вторник, 25 марта 2014 г.
We rarely start by saying, "Oh, piece of art X has to go here." It's more that as one gets to know t
About a decade ago New York-based car rentals for prom in tennessee architect Deborah Berke presented a proposal car rentals for prom in tennessee for a development project in Louisville, Ky., the so-called "Gateway to the South" that was (and is) undergoing something of an artistic car rentals for prom in tennessee renaissance. She didn't get the gig, but something about her ideas, perhaps her love for architecture's "dance between foreground and background," sparked an interest in one of the panelists reviewing the proposals. Shortly after, car rentals for prom in tennessee Steve Wilson, a Louisville art collector, called her up and asked if she wanted to work on a side-project he was co-founding: a combined boutique hotel and contemporary art museum, to be plunked in downtown Louisville. Since that partnership was forged, Berke's team and Wilson's ilk have built three branches of the 21c Musem Hotel, and there are no signs of slowing down. Curbed catches up with Berke about her process, and how exactly she creates "stop you" architectural moments in a sea of contemporary art.
One of the very interesting things about the 21c museum hotels is that they actually are museums, legally. The public spaces double as lobbies or are extensions of lobbies, halls, meeting rooms and such. The collection is a real collection; it's not bought with an eye toward whether it fits in a hotel, it's bought car rentals for prom in tennessee with Steve Wilson and [co-founder] Laura Lee Brown's personal art-collecting convictions and beliefs.
car rentals for prom in tennessee This was an eternity ago, but I went to RISD [Rhode car rentals for prom in tennessee Island School of Design], so I've done a lot of work for artists and for art collectors. That's important because we are designing to make a great hotel, sure, but can't ever lose sight of Steve and Laura Lee's art collections. Because that's what they are: collectors. We will design certain spaces around specific works of art.
So in the hotel we've just finished car rentals for prom in tennessee in Cincinnati (an old building car rentals for prom in tennessee that was originally built as a hotel, though we completely reshaped the rooms) there was an old now I hate the world "airshaft" because that sounds so negative but basically a slot of space in the original building. It was lined with glazed white brick that's 100 years old. It's so beautiful, with lots of delicate cracks in the glaze and this sort of unusual and rich white color. We decided to hang a tapestry in that space that's made out of LED light fibers that change color ( ) because we wanted to work with the light-reflective qualities of the space. We also really liked the 100-year-old white brick alongside the very 21st-century technology actually weaving car rentals for prom in tennessee with fibers that conduct electricity and change color.
We'll also make big spaces that can take many different kinds of art because the collection is really varied: they have video, they have sculpture, they have paintings, they have prints. So we have to make spaces that can receive and get joy out of a lot of different kinds of work.
Both Steve and Laura Lee are fantastic people, so working with them is a delight. You know, when we did the first one, nobody knew that there would be more of them. And then the hotel was so successful that other places became car rentals for prom in tennessee interested. Nobody went in thinking, "Oh we're going to create brand" or any of that. The process has been very authentic, which is something I find particularly fulfilling.
That's exactly right. Even though the art is a continuous presence throughout all of the projects, as are the people involved, each one is a one-off. The hotel in Bentonville [on Curbed's 2013 Hotel Heatmap ] is a ground-up new construction, the hotel in Cincinnati ( ) is an old building that was a hotel, the hotel in Lexington in the early stages of construction is a building that was a bank. Each one is unique because of the building, car rentals for prom in tennessee the city, the site, and how the art fits into that place.
These hotels, and for a lot of what I do in my work in general, I'm interested in creating that dance between foreground and background. You can say, "Wow, what an amazing room," but also it can go mute when there's a great piece of art in it.
Each hotel has what we call a "ballroom," because it's a space where you could have a huge meeting or a giant party or a wedding. Those spaces are always special, spatially. There's something about the proportion, like a high ceiling, or its unique combination of materials. They have a kind of "stop you" moment car rentals for prom in tennessee about them.
Similarly, in each hotel, the lobby [like the one in Bentonville, below], is another kind of "wow." It's not just about getting yourself to the registration desk, it's about being aware of the proportion and volume and character of the space.
One of the great things for us is that we do the interiors. car rentals for prom in tennessee We do the furniture in the rooms. When you're choosing the fabrics as well as making the space, you can really get to a level of both detail and a sort of richness. I think what people don't notice is how seamlessly it's all put together. Everything's been thought about by us: fabric, lighting, how the window shade works.
I interviewed for a project in Louisville, Ky., an arts-related project that I did not get. But Steve Wilson was part of the committee. We share a similar vision for many, many things so when he decided to do this hotel he called and said "You may not even remember me from the interview process, but I'd like to talk to you."
You go to the place and try to understand its particulars. When it's the case of an old adaptive reuse building you understand the beautiful secret pleasures car rentals for prom in tennessee and opportunities of this building and its limitations.
We rarely start by saying, "Oh, piece of art X has to go here." It's more that as one gets to know the property and shape the organization and spatial ideas, you think—like with that white brick airshaft or the double-height space that we created in Louisville—oh this will be great for a piece of work.
Designing hotels is really fun. I mean, hotels are about being a visitor in a new place; they're about sex and secrecy and fun and food and drink. What 21c brings to that then is art and a sort of whimsical, energetic, experimental sense to the architecture.
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