The building's ultraskin is like a hypersurface resonating of forces
criss-crossing over one another.
Landscape elements (the topographic sweep of the L.A. River), pieces
of urban infrastructure (freeways, railroad), an industrial archeology
of found objects (homeless boxes along the river banks, trucks) as well
as elements of the newly proposed "buildings" were combined
to create a generative geometry. The end result is a particolored, architectural
quilt of multiple elements whose overall character is that of a re-configured
ground plane; the initial scheme is morphed into an architecture that
is more responsive to the datascape and thus reduces the perception
of the newly designed building as an inserted "object" competing with
the existing buildings on the site.
Just as the physical space of the building acts as a media
membrane that is informed by the existing condition of the idiosyncratic
place it sits in (a curved bridge, the verticality of downtown, the
LA River, the complex road system surrounding it, the railroad and the
freeway interchange), so its final destination as archive center for
the city of Los Angeles aims at gathering memories of the place, though
on a different level.
The unavoidable presence and materiality of the site is knit
together with the intangible sphere of memory and its timeless
information.
Site
On the L.A. River, between 4th and 6th street in metropolitan Los Angeles,
the site is a "dead" place, a nothingness, a crash site, the
collision of two plates. The river without water for months at a time
can be perceived as a gaping wound lined in concrete, ripping the city
apart from North to South. In this singular location, the river lies
positioned between the cocky pride of the vertical economic center to
the West, and the fragmented remnant of a natural park to the East.
The Hollenbeck Park is practically choked by freeways (the merged 10
and 5 border it) and the overpass of 6th street which looms above. The
L.A. River exists here as a border line within the city, a no-man's
land which the homeless use as their roadway and drag racers invade
for their illegal rallies. The river here completely belies its own
metaphor as the origin of life.
Program
Bridging the river and embedded below it, visible and invisible, is
the Minotaur's Warehouse (the wear and the tear house) which is an archive,
a deposit for the memory for the city of Los Angeles. In this program,
the past, present and the future come together in radical contemplation.
Here are deposited the materiality of traces and the tangible fluctuations
of memory. Dreams which have become realities and realities no longer
knowable coexist. Here a "City of Quartz" pools its numerous
micro-cosmic communities, its polyvalent and idiosyncratic cultures,
its brave claim to temporality.
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