1 00:00:00,787 --> 00:00:03,747 Imagine that when you walked in here this evening, 2 00:00:03,747 --> 00:00:05,825 you discovered that everybody in the room 3 00:00:05,825 --> 00:00:08,450 looked almost exactly the same: 4 00:00:08,450 --> 00:00:10,447 ageless, raceless, 5 00:00:10,447 --> 00:00:12,426 generically good-looking. 6 00:00:12,426 --> 00:00:14,478 That person sitting right next to you 7 00:00:14,478 --> 00:00:16,704 might have the most idiosyncratic inner life, 8 00:00:16,704 --> 00:00:19,045 but you don't have a clue because we're all wearing 9 00:00:19,045 --> 00:00:22,450 the same blank expression all the time. 10 00:00:22,450 --> 00:00:25,636 That is the kind of creepy transformation 11 00:00:25,636 --> 00:00:28,066 that is taking over cities, 12 00:00:28,066 --> 00:00:31,485 only it applies to buildings, not people. 13 00:00:31,485 --> 00:00:37,711 Cities are full of roughness and shadow, 14 00:00:37,711 --> 00:00:38,934 texture and color. 15 00:00:38,934 --> 00:00:44,376 You can still find architectural surfaces of great individuality and character, 16 00:00:44,376 --> 00:00:47,608 in apartment buildings in Riga 17 00:00:47,608 --> 00:00:50,041 and [???]. 18 00:00:50,041 --> 00:00:53,498 social housing in Vienna, 19 00:00:53,498 --> 00:00:55,535 Hopi villages in Arizona, 20 00:00:55,535 --> 00:00:57,859 brownstones in New York, 21 00:00:57,859 --> 00:00:59,917 wooden houses in San Francisco. 22 00:00:59,917 --> 00:01:02,251 These aren't palaces or cathedrals. 23 00:01:02,251 --> 00:01:04,094 These are just ordinary residences 24 00:01:04,094 --> 00:01:06,969 expressing the ordinary splendor of cities. 25 00:01:06,969 --> 00:01:09,017 And the reason they're like that 26 00:01:09,017 --> 00:01:11,010 is that the need for shelter 27 00:01:11,010 --> 00:01:13,343 is so bound up with the human desire 28 00:01:13,343 --> 00:01:15,303 for beauty. 29 00:01:15,303 --> 00:01:17,792 Their rough surfaces give us 30 00:01:17,792 --> 00:01:21,070 a touchable city. 31 00:01:21,070 --> 00:01:23,448 Right? Streets that you can read by running your fingers 32 00:01:23,448 --> 00:01:24,783 over brick and stone. 33 00:01:24,783 --> 00:01:28,430 But that's getting harder to do, 34 00:01:28,430 --> 00:01:31,917 because cities are becoming smooth. 35 00:01:31,917 --> 00:01:34,875 New downtowns sprout towers that are almost always made 36 00:01:34,875 --> 00:01:36,381 of concrete and steel 37 00:01:36,381 --> 00:01:39,166 and covered in glass. 38 00:01:39,166 --> 00:01:42,076 You can look at skylines all over the world -- 39 00:01:42,076 --> 00:01:45,523 Houston, Guangzhou, 40 00:01:45,523 --> 00:01:47,483 Frankfurt -- 41 00:01:47,483 --> 00:01:50,987 and you see the same army of high-gloss robots 42 00:01:50,987 --> 00:01:53,744 marching over the horizon. 43 00:01:53,744 --> 00:01:55,920 Now just think of everything we lose 44 00:01:55,920 --> 00:01:58,381 when architects stop using the full range 45 00:01:58,381 --> 00:02:00,934 of available materials. 46 00:02:00,934 --> 00:02:03,105 When we reject granite 47 00:02:03,105 --> 00:02:05,798 and limestone and sandstone and wood and copper 48 00:02:05,798 --> 00:02:07,330 and terra cotta and brick 49 00:02:07,330 --> 00:02:09,311 and wattle and plaster, 50 00:02:09,311 --> 00:02:11,491 we simplify architecture 51 00:02:11,491 --> 00:02:13,841 and we impoverish cities. 52 00:02:13,841 --> 00:02:17,291 It's as if you reduced all of the world's cuisines 53 00:02:17,291 --> 00:02:19,372 down to airline food. 54 00:02:19,372 --> 00:02:20,936 (Laughter) 55 00:02:20,936 --> 00:02:23,678 Chicken or pasta? 