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Preserving the Modern
Welcome to the Summer issue of Preservation Architect. It is a full
issue, and comes at a busy time, just after convention and as we
enter the second half of the year. I think you will find many
opportunities herein to connect with relevant issues, and believe
you will enjoy the read. The committee is always looking for active
participation from members and components, so please contact us if
you have ideas or want to volunteer!
To provide an opposing viewpoint to one of our featured articles,
Carroll William Westfalls Why Preservation Cannot Save
Us from Modernism, and Why Classicism Can, I wanted to write
a short piece on preserving modernism, as it was the impetus for my
becoming co-chair of the upcoming jointly-sponsored conference with
the Committee on Design in Copenhagen, Denmark (please clickhere for more details). I find that many
in the preservation community are struggling with preserving
buildings from our recent past, i.e., those that are called
Mid-Century and are now coming of age to be listed in the National
Register of Historic Places. The relative youth of some of these
buildings and their often stripped down appearance has
taken awhile for some to appreciate, and others still have doubts
as to their contribution to significant architecture.
Why is this era of architecture, in all its iterations of style, so
difficult to appreciate? Is it because there was such an
extraordinary boom in construction after World War II that one
style saturated the market? Do we take some of these buildings for
granted and just see them as background architecture, when in fact
many may be very fine buildings? Why do we often categorize them as
non-architecture, when their engineering, integration of functions,
crisp features and elegant proportions comprise a well-designed
whole? Why cant the public just accept that time moves on,
and each era needs to be respected for what its architecture has
brought to culture? These are the issues that relate to finding
ways to identify, assess, document and list these structures.
Many architects know and delight in Mid-Century icons such as the
United Nations Building, Gordon Bunshaft/ SOMs Lever House,
and Mies van de Rohes Chicago Federal Center and Farnsworth
House - but what about more ordinary structures? There are lots of
excellently designed buildings, campuses and commercial complexes
constructed in the mid-century that are finding new appreciation.
Their clean-lined designs, their settings and relationships to
their environments, their transitions from indoor to outdoor by the
use of plazas, glass and elegantly designed lobbies, as well as
their full integration of furniture, finishes and lighting, all
speak to the care with which mid-century architects undertook their
commissions. A number of corporate giants are finding that
preserving and retaining their Mid-Century corporate headquarters,
such as RJ Reynolds in Virginia, or General Motors in Michigan,
serves as a strong business indicator of the soundness of the
corporation and its respect for its legacy as it moves into the
future.
Thousands of structures need to be identified and listed in the
National Register of Historic Places as a first step to their
preservation. There are also technical challenges with materials
conservation and building performance that architects need to
develop and share. The steel structures, thin skins and curtain
walls of so many of the recent past buildings have created a
preservation dilemma. How do you bring back to life materials and
fastening systems that are on the verge of failure? How do you
bring contemporary performance levels to buildings designed during
a golden age of prosperity and lack of concern for energy
efficiency? How do you save post-war thermo-plastics and composite
materials that now are considered unfriendly to the environment, or
went out of production as poor performers?
Many HRC members and allied organizations, such as the Association
for Preservation Technology International and DoCoMoMo, are working
to encourage identification and protection of these structures. The
National Trust for Historic Preservation, through its acquisition
of the Glass House and the Farnsworth House, as well as its annual
11 most endangered list, is bringing visibility to this era of
architecture. The General Services Administration has been a major
proponent of preserving modernism through their Federal Modernism
initiative, and there is a wealth of information on their website
(http://www.gsa.gov/federalmodernism). More
conferences and technical bulletins are being written about how to
preserve fragile materials, how to detail replacement materials and
systems, and how to be more sustainable and energy efficient when
sensitively retrofitting exterior envelopes. The underlying
philosophical issue continues to be maintaining the integrity of
these resources while major rehabilitation is undertaken. It is an
issue that will stimulate much discussion as architects grapple
with many of the technical issues to do with materials conservation
or lack thereof. A particularly good resource is the recent
publication Preservation of Modern Architecture, by Theodore H. M.
Prudon, published by Wiley & Sons.
The Historic Resources Committee is part of this new wave of
interest, and as such is co-sponsoring the upcoming conference in
Copenhagen, Danish Modern: Then and Now. As we go to press,
registration is filling fast. So if you have ever considered
learning more about the class of architecture known to many as
Mid-Century Modern, I hope that you will join me for this exciting
event over Labor Day weekend. This will be just the first effort as
HRC joins with others to bring awareness of this continuing topic
of interest: preserving our modern architectural heritage.
Sharon C. Park, FAIA
2008 Chair, HRC
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