Diary australia web

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March - May 2014 / the apartment / the landscape / the people / the foot/ Liverpool Northern Beaches / Eastern Suburbs / sculpting the territory / Tasmania / Canberra

Diary NSW : Le Voyage d’Australie

AIA Droga Architect in Residence 2014: Carmen Fiol Costa


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interview What inspired you to become an architect? It was an intuitive decision. My mother, a pharmacist, didn’t understand the path I chose but my father supported me. He wanted to be an architect but family pressures made him choose textile engineering. As a teenager, I was inspired by the buildings of Barcelona and the landscapes of Cataluña, France and England. How would you describe your design ideology to someone unfamiliar with your work? I search for the avant-garde in architecture and contemporary design, and seek to participate in the making of the city as a ground for social living. At this stage of my career I prefer to devote myself to projects that involve strategic thinking and a transversal philosophical approach. Generally if I am not involved in the conception of a project, I am not interested in its realisation. Recently you became the AIA’s first Droga Architect in Residence here in Sydney, what do you hope to achieve through this program? I am elaborating the description of concepts and principles of my practice Arriola & Fiol, building on our concept of urban civic projects. These projects are always hybrids, integrating buildings, street-infrastructure and open space. The focus is on scale and site rather than the program and zoning. Further to this, I am studying how the Australian traditional landscape and its original and contemporary artistic production can influence the architectural design of city communities. Integration between territory and city is a burning issue and influences the urban project. I will examine how the singularity of landscape affects the grain, openness and density of urban fabric. Looking to the future, I propose international exchanges between Barcelona and Sydney. We foresee postgraduate students or emergent architects being selected to contribute to Australian projects at the A&F Barcelona studio. As a result, cross-cultural ties between communities and architects will be strengthened. I understand that your practice is located in Barcelona, what is your experience with Sydney like in comparison? Kenneth Frampton recently told me that his favourite cities are Sydney and Barcelona. I had been in Sydney before, but now with a longer stay and the possibility of forming relationships with colleagues and friends, I am appreciating the similarities of Sydney and my home city. Sydneysiders are active and love their city and its landscape. Barcelona shares a similar climate, and its people are always ready to participate in a wide range of architectural, cultural and sporting events.

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The main difference – apart from the scale of the territory – is that Sydney’s heritage is the Anglo-Saxon Park Movement, where the traditional community concern has been to create commons and green belts. In contrast, Barcelona’s origins are Latin and Mediterranean and its urban fabric is based on a system of plazas. Today the city of Sydney is young and has a healthy urban fabric. It is the perfect moment to organise and coordinate a metropolitan area with the collaboration of different cities and the state; a time for the different bodies to work together to develop infrastructural projects and the common organisation of services. It is the perfect moment to transform open urban spaces in the city into plazas, to work for a more functionally and topographically integrated city, to erase barriers for pedestrians. Sydney needs to create places in the city for people. What do you think is most pressing concern in urban and social housing developments? To coordinate the desire to live in a single family house with the need to be a part of a community. There are so many possibilities: a housing complex with retailers and ateliers, different residential units with private yards sharing a common garden, towers and open courtyard buildings with apartments and maisonettes at the ground floor and roof gardens. They bring density to the city, offering the possibility of exchange between people while maintaining access to the ground. Do you face any challenges as a woman in architectural academia? A woman is not yet the expression of power. The only power for women is authority, try to be self-confident and have a good team to work with as every move is an adventure. A person is very small compared with the diversity of cultures and realities. Any advice for the young? Be curious and challenge what is politically correct, be free. Use intelligence to bring quality to our physical world – not only to the private sphere but to the city. Think about the real possibility of a sustainable architecture in a consumer society. The city is a place of culture and exchange; it is no longer a fortress against nature. The challenge is to integrate it with art and territory; search for the traces of the land in the city and connect with them.


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what is a diary?


