25.10.2010

Small Scale, Big Change: New Architectures of Social Engagement

Duration: October 3, 2010–January 3, 2011
Venue: Museum of Modern Art New York, Special Exhibitions Gallery, third floor

Link to the website of the exhibition
Achieving great effects with minimal interventions is probably the ultimate goal of any architect who is not just „in it for the money“. The MoMA in New York now showcases eleven of these (relatively) small-scale projects with considerable (mostly social) impact. Most of them, however, have already been broadcast to a wide audience on other occasions.
This exhibition presents eleven architectural projects on five continents that respond to localized needs in underserved communities. According to the curators, „these innovative designs signal a renewed sense of commitment, shared by many of today’s practitioners, to the social responsibilities of architecture. Though this stance echoes socially engaged movements of the past, the architects highlighted here are not interested in grand manifestos or utopian theories. Instead, their commitment to a radical pragmatism can be seen in the projects they have realized, from a handmade school in Bangladesh to a reconsideration of a modernist housing project in Paris, from an apartheid museum in South Africa to a cable car that connects a single hillside barrio i Caracas to the city at large.“
Small Scale, Big Change explores the following projects in depth:
Primary School, Gando, Burkina Faso (Diébédo Francis Kéré, 1999–2001); Quinta Monroy Housing, Iquique, Chile (Elemental, 2003–05); Red Location Museum of Struggle, Port Elizabeth, South Africa (Noero Wolff Architects, 1998–2005); METI – Handmade School, Rudrapur, Bangladesh (Anna Heringer, 2004–06); Inner-City Arts, Los Angeles, California (Michael Maltzan Architecture, 1993–2008); Housing for the Fishermen, Tyre, Lebanon (Hashim Sarkis A.L.U.D., 1998–2008); $20K House VIII (Dave’s House), Hale County, Alabama (Rural Studio, 2009); Metro Cable, Caracas, Venezuela (Urban Think Tank, 2007–10); Manguinhos Complex, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Jorge Mario Jáuregui, 2005–10); Transformation of Tour Bois le Prêtre, Paris, France (Frédéric Druot, Anne Lacaton, and Jean Philippe Vassal, 2006–11); and Casa Familiar: Living Rooms at the Border and Senior Housing with Childcare in San Ysidro, California (Estudio Teddy Cruz, 2001–present).
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