| Commentary: One architect's answer to Kobe earthquake may be example for Haiti |
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| By Robert Duffy, Beacon Associate Editor | |
| Posted 10:55 am Mon., 01.18.10 | |
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Former President Bill Clinton was on television last week talking about Haiti, and he emphasized the need for thinking beyond the so-called 72-hour window -- the time frame during which trapped men, women and children have a good shot at being rescued alive. He spoke emphatically of the pressing needs for food, water, medical care and shelter in the days coming on, but he also stressed the need to look forward, well into the future, and to make good decisions about sustainable solutions. Clinton also betrayed frustration. Through his foundation, he has been at work directing planning efforts and fund-raising activities in hopes of kick-starting Haiti's stalled economy and bringing a measure of financial stability to the troubled nation.
Although distribution of food, water and medicine has been chaotic, these necessities are haltingly but gradually making their way through the arteries of the Haitian nation, especially in the capital, Port-au-Prince, which was most devastatingly affected. Shelter, because it involves larger material resources, and requires at least moderately skilled labor, is a more difficult proposition simply because of scale and complexity. There have been brilliant solutions, however, and one architect's work in particular needs to be considered quickly if the problem of shelter is to be addressed efficiently. The Power of paper In 2001, the Japanese architect Shigeru Ban gave a lecture at the College of Architecture at Washington University. To say his talk was inspirational does it little justice; it was transformational. Although Ban is widely known and respected for his breathtakingly original and refined residential and institutional buildings, as well as extraordinary exhibition designs, my devotion to him and his work evolved from that speech. It focused on work he has done applying his art and his deep commitment to humanity to the service of populations devastated by "natural" disasters. In February 1995, I was in Japan on assignment. The morning after we arrived, we made a circuitous journey on at least four different conveyances from Osaka to Kobe, where the destruction and anguish of the Great Hanshin Earthquake of the previous month were heartbreakingly evident. Multi-story buildings were crushed into pancake stacks; tall buildings leaned precariously over busy streets; others were cleaved as if attacked by some mad giant chef. We walked through a neighborhood that was obliterated, destroyed by a fire precipitated by the shaking. What remained were signs indicating where an occupant might be found, and poignant reminders of previous residents: a doll, a teapot, a pair of worn trousers, a vase. In Port-au-Prince at this moment, similar situations exist all over the city, and because of the relative poverty are even more profound than Kobe. Thousands and thousands of men, women and children are living in the streets in conditions so wretched one actually cannot imagine them. In 1995, months after the Kobe quake, very little had been done to address the problems of shelter. Shigeru Ban resolved to do something, to bring his skills to bear on the problems of housing, not simply to lament the disaster from an aesthetic and physical remove. His solution was to employ, with great virtuosity, a material that is very much a part of his heritage and a material he'd used before: paper. In 1986, Ban was commissioned to design an exhibition of the work of the great Finnish architect Alvar Aalto, whom Ban admires deeply and in whose work he discovered extraordinary resources in both formal and functional terms. Thrift, keen attention to human scale and human need, delight in simplicity, an understanding of the healing and exultant qualities of beauty -- all apply to the work of both men, whose minds and souls, it seems to me, are in mystical sync. The Aalto exhibition was designed for the Axis Gallery in Tokyo, and demands for economic restraint and a sense of aesthetic possibility sent Ban to paper as his primary material for the construction of the installation in the gallery. His choice was propitious, and would affect his work from that moment forward. As noted above, many of the conditions that I saw in Kobe in February still existed in June when Ban came on the scene. Large numbers of residents of the city were still living in shantytowns, in tents and lean-tos. Despair and homelessness were bedfellows. Paper construction in Kobe
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On July 29, St. Louis reopened a two-block stretch in Old North St. Louis that also opens possibilities for more development.(Photos by Rachel Heidenry | Beacon intern)
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