56 00:02:23,678 --> 00:02:25,960 But worse still, 57 00:02:25,960 --> 00:02:29,623 assemblies of glass towers like this one in Moscow 58 00:02:29,623 --> 00:02:34,626 suggest a disdain for the civic and communal aspects of urban living. 59 00:02:34,626 --> 00:02:39,470 Right? Buildings like these are intended to enrich their owners and tenants, 60 00:02:39,470 --> 00:02:42,201 but not necessarily the lives of the rest of us, 61 00:02:42,201 --> 00:02:46,457 those of us who navigate the spaces between the buildings. 62 00:02:46,457 --> 00:02:50,065 And we expect to do so for free. 63 00:02:50,065 --> 00:02:53,198 Shiny towers are an invasive species, 64 00:02:53,198 --> 00:02:57,821 and they are choking our cities and killing off public space. 65 00:02:57,821 --> 00:02:59,469 We tend to think of a facade 66 00:02:59,469 --> 00:03:01,102 as being like makeup, 67 00:03:01,102 --> 00:03:05,154 a decorative layer applied at the end to a building that's effectively complete. 68 00:03:05,154 --> 00:03:07,877 But just because a facade is superficial 69 00:03:07,877 --> 00:03:10,145 doesn't mean it's not also deep. 70 00:03:10,145 --> 00:03:12,420 Let me give you an example 71 00:03:12,420 --> 00:03:15,510 of how a city's surfaces affect the way we live in it. 72 00:03:15,510 --> 00:03:18,372 When I visited Salamanca in Spain, 73 00:03:18,372 --> 00:03:20,760 I gravitated to the Plaza Mayor 74 00:03:20,760 --> 00:03:22,560 at all hours of the day. 75 00:03:22,560 --> 00:03:25,082 Right? Early in the morning, sunlight rakes the facades, 76 00:03:25,082 --> 00:03:26,691 sharpening shadows, 77 00:03:26,691 --> 00:03:30,753 and at night, lamplight segments the buildings into hundreds 78 00:03:30,753 --> 00:03:32,676 of distinct areas, 79 00:03:32,676 --> 00:03:34,913 balconies and windows and arcades, 80 00:03:34,913 --> 00:03:38,600 each one a separate pocket of visual activity. 81 00:03:38,600 --> 00:03:41,732 That detail and depth, that glamour 82 00:03:41,732 --> 00:03:46,135 gives the plaza a theatrical quality. 83 00:03:46,135 --> 00:03:50,405 It becomes a stage where the generations can meet. 84 00:03:50,405 --> 00:03:53,343 You have teenagers sprawling on the pavement, 85 00:03:53,343 --> 00:03:56,286 seniors monopolizing the benches, 86 00:03:56,286 --> 00:04:00,591 and real life starts to look like an opera set. 87 00:04:00,591 --> 00:04:03,278 The curtain goes up on Salamanca. 88 00:04:03,278 --> 00:04:08,645 So just because I'm talking about the exteriors of buildings, 89 00:04:08,645 --> 00:04:11,981 not form, not function, not structure, 90 00:04:11,981 --> 00:04:17,569 even so those surfaces give textures to our lives, 91 00:04:17,569 --> 00:04:20,588 because buildings create the spaces around them, 92 00:04:20,588 --> 00:04:23,565 and those spaces can draw people in 93 00:04:23,565 --> 00:04:25,520 or push them away. 94 00:04:25,520 --> 00:04:29,307 And the difference often has to do with the quality of those exteriors. 95 00:04:29,307 --> 00:04:32,983 So one contemporary equivalent of the Plaza Mayor in Salamanca 96 00:04:32,983 --> 00:04:36,050 is the Place de la Défense in Paris, 97 00:04:36,050 --> 00:04:39,504 a windswept, glass-walled open space 98 00:04:39,504 --> 00:04:41,582 that office workers hurry through 99 00:04:41,582 --> 00:04:43,840 on the way from the Metro to their cubicles 100 00:04:43,840 --> 00:04:48,107 but otherwise spend as little time in as possible. 101 00:04:48,107 --> 00:04:51,369 In the early 1980s, the architect Philip Johnson 102 00:04:51,369 --> 00:04:55,951 tried to recreate a gracious European plaza in Pittsburgh. 