
Explanation
A place to live, or a miracle?
Several questions were answered Wednesday as the University administration
announced an end to its relationship with Christopher Alexander, the embattled
architect of the Agate and Amazon family housing facilities. Administration
officials said there was a "lack of understanding" between Alexander and his firm
CES/T&E Venture, and that it will proceed on schedule with plans to demolish and
rebuild the Amazon facility in time for the 1995-96 school year. Just who is
Christopher Alexander anyway? This is not an easy question to answer. When
contacted on Oct. 28 for comments on another story, Alexander informed the
Emerald that he would no longer speak with representatives of this
newspaper. Alexander lives in Berkeley, Calif. where he runs an organization
called The Center for Environmental Structure, which formed a partnership with
the Eugene architectural firm of Thallon and Edrington for the sole purpose of
designing and rebuilding the family housing facilities at the corner of 18th Ave.
and Agate St. and the Amazon facility at 24th Ave. and Patterson St. Alexander
has a history with the architectural environment of the University dating back to
the early 1970s, when he wrote a book entitled The Oregon Experiment. The
processes described in that book have become standard University policy when
planning construction projects and are required reading for architecture
students. The Science Complex, additions to the Education Dept. building and
additions to the School of Music all were designed using Alexander's Oregon
Experiment processes, but by other firms. Architects around the country
see Alexander as either a genius or a self-appointed guru. Critics sometimes
accuse him of trying to create a "cult" because his ideas often run counter to
the conventional wisdom of architecture. In the architectural sense, what he does
is "not done." But there are a growing number of people who believe his ideas
have revolutionized the way buildings are now built and how they will be built in
the future. County Jerry Finrow, Dean of the University of Oregon School of
Architecture among them. "Christopher Alexander is one of the most important
theorists in 20th Century architecture because when he was a practising theorist,
he proposed views and approaches that no one else had thought of before in the
history of the field," Finrow said. The saga of Alexander's mark on the
architecture world began at Cambridge University, where he completed his first
academic degree in mathematics. He the completed Cambridge's three-year
preliminary program in architecture in two years. From what one trade journal
writer has said, Alexander believed Cambridge's architecture program missed the
point. "He wanted to know how to make a beautiful building," wrote Jerry
Shipsky in the journal Architecture. "He's been obsessed with that
question ever since." Alexander then moved across the Atlantic to Harvard
University, where he was possibly the first student to ever complete a Doctorate
in architecture. Put simply, Alexander applied his background in mathematics
toward solving problems of architecture, Finrow said. Shipsky compared
Alexander's work to "inventing calculus simply in order to solve a particular
equation or creating the laws of motion simply in order to ride in a car."
Finrow said this led Alexander to the idea that architecture, as it has been
commonly practiced, is too simplistic and formulaic to create beautiful
buildings. Applying traditional rules do not necessarily result in a beautiful
building. Alexander believes that the environment is made up of patterns,
rather than things. The distinction between a good and bad pattern can be decided
up on objectively by groups of people who have a stake in the design of the
building. That means forming committees, known as "user groups" which combine
their thoughts on how the building should look into a practical, workable
building plan. This process is fundamentally different from anything tried
before, and has been hailed by some as the wave of the future for architectural
design. Between 1977 and 1980, Alexander published a series of books that
culminated in The Oregon Experiment, which Finrow considers to be the
second phase of Alexander's philosophical development. "I think it was the
most productive set of ideas he ever had," Finrow said. "The process expressed
there is very structured and organized and allows the architect to get into the
same place that the users are in. It uses their insights to create a basis to
work from." "Our own environment has been ruined by the current architectural
separation between client, architect and contractor," Alexander told
Progressive Architecture in 1991. In that article, Alexander tells an
anecdote about a housing project he worked on in Mexicali, Mexico, during the
1970s. "A bank official came to the Mexicali project as we were building it
and said that clearly the people didn't know how to design housing since, in one,
the bedrooms were too big and the living room too small. "I asked the woman
whose house it was to come over and explain, and she told him that it was very
simple. The bedrooms were big to give each of her children a place to study,
since education was so vital to their betterment. ...The living room was small
because 'our family all sits together on the same sofa anyway. We love each
other. Why do we need more space?' Poor people because of their distressed
circumstances, tend to be more direct." Finrow called Alexander's approach a
"very effective methodology." "I have practiced from that perspective myself,
and I think it's very successful," he said. But if Alexander's methods have
worked so well in the past, what, if anything, has gone wrong with the Agate and
Amazon projects? Nancy Forrest, a member of the Amazon Community Tenants
Council, agrees that Alexander may be a genius, but that something has gone wrong
with the Agate and Amazon users group process something that may or may
not be Alexander's fault. Forrest said the University placed too many
administrators, staff members and faculty members in the users group, and not
enough of the low-income students who will live in the buildings. Forrest further
blames University officials for setting the cost boundaries of the project, which
have become just one of the major sticking points of the entire controversy,
without allowing user groups to discuss them. Alexander is well-known for his
design of the Eishan University campus on the outskirts of Tokyo, Japan. Finrow
said it had its own set of controversies. "It's no surprise that there has
been controversy on this project. But once it got through all the unfortunate
circumstances of its birth, Eishan became a marvelous environment that is
probably really appreciated and loved by those who live there," Finrow said.
But under current financial conditions, can the University really afford a
"marvelous environment?" "I would argue that the University can't afford not
to have a quality environment," Finrow said. "Part of what makes our place
meaningful is the environment in which we live. You have to ask if the
environment is of good quality and if it's enriching. I think the cost argument
is a tough one, but I don't think we can afford to have that attitude." In
1992, Alexander designed a house for Ann Meadlock and John Graham on Whidbey
Island, near Seattle, Wash. A glowing pictorial and written review in the April
1992 issue of House and Garden highlights the "Alexander experience," with
heartfelt, yet revealing quotations from people involved with the project,
including the homeowners. "I have a lot of soul in that building," said one
carpenter who worked on the house. "You feel the way it's made," said Gary Black,
one of Alexander's associates. But the final paragraph of that article hints
at what could be a trade-off to working with Alexander. It says:
Was the University
simply looking for "a place to live" when Alexander and his firm were selected to
design the Agate and Amazon projects? Wednesday's developments seem say yes to
that question. But there are other questions. How will the design-build
process referred to University officials work? How much input will students
affected have on the project's outcome and costs? Though Christopher Alexander
is now gone from the picture, this story is far from over.
Not long after the story on Christopher Alexander's
lack of a license ran, the University fired Alexander from the Amazon Housing
project. As luck would have it, I was in class at the time it happened, but had
been preparing a detailed on Alexander's background and his relationship with the
University. I gathered together all of my reporting, rewrote parts of it, and it
ran as an analysis peice that complemented the news story of the firing.
By Arik Hesseldahl
Oregon Daily Emerald"Medlock and Graham freely admit that the Alexander experience was no
picnic it took forever and cost more money than they had. Nevertheless,
they'd do it again. 'If you just want a place to live, don't do this,' counsels
Graham. 'But if you want a miracle, do it.'"
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