Never Demolish
John Hill
29. de novembre 2021
Photo © Anna Mas
Curators Ilka and Andreas Ruby have transformed the Barcelona Pavilion into a domestic space — a temporary version of the EU Mies Prize-winning "Transformation of 530 Dwellings in the Grand Parc Bordeaux" by Lacaton & Vassal architectes, Frédéric Druot Architecture, and Christophe Hutin Architecture.
Never Demolish, as the intervention is titled, takes its name from the mantra that partners Anne Lacaton and Jean-Philippe Vassal have used throughout their careers as architects, be it when designing public spaces, cultural works, or social housing. Their most famous "never demolish" project is the award-winning Transformation of 530 Dwellings - Grand Parc Bordeaux that they did with architects Frédéric Druot and Christophe Hutin, and which won them the European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture – Mies van der Rohe Award in 2019 and was highlighted in the announcement of the duo winning the 2021 Pritzker Architecture Prize. The project added four-meter deep winter gardens to the facades of three social housing buildings in Bordeaux, France, dating to the 1960s.
Ilka and Andreas Ruby, who nearly ten years ago curated an exhibition on Tour Bois le Prêtre, a similar transformation done by Lacaton and Vassal with Druot, contend that large-scale housing projects from the 1960s and 70s "can have a second life that's better than their first, through sensible renovation – enlarging the spaces and improving living standards." Never Demolish uses the Transformation of 530 Dwellings "as a potential model for the social and physical rehabilitation of the mass-housing estates of modernism," inserting a simulation of the project into the Barcelona Pavilion, famously designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Lilly Reich as the German Pavilion for the Barcelona International Exhibition. The juxtaposition of the two projects is explored through the below images.