103 00:04:55,951 --> 00:04:57,444 This is PPG Place, 104 00:04:57,444 --> 00:05:02,585 a half acre of open space encircles by commercial buildings 105 00:05:02,585 --> 00:05:04,254 made of mirrored glass. 106 00:05:04,254 --> 00:05:05,832 And he ornamented those buildings 107 00:05:05,832 --> 00:05:07,553 with metal trim and baize 108 00:05:07,553 --> 00:05:09,475 and gothic turrets 109 00:05:09,475 --> 00:05:11,659 which really pop on the skyline. 110 00:05:11,659 --> 00:05:13,680 But at ground level, 111 00:05:13,680 --> 00:05:18,166 the plaza feels like a black glass cage. 112 00:05:18,166 --> 00:05:21,146 I mean sure, in summertime kids are running back and forth 113 00:05:21,146 --> 00:05:22,487 through the fountain 114 00:05:22,487 --> 00:05:24,227 and there's ice skating in the winter, 115 00:05:24,227 --> 00:05:27,993 but it lacks the informality of a leisurely hangout. 116 00:05:27,993 --> 00:05:33,640 It's just not the sort of place you really want to just hang out and chat. 117 00:05:33,640 --> 00:05:39,584 Public spaces thrive or fail for many different reasons. 118 00:05:39,584 --> 00:05:41,702 Architecture is only one, 119 00:05:41,702 --> 00:05:43,938 but it's an important one. 120 00:05:43,938 --> 00:05:45,373 Some recent plazas 121 00:05:45,373 --> 00:05:48,131 like Federation Square in Melbourne 122 00:05:48,131 --> 00:05:52,126 or Superkilen in Copenhagen 123 00:05:52,126 --> 00:05:55,613 succeed because they combine old and new, 124 00:05:55,613 --> 00:05:57,526 rough and smooth, 125 00:05:57,526 --> 00:05:59,334 neutral and bright colors, 126 00:05:59,334 --> 00:06:04,049 and because they don't rely excessively on glass. 127 00:06:04,049 --> 00:06:07,180 Now, I'm not against glass. 128 00:06:07,180 --> 00:06:11,312 It's an ancient and versatile material. 129 00:06:11,312 --> 00:06:16,125 It's easy to manufacture and transport 130 00:06:16,125 --> 00:06:18,170 and install and replace 131 00:06:18,170 --> 00:06:19,744 and clean. 132 00:06:19,744 --> 00:06:22,593 It comes in everything from enormous, ultra-clear sheets 133 00:06:22,593 --> 00:06:25,467 to translucent bricks. 134 00:06:25,467 --> 00:06:27,569 New coatings make it change mood 135 00:06:27,569 --> 00:06:29,867 in the shifting light. 136 00:06:29,867 --> 00:06:33,296 In expensive cities like New York, it has the magical power 137 00:06:33,296 --> 00:06:37,036 of being able to multiply real estate values by allowing views, 138 00:06:37,036 --> 00:06:40,016 which is really the only commodity that developers have to offer 139 00:06:40,016 --> 00:06:43,821 to justify those surreal prices. 140 00:06:43,821 --> 00:06:46,396 In the middle of the 19th century, 141 00:06:46,396 --> 00:06:49,360 with the construction of the Crystal Palace in London, 142 00:06:49,360 --> 00:06:54,566 glass leapt to the top of the list of quintessentially modern substances. 143 00:06:54,566 --> 00:06:56,082 By the mid-20th century, 144 00:06:56,082 --> 00:06:59,905 it had come to dominate the downtowns of some American cities, 145 00:06:59,905 --> 00:07:02,015 largely through some really spectacular 146 00:07:02,015 --> 00:07:03,730 office buildings like Lever House 147 00:07:03,730 --> 00:07:07,685 in midtown Manhattan, designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill. 148 00:07:07,685 --> 00:07:09,602 Eventually, the technology 149 00:07:09,602 --> 00:07:13,347 advanced to the point where architects could design structures so transparent 150 00:07:13,347 --> 00:07:16,421 they practically disappear. 