames of a filmstrip. Folies around the site in a point grid structure are meant as “activators of space” rather than sculptural objects. This enabled the park to be an area of both intense activity and quietness. 

Tschumi, along with the director of the Park; Goldberg built the first group of folies in the centre of the park with the idea that commercial investors would be attracted to lots on the outer edges, providing the necessary funding to finish the buildings; they’d “follow easily” Bure, 2008, p.65). Tschumi embraced this double entendre or “transference” in architecture; “the structures were both architectural “follies” and [architectural] “madness””; in the sense that they did not “follow easily” the norm. He embraced this later with his Twentieth Century Follies; temporary installations in New York, London and The Netherlands. These folies did not identify with any one meaning; instead they were perceived to have multiple meanings. With the support of his intellectual allies including Roland Barthes, Maurice Blanchot and Michel Foucault, the park was anchored into the realm of “structuralist and post-structuralist allusion” (Bure, 2008, p.65).

Bure, G. 2008. Paris / La Villette. In Bernard Tschumi. ed. G. Bure, 47-73. Birkhauser: Basel

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