|
Last night, the winds howled.
We awoke to find that trees had fallen when velocities
reached 66 miles per hour, and that outside Rochester,
a womans death was attributable to the onslaught.
On the opposite coast, the evening news showed children
shoveling hail, a few short weeks after devastating
wildfires had ravaged nearby swaths of Southern California,
killing at least 22 people and destroying at least 3,400
homes. We seemed to be bookended by perils.
How ironic. In the post-9/11
era, when man-made dangers have tossed us about, we
have hunkered down to the safety of the cyberworld,
where no winds blow. Yet perilous natural events seem
to be assaulting us on all frontsearthquake, fire,
hurricane, tornado, floodswith the reminder that
Mother Earth is not benign, but an active, tempestuous
planet, subject to internal pressure and solar storms.
Despite our technological prowess and planning, no one
can accurately predict where the next calamity might
strike.
It may be time to return
to building wisdom. For a decade, we have been focused
on architectural niceties, building free-form castles
and debating the relative merits of the latest theory,
allowing our conversations to stretch to the esoteric-thin.
Yet architects work must stand, and withstand
outside forces as well, shielding us from natural and
human disasters: The public health, safety, and welfare
depend on our professional ability to provide shelter.
How can we learn how to build more safely? Academic
research provides case studies and analysis; legislation
and codes outline minimal thresholds. Nothing, however,
replaces common sense and experience, which we, the
design and construction industry, must provide. We are
not, after all, the first generation on the planet to
build.
Take siting, for example.
When shear winds tore across the southeast during 2001
and 2002, tall pine trees snapped and cracked, sometimes
impaling the roofs of adjacent structures and imperiling
the lives of the families inside. Earlier generations
had avoided planting too close to home for just that
reason: Trees can fall in a strong wind. A similar lesson,
modified by the nuances of forest management, applies
to the California brush fires.
Building wisdom, tempered
by science, can come from earlier practitioners and
even salty contractors who can show younger architects
the ropes. Many of our most powerful lessons have come
to us standing, chastened, in a construction trench
under the glare of a builder who explained why a system
would not work as drawn. Or from a local historian who
knows that earlier generations avoided settling on an
open patch of land subject to regular flooding. These
human lessons round out our education and continue throughout
our lives, if we are given the chance and seek them
out.
Schools of architecture have
already established programs that allow students to
wield a hammer on actual projects. On graduation, however,
the hammering stops. Because contemporary office practice
focuses on the production skills of gifted architecture
graduates inside the office, we have a professional
obligation to the next generation to shake our offices
loose. Although the IDP program already requires it,
we must insure that every young architect be freed from
the computer screen and sent regularly into the field
to observe construction. Only by seeing our work take
shape and confronting the multidimensional, often conflicting
demands of the real world can we hope to make better,
more secure structures.
No code, no database will
ever substitute for our professional concern for our
clients, particularly for their well-being and safety.
However, genius is not required to question whether
we should build where the land burns or atop a geological
fault. Architectural skill and human experience combined
can lead us all to higher ground and away from peril.
Human beings have made our contemporary world dangerous
enough, but we can make it a safer place. Thats
building wisdom worth practicing.
Join Robert Ivy as he jots down
notes on his travels and the state of architecture today
in the Editor's Journal.
Check out our index
of past editorials.
If you wish to write to our
editor-in-chief you can email him rivy@mcgraw-hill.com.
|