151 00:07:16,421 --> 00:07:18,015 And along the way, 152 00:07:18,015 --> 00:07:22,697 glass became the default material of the high rise city, 153 00:07:22,697 --> 00:07:25,351 and there's a very powerful reason for that, 154 00:07:25,351 --> 00:07:30,216 because as the world's populations converge on cities, 155 00:07:30,216 --> 00:07:33,842 the least fortunate pack into jerrybuilt shantytowns, 156 00:07:33,842 --> 00:07:37,726 but hundreds of millions of people need apartments and places to work 157 00:07:37,726 --> 00:07:38,979 in ever larger buildings, 158 00:07:38,979 --> 00:07:41,513 so it makes economic sense to put up towers 159 00:07:41,513 --> 00:07:45,329 and wrap them in cheap and practical curtain walls. 160 00:07:45,329 --> 00:07:48,448 But glass has a limited ability 161 00:07:48,448 --> 00:07:51,459 to be expressive. 162 00:07:51,459 --> 00:07:53,604 This is a section of wall framing a plaza 163 00:07:53,604 --> 00:07:56,676 in the pre-Hispanic city of Mitla, in southern Mexico. 164 00:07:56,676 --> 00:08:00,394 Those 2,000-year old carvings 165 00:08:00,394 --> 00:08:04,696 make it clear that this was a place of high ritual significance. 166 00:08:04,696 --> 00:08:11,182 Today we look at those and we can see a historical and textural continuity 167 00:08:11,182 --> 00:08:13,811 between those carvings, the mountains all around, 168 00:08:13,811 --> 00:08:17,937 and that church which is built on top of the ruins 169 00:08:17,937 --> 00:08:21,126 using stone plundered from the site. 170 00:08:21,126 --> 00:08:23,931 In nearby Oaxaca, even ordinary plaster buildings 171 00:08:23,931 --> 00:08:27,937 become canvasses for bright colors, political murals, 172 00:08:27,937 --> 00:08:31,082 and sophisticated graphic arts. 173 00:08:31,082 --> 00:08:34,136 It's an intricate, communicative language 174 00:08:34,136 --> 00:08:37,654 that an epidemic of glass would simply wipe out. 175 00:08:38,196 --> 00:08:41,147 The good news is that architects and developers 176 00:08:41,147 --> 00:08:43,933 have begun to rediscover the joys of texture 177 00:08:43,933 --> 00:08:46,572 without backing away from modernity. 178 00:08:46,572 --> 00:08:50,901 Some find innovative uses for old materials like brick 179 00:08:50,901 --> 00:08:54,013 and terra cotta. 180 00:08:54,013 --> 00:08:56,863 Others invent new products like the molded panels 181 00:08:56,863 --> 00:08:58,618 that Snøhetta used 182 00:08:58,618 --> 00:09:01,645 to give their San Francisco Museum of Modern Art 183 00:09:01,645 --> 00:09:04,835 that crinkly, sculptural quality. 184 00:09:04,835 --> 00:09:08,519 The architect Stefano Boeri even created living facades. 185 00:09:08,519 --> 00:09:12,580 This is his Vertical Forest, a pair of apartment towers in Milan, 186 00:09:12,580 --> 00:09:15,436 whose most visible feature is greenery. 187 00:09:15,436 --> 00:09:21,310 And Boeri is designing a version of this for Nanjing in China. 188 00:09:21,310 --> 00:09:25,453 And imagine if green facades were as ubiquitous as glass ones 189 00:09:25,453 --> 00:09:28,633 how much cleaner the air in Chinese cities would become. 190 00:09:29,464 --> 00:09:32,563 But the truth is that these are mostly one-offs, 191 00:09:32,563 --> 00:09:34,115 boutique projects, 192 00:09:34,115 --> 00:09:37,347 not easily reproduced at a global scale. 193 00:09:37,347 --> 00:09:40,448 And that is the point. 