Thursday, July 30, 2009

Chaplets


This is a "chaplet" (chapel-et, get it?) of artist Marjorie Schlossman (with contributions from architects and contractors). A handful of chaplets were made and put in random locations. Part of their purpose was to create a "sacred space."

Was this goal realized? Well, nothing says sacred like the parking lot behind Sears. (See photo.) I can imagine the bums and prostitutes will put it to a good use.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Luigi Bocconi University

Luigi Bocconi University

Luigi Bocconi University is a private university in Milan. Around a year ago, this building was named the World Building of the Year at the inaugural World Architecture Festival. Judges called it a "magic subterranean realm," whatever that means. These judges have less credibility than an ordinary citizen, who can likely see for himself that the building is ugly, imposing, and unwelcoming.







Sunday, July 12, 2009

Brasilia

Brasilia Cathedral


Supremo Tribunal Federal Brasília



Brasilia is a World Heritage site, described by UNESCO as, "a landmark in the history of town planning." Brasilia was planned and developed in the 1950s by planner Lucio Costa, and the city's architect was Oscar Niemeyer.


The city's design emphasizes both the need for easy transportation and the necessity of transportation. In other words, the city is designed around the car, for the car. Uses are separated, making the city unwalkable. The city's modern architecture is uninviting and bland and sterile. Brazil's capitol is a futuristic concrete wasteland, a contradiction of it's own character and people. There may be no greater failure of modern city planning and of modern architecture.




Brasilia Museu Nacional da República



National Library in Brasilia

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Indiana University Art Museum


Another ugly concrete building designed by Pei & Partners.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Los Angeles - LAPD Headquarters


And yet another ugly modern building in Los Angeles, this time courtesy of the LAPD. The palm trees are there for show, not for function. The reflection off the glass is supposedly blinding. Slits for windows, angles that destroy any sort of relationship with the street. Give it ten years before the community starts to say WTF was LA thinking?

Monday, July 6, 2009

Pei and Sullivan's Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University


This blog could probably dedicate itself to ugly I.M. Pei-associated buildings. Here's the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University. It's an award-winning project of the 70's, the decade that gave us bad presidents, bad clothes, bad cars, and bad buildings. I guess we're supposed to be impressed with concrete rectangles. Note the trendy art sitting on the lawn.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

DC: 3rd Church of Christ


Not one to be outdone, of course, is the Third Church of Christ in Washington, D.C. There was a historical preservation issue with this this ugly Brutalist building - the church didn't want it, some DC historical commission did. Thankfully the church won out and it'll be eventually razed.

If only all other Brutalist buildings would have a similar fate.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Los Angeles: Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels


Drive the 101 through Los Angeles and you'll see this $190 million modern monstrosity (from this angle, too). Forget any notion that a church should look like a church, or at least outwardly express the beauty and sacredness of its purpose.