WA/SA [waldrip architects/ s.a.] [architecture- los angeles]
Alberti, Sandro 9-11! WaTer-C!; 10 August, 2002 [text20]
Working 9-5, at...
‘WA/SA’, ‘Aloha8’, and ‘Working 9 to 5, at...’
are fictions of fen-om: [www.fen-om.com]
From Matias Creimer’s proposal for a ‘9-11 Museum’: “Like many of my colleagues I have spent time thinking about the WTC attacks and the challenge to provide an architectural solution beyond the demolition of the damaged structures and the quick removal of the debris. It is already clear that the new WTC
project will not simply be the result of one more Into the heavy earth. private investment in downtown Manhattan and the 9-11 Museum shown in this web site is my own contribution to this already open debate. This is a Museum proposed for the NY World Trade Center site. Its shape has been derived from the inversion of the original WTC office complex by excavating its exact negative shape into the land. Like a footstep in the sand, it embodies the memory of what is no longer present. The entire proposed building is sunk beneath the ground, and its footprint covers the whole site. Wells created by the inversion of the old buildings’ masses allow natural light and air into all floors. By letting the existing underground water flow into the wells, a series of pools is generated on which the sky above is permanently reflected. An access ramp and two stairs have been added, following the geometry of the original pattern of the ground level plaza. The program proposed for this building is a ‘9-11 Museum’, meant to host a permanent collection of artifacts to inform visitors about everything that has happened at the site. The Twin Towers have always been a major tourist destination, and the terrorist attacks have not kept people from wanting to visit the WTC site. This ‘9-11 Museum’ has been envisioned not only as a learning experience for visitors but also as a gathering place where this experience can be shared [something no book or web site can provide]. The choice of this program on this site as well as the design process to derive the form of the proposed building, reflect the idea that the architecture that replaces the World Trade Center complex should be deeply tied to the memory of the site. Both the form and the function should commemorate what has so horrendously become absent.” In looking at Matias Creimer’s proposal for this new architecture at the World Trade Center site, one might be struck by the fact that it contains none of that spontaneous contemporaneity expected of an Argentinean architect working in Los Angeles. For, as has become clear over the past decade, if there have been fresh developments in architecture theory, identity politics are amongst the most obvious [‘Architecture Theory
Reflections; it’s in the water!
Horizontal monumentality.
Overview of the negative made positive.