194 00:09:40,448 --> 00:09:43,571 When you use materials that have a local significance, 195 00:09:43,571 --> 00:09:47,003 you prevent cities from all looking the same. 196 00:09:47,003 --> 00:09:49,916 Copper has a long history in New York -- 197 00:09:49,916 --> 00:09:51,622 the Statue of Liberty, 198 00:09:51,622 --> 00:09:54,006 the crown of the Woolworth Building -- 199 00:09:54,006 --> 00:09:57,705 but it fell out of fashion for a long time 200 00:09:57,705 --> 00:10:02,105 until shop architects used it to cover the American Copper Building, 201 00:10:02,105 --> 00:10:05,295 a pair of twisting towers on the East River. 202 00:10:05,295 --> 00:10:08,179 It's not even finished and you can see the way sunset 203 00:10:08,179 --> 00:10:10,787 lights up that metallic facade, 204 00:10:10,787 --> 00:10:13,824 which will weather to green as it ages. 205 00:10:13,824 --> 00:10:16,289 Buildings can be like people. 206 00:10:16,289 --> 00:10:19,270 Their faces broadcast their experience. 207 00:10:19,270 --> 00:10:21,089 And that's an important point, 208 00:10:21,089 --> 00:10:23,257 because when glass ages, 209 00:10:23,257 --> 00:10:25,429 you just replace it, 210 00:10:25,429 --> 00:10:27,669 and the building looks pretty much the same way it did before 211 00:10:27,669 --> 00:10:30,234 until eventually it's demolished. 212 00:10:30,234 --> 00:10:33,942 Almost all other materials have the ability to absorb 213 00:10:33,942 --> 00:10:36,278 infusions of history and memory 214 00:10:36,278 --> 00:10:40,850 and project it into the present. 215 00:10:40,850 --> 00:10:43,053 The firm Ennead 216 00:10:43,053 --> 00:10:47,866 clad the Utah Natural History Museum in Salt Lake City in copper and zinc, 217 00:10:47,866 --> 00:10:53,410 ores that had been mined in the area for 150 years 218 00:10:53,410 --> 00:10:57,691 and that also camouflage the building against the ochre hills 219 00:10:57,691 --> 00:10:59,594 so that you have a natural history museum 220 00:10:59,594 --> 00:11:03,723 that reflects the region's natural history. 221 00:11:03,723 --> 00:11:06,739 And when the Chinese Pritzker Prize Winner Wang Shu 222 00:11:06,739 --> 00:11:09,851 was building a history museum in Ningbo, 223 00:11:09,851 --> 00:11:13,124 he didn't just create a wrapper for the past, 224 00:11:13,124 --> 00:11:16,407 he built memory right into the walls 225 00:11:16,407 --> 00:11:19,883 by using brick and stones and shingles 226 00:11:19,883 --> 00:11:24,513 salvaged from villages that had been demolished. 227 00:11:24,513 --> 00:11:27,822 Now, architects can use glass 228 00:11:27,822 --> 00:11:30,436 in equally lyrical and inventive ways. 229 00:11:30,436 --> 00:11:32,049 Here in New York, two buildings, 230 00:11:32,049 --> 00:11:34,838 one by Jean Nouvel and this one by Frank Gehry 231 00:11:34,838 --> 00:11:37,787 face off across West 19th Street, 232 00:11:37,787 --> 00:11:40,811 and the play of reflections that they toss back and forth 233 00:11:40,811 --> 00:11:43,421 is like a symphony in light. 234 00:11:43,421 --> 00:11:47,553 But when a city defaults to glass 235 00:11:47,553 --> 00:11:49,032 as it grows, 236 00:11:49,032 --> 00:11:51,070 it becomes a hall of mirrors, 237 00:11:51,070 --> 00:11:54,142 disquieting and cold. 238 00:11:54,142 --> 00:11:58,581 After all, cities are places of concentrated variety 239 00:11:58,581 --> 00:12:04,869 where the world's cultures and languages and lifestyles 240 00:12:04,869 --> 00:12:06,886 come together and mingle. 241 00:12:06,886 --> 00:12:09,963 So rather than encase all that variety 242 00:12:09,963 --> 00:12:14,763 and diversity in buildings of crushing sameness, 243 00:12:14,763 --> 00:12:17,007 we should have an architecture that honors 244 00:12:17,007 --> 00:12:19,589 the full range of the urban experience. 245 00:12:19,589 --> 00:12:21,177 Thank you. 246 00:12:21,177 --> 00:12:26,631 (Applause)