10 minute read
Building the future
Tosin Oshinowo’s curatorial programme for the second iteration of the Sharjah Architecture Triennial will cast its gaze towards sustainable solutions from the Global South
WORDS BY AIDAN IMANOVA CREATIVE DIRECTION BY AIDAN IMANOVA AND HANNAH PEREZ PHOTOGRAPHY BY BASHAR BELAL
Nigerian architect Tosin Oshinowo believes in a human-centric architecture. Her Lagos-based practice CmDesign Atelier is behind several residential and commercial projects in (and around) the city, such as the Maryland Mall (dubbed ‘The Big Black Box’ due to its frame and size), as well as apartment complexes and stylish beach houses. Her practice has also recently completed a rehousing project with the United Nations Development Programme in Northeast Nigeria’s Borno State, replacing the original Ngarannam village whose inhabitants had been displaced by insurgent group Boko Haram in 2015. The project includes 500 earthen-style homes arranged in a grid with shared facilities and was built in close consultation and communication with its community.
Many of Oshinowo’s endeavours follow these principles of human-centric design, whether it is about community engagement or giving voice to artists and creatives as part of her own projects (she has participated in several artistic projects herself, such as her collaboration with Lexus and London-based designer Chrissa Amuah). But besides being conscious of human efforts, Oshinowo is also keenly aware of the importance of one’s context, which has given way to an alternative view of sustainability: one that merits local materials and locally-appropriate architecture which strays from Western ‘modernisation’ and a ‘global style’. “[The architecture] needs to reference where it is from, it needs to be conscious of the environment and it needs to pull inspiration from its context,” she tells identity.
Oshinowo plans to carry forward these principles as part of her new role as the curator of the second edition of the Sharjah Architecture Triennial, under the theme ‘The Beauty of Impermanence: An Architecture of Adaptability’, that will explore issues of scarcity across the Global South which has given rise to a culture of re-use, re-appropriation, innovation, collaboration and adaptation. “[The theme] comes from my understanding of my environment, my contextuality, and the fact that particularly in Africa, and in Lagos, we are always working with limited resources. [With this comes] an [abundance] of innovation and creativity. I used to think of it as a constraint, but to be honest, that is where we found our freedom.”
Set to take place in November 2023, the Triennial will bring together architects, designers, planners, artists and product designers who are working towards reorienting global conversations to create a more inclusively sustainable and resilient future for people and the planet.
To prioritise sustainable practices that work with the climate rather than against it, Oshinowo asserts that one must “go back to go forward” and this calls for moving away from the canon of global notions of sustainability. “If I look at traditional buildings prior to colonialism, they were comfortable, they were appropriate, [and] there was a culture of maintenance, of renewal, of regeneration, which we have lost. We have this buzzword ‘sustainability’ today which [is] highly abused. It is not enough to have ‘zero impact’. The traditional buildings of the past were about the cycle of life and regenerating and renewing. [For example], in Northern Nigeria, at the end of every rainy season, there is a process of repairing the walls [of the building]. [It is] a natural cycle. We have lost so much of that in modern architecture,” she says.
The architect plans to tap practitioners from across the Global South who are working within the reality of scarcity, traditional technologies and adaptable design that are relevant to their contexts and could become learning examples for the rest of the world. While the detailed programming and participant list has not been fully defined, current plans include dividing the exhibition into a series of sections: one exploring architectures that adapt to their environment, one on innovative and contextual materials and another one the use of waste, that - although problematic – is being used to create interesting interventions.
“One of the biggest challenges we have, particularly in West Al Qasimiya Private School is the Africa, is that we have become the official headquarters of the dumping ground for the West’s Sharjah Architecture Triennial clothes,” Oshinowo explains. This has affected local economies and is becoming an ecological issue as discarded textiles – and car parts – increase in the continent’s landfills. “The irony is that people do such interesting things with this waste.” While some of these waste products are recycled within their genre of use, other times they are readapted to create a whole new function. Car tyres, for example, play a big part in innovative furniture in Nigeria, with artists and designers giving discarded items a second life. Ugandan artist Bobby Kolade, for example, upcycles balls of second-hand clothing to create walls for houses.
The school will serve as an exhibition space during the event
Photography by Hannah Perez
The challenge here – and there are many – is convincing high-end clients that working with local materials and upcycling can produce comparable results to importing said materials from overseas, but Oshinowo is hopeful that with the right approach, the narrative can be changed. She cites Indian architect Vinu Daniel, founder of Wallmakers, who is building high-end residential projects using traditional techniques and eco-friendly materials such as clay. “It just goes to show that if architects and designers start to make a different way of seeing things attractive and aspirations, you would be surprised who will follow you down that road,” says Oshinowo. It is one thing to create this type of architecture because the planet requires it, but one must also make it attractive to a client, she adds. “We must be honest. Particularly as architects, we are providing a professional service that someone must pay for. We don’t have the luxury – as artists do – to produce work and that people then engage with. We are indirect salespeople, and we have to make it aspirational. And if we can do that then we are on the way to ensuring that these are the things that can become part of everyday life.”
