THE PURSUI OF KNOWLEDGE: Saving the City

Scruton, Roger

THe PuRsuIT of KnowledGe Saving the City by Roger scruton A ll conservatives agree on one thing, which is that, before destroying things, we should pause to consider their merits....

...46 THe aMeRIcan sPecTaToR ocTobeR 2008...
...As our debate proceeded, I was struck by the way in which all arguments for the old idea of settlement were instantly scoffed at: tradition, order, scale, grammar, modesty—all were regarded as part of the one great architectural crime called “pastiche” (a crime committed, if we are to take the accusation seriously, by every building from the Parthenon to the Cathedral of St...
...We build in order to dwell...
...Our opponents (Stephen Bayley, Alain de Botton and Sean Griffiths) responded with two ideas: that you cannot adopt the old classical grammar without creating “pastiche,” and that architecture must move with the times—it must be new, creative, adventur­ous, breaking the mold, just like music, painting, and literature as the modernists understood them...
...Its streets are public spaces, and the facades of its buildings stand in a personal relation to all who pass them by...
...Nevertheless here was a rare opportunity to speak publicly against one of the greatest acts of destruction in my lifetime: the erasing of our cities by building styles that defy the fundamental goal of city architecture, which is the creation of livable neighborhoods...
...Buildings without facades, which violate organic street plans, trash harmonious skylines and dwarf their neighbors, have mutilated our neighborhoods 44 THe aMeRIcan sPecTaToR ocTobeR 2008 and unsettled those who live and work in them...
...Those three principles imply that architects should not be learning how to obliterate townscapes with steel frames and curtain walls or to extend their Babelian structures to the stars...
...It is partly because of the modern ways of building that the flight to the suburbs became inevitable...
...To pretend to these qualities in their absence is to jettison the three most important social virtues, which are modesty, humility, and the ability to act as though others are more important than yourself...
...Intelligence Squared, which organized the debate, asked for a vote before and after the speeches...
...Like Prince Charles, I see this as an unmitigated disaster, and like him I blame architects for much— though not all—that has gone wrong...
...Léon Krier, who created the new town of Poundbury for the prince, in a style that harmonizes with the old town of Dorchester next door, was overtly scoffed at as an anachronism...
...Moreover, the debate was sponsored by the Royal Institute of British Architects and the chamber packed by the aspiring architects whom they repre­sent...
...Aspiring architects attending the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn in the early 20th century would study the classical orders...
...What ordinary citizens think about these things, what they want and hope for, did not matter...
...The complaint issued against modern architecture—by the Prince of Wales and many others—is not about the master­pieces of modern architecture...
...A town is a home, where strangers settle side by side and enjoy a shared sense of belonging...
...I therefore proposed three common-sense prin­ciples: settlement, modesty, and fittingness...
...We began from a hopeless position, with a majority clearly against us...
...The motion—“this house believes that Prince Charles was right, modern architecture is still all glass stumps and carbuncles”—was somewhat tenden­tious...
...John the Divine...
...it concerns the ordi­nary buildings that have sprung up in our towns and that seem designed to violate the urban fabric...
...The Big Commission is everything, and it should be executed in modern materials, so as to be true to our times and to the Zeitgeist that is now at large in them...
...Architects have become careless of the city and its inhabitants, more concerned to draw attention to themselves and their creations than to fit modestly into their surroundings, as good manners demand...
...After all there is good modern architecture and bad, and glass is only one part of the problem...
...But they involve a failure to see what archi­tecture is...
...I was therefore pleased to be invited recently to debate the question of modern architecture, at one of the Intelligence Squared debates in London...
...Our oppo­nents responded with a burst of laughter...
...This principle applies to everything important, from marriage to mon­ archy, and also to architecture, which is a fun­damental component in both those things...
...As Brian C. Anderson points out in this issue, modernist designs and futuristic plans have helped to deprive cities of their centers, of their resident populations, and of the visible symbols of urban civilization...
...And the debate in which I took part illustrated the extreme difficulty of making any headway...
...it affects future generations and strangers whom I will never meet...
...And when that happened city centers lost their law-abid­ing guardians and declined into dangerous waste­lands punctuated by fortified towers...
...And yet, behind their laughter and their empty invocation of a future with no visual connection to the past and no concern for traditional values, I sensed a kind of facetious nihilism, a clucking contempt for ordinary decencies founded on nothing more than the inability to believe in them, or in anything else...
...They earn vast fortunes from destroying the settlements of others, and spend the result on some dream home on a mountain top, from which they descend from time to time like wolves in search of the next thing to devour...
...Stephen Bayley managed to accompany every reference to the Prince of Wales with a smirk or a snigger...
