Domus 1054 is on newsstands: “Stimulating cities”

In the second issue edited by Tadao Ando, Markus Breitschmid defends the role of radical architecture; Rahul Mehrotra observes the physical form of Indian cities; Michael Holland describes Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers. Browse the gallery and discover the contents of the February issue.

Editorial/ Jewellery boxes in the metropolis In the February editorial, guest editor Tadao Ando discusses the need to produce statements critical of existing urban planning institutions and to have buildings act as “emissaries of this uncompromising spirit”.

Text Tadao Ando. Photo Christian Richters

Essay/ Urban India. Negotiating the impatience of global capital Observation of the physical form of Indian cities is the tool employed by Mehrotra to exemplify the clash between two opposing political rhetorics: constructing a global city or one that is equitable and sustainable.

Text Rahul Mehrotra. Photo Peter Bialobrzeski  

Essay/ Each building exists for itself Starting from the architecture of Valerio Olgiati, the Swiss-American theoretician argues that a radical building – with its sense-making quality – is also the most inclusive and free. It is where everyone can fully express their creativity.

Text Markus Breitschmid. Photo Archive Olgiati  

Architecture/ Locket - Public toilets, Tokyo, Japan In the past year, the city of Tokyo has seen a significant increase in the range and variety of new public restrooms. Various benefactors, ranging from private organisations to city governments, have taken on the challenge to support Tokyo’s collective urban fabric, exceeding what is required from the programme of the bathroom.

Text Shigeru Ban Architects, Nao Tamura, Suppose Design Office, Akarui.co.jp. Photo Hiroyuki Hirai  

Architecture/ Locket - Tondo, Brussels, Belgium The suspended passage connects a government building with its extension. Its urban presence stands out on a formal level and in the reciprocal visual connection with the street.

Text OFFICE Kersten Geers David Van Severen. Photo Bas Princen  

Architecture/ Jewellery box - YueCheng Courtyard Kindergarten, Beijing, China A formally fluid floating roof is overlaid on the rigorous layout of the historic complex, integrating the kindergarten spaces with residences for the elderly.

Text MAD Architects. Photo ArchExist

Architecture/ Jewellery box - Arena Park Lumen, San Jose, USA The project combines the tower form with the shape of a forum to create a catalyst for public activities in the Arena Green Park.

Text Studio Sean Canty. Image © Studio Sean Canty  

Architecture/ Jewellery box - Alexander McQueen flagship store, Miami, USA Reminiscent of the Retti Candle Shop by Hans Hollein, this flagship store is connected to the city as a garden enlivened by a series of architectural elements among which people can stroll

Text Smiljan Radic. Photo Azeez Bakare

Architecture/ Treasure chest - Axel Springer building, Berlin, Germany The building is bisected by the axis that joins the other two structures on campus, shaping a “valley” of informal work spaces connected to the city.

Text OMA. Photo Laurian Ghinitoiu

Art/ Urban symbols - Public art: what role for monuments? In London and New York, public art is driving a critical action stimulating reflection and creating a dialogue with the context, raising fundamental issues for the community.

Text Angela Maderna. Photo Timothy Schenk. Courtesy of the High Line

Design/ Jewels of light, 208 light-emitting buoys Rimini, Italy Like an expanse of urban jewels on the water, the buoys in the “208.” installation poetically light the city and offer an opportunity to develop a new typology of nautical object.

Text Gio Tirotto. Photo Eshu Adv — Davide Piras  

Creators/ What stimulates the city? This segment was established as a way of showcasing the diversity of thought that can emerge around a single idea. Each month an array of artists and designers who shape objects, spaces and buildings will be given the freedom to express themselves visually on the theme we will explore in each issue. To illustrate a cross-generational, cross- disciplinary view of the design world, each time we will host ten creators. It is up to the chosen creators to visualise freely each of these abstract ideas in the form of images, collages, drawings, sketches and texts. For this issue, the research focuses on the question “what stimulates the city?”

Text Manuel Aires Mateus, Dominique Perrault, Steven Holl, John Pawson, Balkrishna Doshi, Paul Smith, Sou Fujimoto, Erin and Ian Besler, Thom Mayne, Virgil Abloh. Image Besler & Sons

Design snippets/ Microstories - Sabato ‘Simon’ Rodia, Watts Towers, Los Angeles Having survived earthquakes and an urban revolt, the Watts Towers of Simon Rodia – who built them with his own hands in 33 years – have been recognised as public art thanks to the support of the neighbourhood and authorities that saw beyond bureaucracy.

Text Michael Holland. Photo courtesy of the Los Angeles City Archives – Office of the City Clerk  

Design snippets/ The art of detail - Jewel, Changi Airport, Singapore The Rain Vortex in the Jewel centre of Singapore Airport falls through a glass roof resting only on intermittent supports. A complex and spectacular structure, it rethinks the concept of an urban hub, by Safdie Architects.

Text Safdie Architects. Image © Safdie Architects

Design snippets/ Process - Cultural Centre, Shandong, China Carefulon-site control during the creation of a dropped ceiling in the Cultural Centre of Shandong, China, has showcased the potential of raw concrete. 

