Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Finding Home Amid Change.


"Speak your mind, even when your voice shakes." Maggie Kuhn.

The quote in spray paint is not the original quote, but the sentiment is loud and clear and remains true to Kuhn's objective. I do not know the story behind this photo, but it reminds me of the east end of Austin as developers moved to quickly provide housing for the growing population. They were worried about population and not people (re: Aldo Van Eyck quote in following text). Humble family homes stood abandoned as people's shared history waited to be demolished beneath a wrecking ball.


Aldo Van Eyck was concerned with the way in which the West had disconnected from their own history. As western nations industrialized, the rural-to-urban shift changed architecture from a place of home and hearth to a sometimes crowded, uncomfortable place.

Well-planned cities adapt to population shifts. The rest are strained as people push the infrastructure to near collapse.

Austin, Texas, is not my hometown, but it is that place that I associate with home. In the years I lived there, I was able to watch Austin grow as the dot.com boom rose and fell and rose again. Large numbers of people moved from Silicon Valley to what was then dubbed the New Silicon Valley in the Austin-Round Rock metro. The new residents brought a change in lifestyle and culture. With that, the city changed. The streets and bypasses were not designed to withstand a huge influx of people. The city was not handling the population shift with ease. Time will tell. As Van Eyck said “People live there, not population.”

Developers bought up the east end for a steal. The people who defined the city were displaced as luxury apartments stood like steel skeletons against the skyline. It was a sad process. I would think that this was the same process that New York City went through in the 20th century. SoHo was once a big thorn in the side of those against gentrification. The artists and galleries that once defined the area were largely forced out. Now, trendy boutiques are the raison d'ĂȘtre in SoHo. For those of us who know nothing else and nothing prior about her history, SoHo is a lovely space with nice little gems of architecture. However, I bet the people who knew the former SoHo can still find that one place that still defines the space for them. They can find home amid progress. This progress (or that necessary evil known as change) does not determine how we relate to a city.

As with any place you love, you gravitate towards the places that have a history for you. My favorite little iced coffee shop in Austin is now a trendy bar. But that's okay. The exposed brick wall takes me right back to the first day I stepped foot in there. I climbed a barrier fence at a construction site the last week that I lived there. On one side was a ma and pop diner. On the other side was a multi-million dollar mixed-use structure. In between, was that place and time where I still had control of how I viewed Austin. People need history; they need a sense of place. In that void, we create our own history and our own understanding of time and place.

It could be argued that responsible architecture anticipates change, but I lean towards Van Eyck’s philosophy that what architecture should do well is “assist our homecoming.” All change takes time to process. In that, we need to provide spaces that allow people to be individuals and not simply mass inhabitants.



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