...And to dwell is to dwell among neighbors, who have as great an interest in how we build as we have ourselves...
...O n the whole modernist architects don’t live like that—they don’t have to...
...And if we are to live as people should we must surely take the inter­ests of all those others, as best we can, into account...
...Size, scale, detail, appearance, light, shade, and grammar are no longer of real sig­nificance...
...And when Quinlan Terry, the anti-modernist architect who has done so much for colonial Williamsburg, stood up to denounce the education that he had received at London’s Architectural Association, he merely identified himself as a target...
...Buildings should fit together in a public space that is accessible and friendly to all of us...
...And the result is seen by the rest of us as a threat, comparable to loudmouthed insolence on the sub­way or drunken puking in the street...
...In particular I blame the schools of architecture, which adopted the rhetoric of the modernists and gave up teaching the things that architects should know...
...Which is only reasonable, given that there were no arguments, but only dogma and rhetoric, on the other side...
...It is an attempt to settle in a territory, and to claim that territory as ours, the place where we and our children belong...
...To encoun­ter someone who believes that we can learn from the past, when architecture is about building the future, induced a fit of pitying amazement...
...How I build affects you, my neighbor, as much as it affects me...
...Roger scruton, the writer and philosopher, is most recently the author of Culture Counts: Faith and Feeling in a World Besieged (Encounter Books...
...The main thing that an architect is expected to know today is how to hang a curtain wall on a steel and concrete frame...
...I agree with Prince Charles that these are among the most serious questions now confronting us...
...That is not what aspiring architects would learn today, either at the Pratt Institute or anywhere else that trains students in “urban design...
...Novelty, transgression, gigantism, originality—these are what citizens are henceforth going to get, since they are required by the calling of the modern architect...
...During the debate these arguments were repeated ad nauseam...
...Most buildings will be the creation of talentless people, who are simply doing a job, like you and me...
...It is not a private gesture, to be understood as the expression of some original state of mind...
...And we all know that, once modernist architects get their hands on it, the neigh­borhood will be smashed to pieces...
...such as were contained in the pattern-books com­posed by Asher Benjamin, and used by the anony­mous builders of the towns and villages of New England, old Boston included...
...Furthermore, genius is as rare among architects as it is among the rest of us...
...It was therefore unlikely that Simon Jenkins, Léon Krier, and myself, who had been invited to pro­pose the motion, would win the vote...
...Future-addicts have a habit of despising those who resist them, whether ordinary people or their high-placed defenders...
...That is what it means to belong to the modern world...
...The heritage of architectural wisdom has been swept impetuously away, to be replaced by courses in engineering, econometric drawing, and the creation of ground­plans...
...Which means, I believe, that we lost the vote but won the argument...
...H ow Do you confront this way of thinking, and how do you undo its legacy...
...ocTobeR 2008 THe aMeRIcan sPecTaToR 45 THe PuRsuIT of KnowledGe The third principle follows...
...If it involves dumping horizontal slabs of concrete across a carefully composed nest of verti­cal houses, or sweeping up whole populations into RoGeR scRuTon high-rise blocks, and giving them nothing to do in them apart from mugging their neighbors on the stairwell—then so be it...
...And if the Big Commission involves sweep­ing away some historic townscape, as Le Corbusier proposed for Paris and Algiers, that is no concern of the architect...
...They would learn how to create facades, how to draw the human figure and to compose buildings in relation to it, how light falls and shadows gather, how scales fit together, how moldings work, and how apertures are framed: in short, how to design a build­ing that fits in like a smile, rather than one that stands out like a carbuncle...
...This is most easily achieved if there is a shared repertoire of details, materials that blend and do not come apart visually at the joints, and proportions that can be emulated by each new addition to the townscape...
...THe PuRsuIT of KnowledGe Saving the City by Roger scruton A ll conservatives agree on one thing, which is that, before destroying things, we should pause to consider their merits...
...Most of our beautiful towns were not the work of architects but of modest builders, working with materials that they understood and on a scale that does not chal­lenge our perceptions...
...Here was someone who believed in permanent values, in order, decency, dignity, and tradition, and who was even dressed accordingly in suit, collar, and tie...
...We all know—be it from Paris or Greenwich Village, from Bath or Beacon Hill—what a livable neighborhood is...
...But 120 voted “don’t know” at the start, and of those the majority voted with us at the end...
...They should be learning the rules of architectural grammar— Novelty, transgression, gigantism, originality—these are what citizens are henceforth going to get, since they are required by the calling of the modern architect...
...The less they try to be original and expressive the better...

Vol. 41 • October 2008 • No. 8


 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.