Text Junya Ishigami+Associates. Photo © Junya.Ishigami+Associates

Overnight, the world paints itself silver and white. A beautiful and arctic atmosphere dominates the northern winter. Humans are no different from snowflakes dancing in the wind. The landscape returns all to zero, revealing the desolate horizon. Infinite emptiness stimulates our anticipation for the world that lies ahead. It feeds our urge to resist the nothingness of the environment. A testimony of humans living on earth.

Text Tadao Ando. Photo Shigeo Ogawa  

Cover of Domus 1054

Hans Hollein, Retti Candle Shop, 1964-1965, Vienna, Austria. Photo Franz Hubmann. Copyright Private. Archive Hollein

The February issue of Domus 1054 focuses on the urban role of contemporary architecture. In his editorial, Guest Editor Tadao Ando tells us about the need to produce critical statements against existing urban institutions. “The purer this critique is, the more radical the architecture it expresses will be, will be able to challenge the ordering of society,” Ando explains. “A network of critical structures that overcome these conflicts can breathe new life into the built environment.”

An Indian architect and urban planner, an essay by Rahul Mehrotra, follows, observing the physical form of Indian cities, exemplifying the clash between two opposing political rhetorics: build a global city or build a fair and sustainable one. Markus Breitschmid, starting from the architecture of Valerio Olgiati, argues that a radical building, capable of creating meaning, is more inclusive and freer.

In the Architecture section, six projects are presented, featuring three different types of landmarks: the public toilets built in 2020 in Tokyo by Shigeru Ban Architects, Nao Tamura, Suppose Design Office and Akarui, and Tondo, the suspended passage designed in the centre of Brussels by Office Kersten Geers David Van Severen. The buildings, on the other hand, gathered under the name Jewellery box are the YueCheng Kindergarten by MAD Architects, a formally fluid floating roof, the Arena Park Lumen by Studio Sean Canty and the flagship store created for Alexander McQueen in Miami by Smiljan Radic, which relates to the city like an animated garden. Finally, described as Treasure chest, the headquarters of Axel Springer by OMA studio, where the new offices of the publishing house are cut by the director that connects the two existing buildings of the campus.

In the pages dedicated to Art, Angela Maderna tries to outline a role for monuments, recounting two examples in London and New York, where public art is the engine of a critical action that stimulates reflection and triggers a dialogue with the context, raising fundamental issues for the community.

For Design Gio Tirotto illustrates the 208 luminous buoys near the historic Tiberius Bridge in Rimini. Like many urban gems suspended over the water, the buoys are a poetic note that illuminates the city. However, they are also an opportunity to develop a new type of nautical object.

In the New Creators section illustrates various thought-forms that can emerge around an idea. Each month we will offer a series of artists and designers who shape objects, spaces and buildings the opportunity to express themselves visually on the theme we investigate in the issue. For this issue, we asked designers such as Manuel Aires Mateus, Dominique Perrault, Steven Holl, John Pawson, Virgil Abloh, and others to focus on the question, “What stimulates the city?”

For Design snippets, Michael Holland discusses Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers, built with his own hands over 33 years and recognized as public art thanks to residents and authorities’ support. Safdie Architects describe the Jewel centre’s ongoing project at Singapore airport, for which a glass roof with discontinuous pillars to support it has been designed. On the other hand, for Junya Ishigami + Associates, the careful management of the construction of the ceiling in the Shandong Cultural Center, China, brought out the potential of raw concrete.

In this month’s Diary, pages dedicated to current events, a round table between Marco Alverà, Sara Hejazi, Elena Ostanel and Igiaba Scego discusses the challenges and limits of current inclusion practices, and how intersectionality is interpreted in urban and business processes. Carlos D’Ercole visits the house the residence of the collector and art dealer Rafael Jablonka, a tribute to the artists whose path he has been an accomplice: Philip Taaffe, Eric Fischl, Miquel Barceló, Mike Kelley and Richard Avedon. Valentina Petrucci meets the British fashion designer Paul Smith, while Andrea Caputo visits the anomalous and anti-urban reality of Elasticofarm, a studio founded by Stefano Pujatti, Alberto del Maschio and Sara Dal Gallo with an office in Canada, in Toronto, a base dispersed in the countryside of Turin, completely dissociated from any metropolitan imaginary, and one in Budoia, in Friuli. Editorial director Walter Mariotti concludes the section with a meeting with Anna Zegna, president of the Foundation of the same name, who tells us about her green vision of the world: economic, social and environmental.

Editorial/ Jewellery boxes in the metropolis Text Tadao Ando. Photo Christian Richters

In the February editorial, guest editor Tadao Ando discusses the need to produce statements critical of existing urban planning institutions and to have buildings act as “emissaries of this uncompromising spirit”.

Essay/ Urban India. Negotiating the impatience of global capital Text Rahul Mehrotra. Photo Peter Bialobrzeski  

Observation of the physical form of Indian cities is the tool employed by Mehrotra to exemplify the clash between two opposing political rhetorics: constructing a global city or one that is equitable and sustainable.

