Valencia's
favorite son, a man who has merged architecture and engineering
into designs that (occasionally) transcend the limitations
of both. Graceful bridges, train stations, museums- all white
structure and glass. Structures that often appear in motion
and, as of late, often actually move. There are no other (big
name) architects working today who are able to capture his
style- not without precedent (see Pier Luigi Nervi and Eero
Saarinen) but certainly timeless enough to be immune from
whatever trends may come and go.
Quadracci
Pavilion at the Milwaukee Museum of Art
(2001) Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
A relatively small addition to an understated
Eero Saarinen building, the Quadracci Pavilion, with its heroic,
moving brise soliel quickly makes you forget that there's
anything else in Wisconsin.
Click
here to go to the MAM site. After seeing the brise soliel
in action, there's a surprisingly strong collection to see
in the old building. Worth any (perceived) trouble
BCE
Place
(1992) Toronto, Ontario, Canada
What could have been just a small, infill
atrium space between downtown office buildings, the Hockey
Hall of Fame and a very popular Moevenpick Marche Restaurant
becomes a transcendent soaring nave of glass and steel.
Campo
Volatin Bridge
(1998) Bilbao, Spain
A few minutes walk from Frank Gehry's
"Look at me!" Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Santiago
Calatrava's (comparably) little footbridge reminds you yet
again just how beautiful good structural engineering can be.
Ciudad de las Artes y las Ciencias
(1991-2004) Valencia, Spain
In his hometown, Santiago Calatrava is designing an architectural
theme park complete with an opera house, a botanical garden
and (of course) a giant blinking eyeball.
Not as much fun as it sounds.
Click
here to go to the City of Arts and Sciences official site,
available in English, Spanish and (of course) Catalan
Now
at ArBITAT
Santiago
Calatrava SA
Zurich, Paris, Valencia
Online at www.calatrava.com
Santiago
Calatrava Valls
1951 born Valencia, Spain
1974 Institute of Arch, Valencia
1981 PhD Federal Institute of Arch, Zurich
1981 Started Practice
1987 Auguste Perret Award
Publications
Santiago
Calatrava: Complete Works
By Alexander Tzonis
(2004) Rizzoli
Everyone
loves Santiago Calatrava, although it might be a bit early
to publish a book called Complete Works- considering that
he is still alive and working....
(read
more)