The Hidden Core of Architecture: Preston Scott Cohen
The Hidden Core of Architecture: Preston Scott Cohen
The Hidden Core of Architecture: Preston Scott Cohen
Christian Kerez, Leutschenbach School, Zurich, Switzerland, The upper and lower chords and diagonal struts of the trusses
2003–08, the core structure displayed and idealized. The steel produce a symmetrical, three-dimensional pattern exposed as
frame of a multi-storied building, normally a grid of columns the primary visible form of the building. Photo: Walter Mair
and beams, is recomposed as a stack of full floor-high trusses.
Three temporalities
building would have been attributed to a patron whose
power ultimately led it to be built by a nameless society
of masons. Now it would elicit the viewer to imagine a
In order to understand what is at stake in the temporal creator of great talent.
divisiveness inherent to contemporary architecture, it The eternity of beauty or virtuosity and the futurity
is necessary to look at shifts that have occurred in three of fame established the conditions for sempiternity
cultural conceptions of temporality in the general field of in architecture. We can now jump forward to the 18th
knowledge and in architecture: eternity, sempiternity, and century, when public reception of artistic culture became
impermanence. important, and observe that Joseph Gandy’s painting of
Needless to say, we have come a long way from the John Soane’s Bank of England as a ruin (Fig. 1) represents
Classical, Late Antique, and early Medieval periods, when one side of the duality: The future fate of the building is
impermanence was relegated to an inferior status. Unlike depicted as similar to that of the magnificent buildings of
the divine realm, which was eternal, the sublunary world antiquity. The fact that Soane commissioned the painting
and everything in it was then understood as passing and is evidence of the other side of the equation: His own fame
therefore of less importance.1 But, in the late Middle Ages, would be guaranteed indefinitely by the building’s future
certain phenomena could not be explained by recourse to greatness.
the dominant conceptual opposition between eternity and By the 20th century, newness and perpetual progress
impermanence. A third category of temporality—called had thoroughly replaced beauty, virtuosity, and eternity
sempiternity—was theorized to denote things created as the ideals to be pursued. Thus impermanence became
during earthly time that as a whole would exist from then the dominant temporal paradigm. Meanwhile, the cultural
on forever despite changing constituent parts.2 This reception of architecture in museums, universities,
hybrid idea of time became an increasingly unavoidable and publications of criticism—an expanded system
part of everyday political and legal discourse. The of legitimation—placed it alongside the other artistic
late Middle Ages saw the emergence of corporations, mediums that were reinventing themselves. These venues
legal entities that could “live” forever, though their guaranteed permanence for productions otherwise
permanence was actually contingent on humanity’s. In dedicated to transience. Despite all claims for the
theological and juridical circles, a consensus was reached significance of newness and temporariness within works
to the effect that certain things, including universities and of art and architecture, the cultural producers kept alive
great cities, were sempiternal. and well the thirst for fame and sempiternity.
Medium specificity
Practice, New York
Temporariness lifts a
weight from the architects’
shoulders, allowing them
Figs. 6a, 6b: Diller Scofidio Renfro, Broad Museum, 2011,
perspective view and exploded axonometric, exterior surface
unrelated to the core. A continuous “veil,” composed of
Post-tectonic
Moving beyond the architects whose allegiance is to
the transient, there are those architects, such as Louis
Kahn, Toyo Ito (Figs. 8, 9) and Christian Kerez, who have
sought to reestablish tectonic unity in distinctive ways by
idealizing the form of the basic structure and rendering
it materially monolithic. In their work, structure is
rhetorically reintegrated with exterior and interior form.
By definition, this hybridity is nostalgic for a lost synthetic
wholeness not endemic to the construction of buildings
Fig. 9: Toyo Ito, Tama Art University Library, Tokyo, 2007, today and only possible in rarefied circumstances.
structural core as architectural phenomenon. The building is
composed of materially monolithic and unusually structured
Other architects, such as Renzo Piano, Herzog &
spatial cells. The arched openings are cut out of steel plates de Meuron, and Machado Silvetti, appear (Fig. 10) not
covered in concrete. Photo: Iwan Baan
to regard the tectonic severance that began in the 19th
century to be the result of a rupture but rather to be part of
the continuing evolution of a received tectonic language.
Their work displays the behavior of the visible cladding
as a system in its own right, and this relates to an overall
order, usually a grid, that governs the whole building.
Thus cladding contributes to the cultural continuity of
architecture, the tectonic language of which, at this
particular historical juncture, just so happens to be
structurally and materially disunified, by necessity.
Postscript
to mask interior machines that produce frenetic and
absurd programmatic combinations. Otherwise, his text
conflates his exemplar par excellence with all of
Manhattan, confusing the exception and the norm. All Ceaseless technological progress, the modern corollary
skyscrapers possess dynamic potential by virtue of the to beauty and eternity, would seem to be epitomized
city, which is so much more exhilarating than anything an by the transient cycles of rapid renewal, fashion, and
architect could produce by design. Architectural specificity obsolescence. Today’s artful architectural installations
can only foreclose the endless possibilities guaranteed and their counterparts in the built environment can go on
by urban vitality.7 Yet despite this claim, the Athletic Club, finding their places within the sempiternal institutions
and each special OMA building that later grew under its of legitimation. There they will be selectively preserved
influence, freezes the “culture of congestion” in a set of for sempiternity, serving as the anthropological traces
exceptional plans and bakes its radical adjacencies and of a process of change. Yet as far as sempiternity of
differentiated spaces into the basic structure. the architectural medium itself is concerned, the
Pretending that the Athletic Club is somehow generic installations, facades, and interiors that treat the
turns out to be a slight of hand that allows Koolhaas to basic structures of buildings like ready-mades will be
keep for himself a fundamental tactic present only in this manifestations of inconsequential tinkering at the
one building, a feature that profoundly differentiates it margins. Only the architecture that transforms the
from other skyscrapers: floor-by-floor structurally defined hidden core, the part that enables the impermanent parts
uniqueness. The structure of the differentiated programs, to change perpetually, can alter the balance between
such as the glass-bottomed pool and the gym, illustrate endurance and impermanence, effect the architectural
unmistakably the principle of wild adjacencies but are space in which we live, and go on mattering indefinitely.
anything but typical or generic. Though it is conceivable
that they could have been designed to be stacked another The King’s Two Bodies, which expounds the idea of
way during the design process, once it was constructed, sempiternity, was brought to my attention by Daniel
the swimming pool could never be swapped for the Sherer. I would like to thank him and Christine Smith
medical baths or the gymnasium for the lounge. Only later for further elucidating key episodes in the history of
are the deep-down, intractable, spatial and structural temporality and Matthew Allen for engaging in rigorous
distinctions in the Athletic Club, so deftly miscategorized and productive critiques of this essay.
in his famous text, foregrounded as the salient inventive
device of his architecture: not the generic spaces stacked
up all over Manhattan but a stack of spaces that are
peculiarly differentiated through and through.