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the invitation

left to right: Rod Simpson, Brian Zulaikha, Daniel Droga, Brit Andresen, Peter Poulet, Hannah Bolitho, Paul Berkemeier

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‘notas cahier’


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‘notas cahier’


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‘notas cahier’

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arrival & the blue hotel

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march


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the Droga apartment

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Daniel Droga and Brian Zulaikha rescuing Lali and Carmen (at the end ofApril)


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march


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welcome dinner at Balmain

Brit Andresen and Mandy O’Bryan

march

Carmen with Paul Berkemeier

Peter Poulet and Rod Simpson

at Carriageworks with Billy Kwong

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march


Sydney University with Rod Simpson

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discussions at sydney uni


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Royal Albert Hospital

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march


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the foot


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reception at Droga apartment

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march 12


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Lali arrives march 14


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Peter & Liz

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Eva & Jamie march 21


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Sydney University talk

organised by Daniel Ryan and presented by Professor Roderick Simpson

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march 2


Sonia & Lali

march 2 with sonia

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Lali and Sonia


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Broken Bay & the Northern Beaches

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march 0

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lali, carmen and brian zulaikha


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Venice Biennale presentation

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april 2


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april

Watsons Bay


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Museum of Contemporary Art

2

april


Circular Quay

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Su Keong - Tickets to Chroma


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the Rocks & CBD with Ed Lippmann

ed lippmann

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discussing the project with Brit

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with brit andresen


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the liverpool design charette

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april -2


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the good things in life

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the apartment getting better


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Hunter Valley & kangaroos

april 1


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Bondi Beach

visit to Surf Club with Camilla Block

april 1


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Blue Mountains


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april 1

in Balmain with Peter Stutchbury, who recommended the Carrington Hotel, above

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Glenn & Wendy

april 1

Wendy Lewin and Oscar

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with Glenn Murcutt


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dinner with Jani Laurence


Sunday at Patonga with Tim Greer

barbara

oscar

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tim greer and andreu arriola


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april 20

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meeting the masters


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Ivan & the GAO

april 2

Ivan Jeldrez and Peter Poulet

Peter Poulet and Carmen Fiol

may

from left to right: Carmen Fiol, John Wilkin, Angelo Candalepas, Ed Lippmann, Sonia Blasco, Wendy Lewin, Anna-Katharina Fett, Suzanne Pini, Fernando Torres, Mary Georgiou, Glenn Murcutt

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friends


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may

Liverpool Workshop

At Government Architect Office with Darlene van der Breggen, Hannah Bolitho, and Barbara Schaffer

DARCH dinner

4

may


University of Canberra lecture


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may -

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tour of Parliament House


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may - with Gevork Hartoonian

lunch at Ambassador’s Sr Enrique Viguera

Ann Cleary (University of Canberra) and Lali Fiol

with Matthew Trinca, Enrico Taglieti, Isabel de Montis and Aldo Giurgola

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may 11

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the painting


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with rachel neeson

Barangaroo

may 14

Alec Tzannes

may 1

with Bob Nation

talk at office

City of Sydney talk Bridget Smith - Presentation to the CoS architectural staff

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may 1


may 1

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inventing the site - Tusculum lecture


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Extract An integral holistic approach is proposed where city forms part of landscape and buildings and open space have the same value. New projects will build continuity with the existing fragments of urban elements and provide density to transform unconnected objects into a sculptured territory. Geography, art and city Landscape is a basic heritage of a city, a singularity that should be strengthened in order to create a civic city that constitutes a worldwide reference. In order to re-establish a relationship between art and city it is necessary to train the eye. Look at the territory from a bird’s eye point of view and examine its structure, topography and geometry. In a continuous city where the territorial structure is densely occupied by buildings, the first exercise would be discovering the original territory. That is, the rivers that flow into the bay, the crest lines of the mountains and the torrent lines; identifying orientation and main winds, in order to find neuralgic points, crossroads, special places or eventual promontories to base a strategic urban layout. The objective is to define a piece of urban settlement, an urban civic project, challenging social economic aims and cultural characteristics of the community.

Tasmania


may 1 -1

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Hobart, Tasmania


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may 1 -21

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Launceston with Helen Norrie


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celebrating with Ian Clayton

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informal drinks with Board Members

may 22

David Parken

Mandy O’Bryan and David Parken

may 2

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GAO talk

Dave, Rohan, Nina, Plini, Carmen and Demas at Candalepas


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may 2

Harry Seidler’s Office

may 24

Candalepas Tour

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with Penelope Seidler

guest speaker - Cervantes Institute

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may 2


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a new Birchgrove house

with Wendy Lewin

may 2

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may 2

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exhibition/presentation of project


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may 2

Vivid festival talk

dinner with Consulate of Spain


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departure

may 2


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