To create an exhibition that is more diverse and gives voice to a larger pool of practitioners, Oshinowo has selected an advisory board of international architects who will help broaden the scope. I am very familiar with people within the African continent who are doing interesting work, but I was very aware that there was a limit to my knowledge of people who potentially could contribute to this theme from regions that I am not familiar with,” she says. It includes Hoor Al Qasimi, President of Sharjah Architecture Triennial and President & Director of Sharjah Art Foundation; Beatrice Galilee, co-Founder and executive director of The World Around; Mariam Kamara, founder of Atelier Masomi in Niger; Rahul Mehrotra, founder of RMA Architects of Mumbai BritishNigerian artist Yinka Shonibare CBE RA; and Brazilian architect and urbanist Paulo Tavares.
I am very optimistic that, because of the advisory board, I’m really going to have a great, intense mix of people, that people haven’t seen [or may not know about],” says Oshinowo. The architect’s aim is to create an exhibition that is accessible to all and one that will hopefully make a future impact.
“I am not trying to answer any questions, but I am hoping that it will help us all think differently about how we approach our practices, how we approach climate change and have some type of long-term influence in how we generally do things,” she says. “The point is that we can inclusively look for solutions.” id
The heart of the home
With kitchens becoming an increasingly more important part of the living space, here are the latest designs on our radar
Art kitchens A new kitchen model that is somewhat classic, yet minimal, Garde Hvalsøe’s Framed kitchen features solid ash drawers that are framed by a cabinet in a contrasting material – be it patinated copper or zinc. Reminiscent of traditional copper and zinc kitchenware, it reintroduces two archetypal components in a contemporary design that links the past with the future, and which beautifully patinates over time. The cabinet’s oblique profile lends a floating appearance to the drawers, which are joined with hidden dovetail joints, with the gaps acting as grips. The cabinet frame also serves as a worktop – a design solution that is both refined and functional.
Designing lightness
Hailing from Brazil, Ornare has been developing cabinetry for kitchens, bathrooms, closets and vanities for 35 years, and opened its first showroom in the Middle East – in Dubai – earlier this year. Its kitchen collections range from more classic designs to pared-back minimal systems, with inspirations ranging from cultural influences to those of the natural world. With careful attention paid to design and craft, its collections are about functionality as much as aesthetics. The Mech collection, for example, is one that embodies lightness. Its structural skeleton is open to a wide range of modular elements that are characterised by their cubic joints. To obtain the best results, the system should be arranged with open sides; however, glass doors can also be chosen for added lightness.
All in the details Boffi kitchens have long been revered for their contemporary elegance and for cultivating a culture of design. Drawing on a strong dedication to research, the brand’s latest Antibes K collection features open-faced column systems with modules for holding glass bottles and ladles. With a sleek design by Pierro Lissoni, it comprises glass, marble and wood shelves with a new composition that is aimed at satisfying the necessary storage functions of the kitchen. The collection is distinct in its details, staying true to the ethos of Boffi.
Monolithic forms Belgian designer Vincent Van Duysen has long been fascinated with monolithic objects created from a single material: an inspiration that he applied to his Intersection kitchen by Dada, further highlighting the brand’s excellence in working with materials. Made of natural stone, the designer was inspired by the likes of Piet Mondrian and Carlo Scarpa, the former for his use of geometric compositions and the latter for his refined use of materials – primarily in his Querini Stampalia Palace in Venice, where marble, stone, ceramics, wood and metal fittings are used in a masterly way to create highly sophisticated and beautiful environments. Bringing a monolithic sense of nature into the home, the stone slabs have been processed to create lighter panels that are suitable for a home environment.
Theatrical touch Mauro Lipparini’s Villa D’Este kitchen for Visionnaire pays homage to the essence of its name as a theatre of culture, pleasure, well-being and happiness. Designed as a ‘true dry/show kitchen’, it is created to take on the role of queen of the home. Villa D’Este encourages revelling in the slow pleasures and sacredness of preparing a meal, blending concave and convex forms that are bold in their classical craftsmanship yet contemporary in shape. Its main elements include the Tivoli boiserie and the central island, the former acting as the skin of the entire collection. Underlining the connection between the kitchen and living room, the boiserie integrates doors and wall units, shelves and built-in lights, opacities and transparencies. The central island, on the other hand, acts as the reference point for the kitchen. Villa D’Este is also defined by its rich use of materials - American ziricote wood, Patagonia quartzite and faceted engraved glass - offset by the luminous lines that are carved into the depths of the boiserie.
Professional practicality
When a professional chef and designer come together to create a kitchen, one can only expect great results. Such is the case with Arrital’s AkB_08 collection, created through a collaboration between designer Franco Driusso and chef Andrea Berton, transferring the practicality of a professional kitchen to a home environment. In keeping with Arrital’s simple and elegant kitchen systems, the collection uses a frame door with a ‘floating core’ where clean lines match the structure’s robustness, creating a contemporary design that fits well with its various accessories. Functionality-wise, it includes elements such as the ‘Twice’ worktop that allows users to increase their work surface or, by lifting it, reveal the ergonomic stainless steel-equipped space featuring an array of essential accessories and tools used for food preparation. id