Essay/ Each building exists for itself Text Markus Breitschmid. Photo Archive Olgiati  

Starting from the architecture of Valerio Olgiati, the Swiss-American theoretician argues that a radical building – with its sense-making quality – is also the most inclusive and free. It is where everyone can fully express their creativity.

Architecture/ Locket - Public toilets, Tokyo, Japan Text Shigeru Ban Architects, Nao Tamura, Suppose Design Office, Akarui.co.jp. Photo Hiroyuki Hirai  

In the past year, the city of Tokyo has seen a significant increase in the range and variety of new public restrooms. Various benefactors, ranging from private organisations to city governments, have taken on the challenge to support Tokyo’s collective urban fabric, exceeding what is required from the programme of the bathroom.

Architecture/ Locket - Tondo, Brussels, Belgium Text OFFICE Kersten Geers David Van Severen. Photo Bas Princen  

The suspended passage connects a government building with its extension. Its urban presence stands out on a formal level and in the reciprocal visual connection with the street.

Architecture/ Jewellery box - YueCheng Courtyard Kindergarten, Beijing, China Text MAD Architects. Photo ArchExist

A formally fluid floating roof is overlaid on the rigorous layout of the historic complex, integrating the kindergarten spaces with residences for the elderly.

Architecture/ Jewellery box - Arena Park Lumen, San Jose, USA Text Studio Sean Canty. Image © Studio Sean Canty  

The project combines the tower form with the shape of a forum to create a catalyst for public activities in the Arena Green Park.

Architecture/ Jewellery box - Alexander McQueen flagship store, Miami, USA Text Smiljan Radic. Photo Azeez Bakare

Reminiscent of the Retti Candle Shop by Hans Hollein, this flagship store is connected to the city as a garden enlivened by a series of architectural elements among which people can stroll

Architecture/ Treasure chest - Axel Springer building, Berlin, Germany Text OMA. Photo Laurian Ghinitoiu

The building is bisected by the axis that joins the other two structures on campus, shaping a “valley” of informal work spaces connected to the city.

Art/ Urban symbols - Public art: what role for monuments? Text Angela Maderna. Photo Timothy Schenk. Courtesy of the High Line

In London and New York, public art is driving a critical action stimulating reflection and creating a dialogue with the context, raising fundamental issues for the community.

Design/ Jewels of light, 208 light-emitting buoys Rimini, Italy Text Gio Tirotto. Photo Eshu Adv — Davide Piras  

Like an expanse of urban jewels on the water, the buoys in the “208.” installation poetically light the city and offer an opportunity to develop a new typology of nautical object.

Creators/ What stimulates the city? Text Manuel Aires Mateus, Dominique Perrault, Steven Holl, John Pawson, Balkrishna Doshi, Paul Smith, Sou Fujimoto, Erin and Ian Besler, Thom Mayne, Virgil Abloh. Image Besler & Sons

This segment was established as a way of showcasing the diversity of thought that can emerge around a single idea. Each month an array of artists and designers who shape objects, spaces and buildings will be given the freedom to express themselves visually on the theme we will explore in each issue. To illustrate a cross-generational, cross- disciplinary view of the design world, each time we will host ten creators. It is up to the chosen creators to visualise freely each of these abstract ideas in the form of images, collages, drawings, sketches and texts. For this issue, the research focuses on the question “what stimulates the city?”

Design snippets/ Microstories - Sabato ‘Simon’ Rodia, Watts Towers, Los Angeles Text Michael Holland. Photo courtesy of the Los Angeles City Archives – Office of the City Clerk  

Having survived earthquakes and an urban revolt, the Watts Towers of Simon Rodia – who built them with his own hands in 33 years – have been recognised as public art thanks to the support of the neighbourhood and authorities that saw beyond bureaucracy.

Design snippets/ The art of detail - Jewel, Changi Airport, Singapore Text Safdie Architects. Image © Safdie Architects

The Rain Vortex in the Jewel centre of Singapore Airport falls through a glass roof resting only on intermittent supports. A complex and spectacular structure, it rethinks the concept of an urban hub, by Safdie Architects.

Design snippets/ Process - Cultural Centre, Shandong, China Text Junya Ishigami+Associates. Photo © Junya.Ishigami+Associates

Carefulon-site control during the creation of a dropped ceiling in the Cultural Centre of Shandong, China, has showcased the potential of raw concrete. 

Text Tadao Ando. Photo Shigeo Ogawa  

Overnight, the world paints itself silver and white. A beautiful and arctic atmosphere dominates the northern winter. Humans are no different from snowflakes dancing in the wind. The landscape returns all to zero, revealing the desolate horizon. Infinite emptiness stimulates our anticipation for the world that lies ahead. It feeds our urge to resist the nothingness of the environment. A testimony of humans living on earth.

Cover of Domus 1054 Hans Hollein, Retti Candle Shop, 1964-1965, Vienna, Austria. Photo Franz Hubmann. Copyright Private. Archive Hollein