The Architect's Newspaper March/April 2023
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1100 Architect redoes a modernist German gymnasium with a light touch page 14
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O’Neill McVoy Architects curves CLT for Bronx Children’s Museum page 26
Triumph of the Quiet Style
David Chipperfield is the 2023 Pritzker Prize laureate. Read on page 11.
COURTESY SIMON MENGES
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The Architectural League’s Emerging Voices 2023 page 28
Spatializing Reproductive Justice Abortion in the U.S. has a significant spatial component. Let’s start with the obvious: Abortions, both surgical and medical, have historically happened primarily at dedicated clinics, separately from other procedures. Clinics became the primary place for abortions after Roe v. Wade because they didn’t pose the same challenges as hospitals, which, in addition to burdensome maintenance costs and code requirements, are often religiously affiliated and can refuse to provide abortions. Additionally, and crucially, clinics can hire exclusively pro-abortion staff, making the experience more comfortable for patients and the internal working dynamics more manageable. Despite these advantages, separating clinics from other healthcare spaces has had the long-term effect of making them targets of antiabortion continued on page 15
Tayfun Kahraman responds to damage from earthquakes in Turkey page 66
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Open In Construction Dispatch Studio Visit Exhibition Highlights
Three projects take on creative and recreational programs with serious results. Read on page 34.
EXTENDED PLAY WINDSTAR STUDIOS
Du Bois and A Printed-Porcelain Memorial Art Nouveau
Feud at KogenMiller Studios
It has been almost five years already since Princeton Architectural Press published W. E. B. Du Bois’s 1900 Paris Exposition data portraits as a visually riveting paperback. After public release in digitized form by the Library of Congress and in various printed color formats in a number of magazines, it would seem that the data portraits had been given their due. Graphic designers oohed and aahed over the cutting-edge modernity of the data portraits and their prescience in terms of data visualization. Important social science labs even commissioned Du Bois– styled presentations of 21st-century data. Deconstructing Power: W. E. B. Du Bois at the 1900 World’s Fair, currently on view at Cooper Hewitt, invites us to consider the data portraits in the material context of the 1900 world’s fair in Paris. This exhibit highlights the role of the data portraits, even though they formed only a part of The Exhibit of American Negroes in Paris. The full American Negroes exhibit was a collaboration of continued on page 65
Edgar Miller’s Kogen-Miller Studios is one of Chicago’s most idiosyncratic and astonishing architectural sites. Lately, though, it has been ensnared in a disagreement that has shut down public access and programming, as one set of owners of the condo complex in the Near North Side Old Town neighborhood are pushing for landmarking as a way to protect its historic integrity. Founded in 2014, Edgar Miller Legacy (EML) for years hosted tours, residency programs for artists, and other public programming at the Kogen-Miller Studios, one of the best works of Chicago artist and architect Edgar Miller. Designed and built by a rotating cast of early-20th-century bohemian designers, artist, and craftspeople, the Kogen-Miller Studios showcase Miller’s virtuosity across nearly every design medium: stained glass, painting, sculpture, architecture, interior design, and more. The mélange is indicative of a richly representational and often overlooked countercurrent to the dictates of the continued on page 16
David Hotson Architect realizes an intricate facade for St. Sarkis Armenian Orthodox Church in Carrollton, Texas. Read on page 20.
DROR BALDINGER, FAIA
Wellness Healthcare plus self-care. Read on page 45.
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