"Rossi loved New York's skyscrapers and its orderly grid, but
he also had an eye for the city's accidents and mysteries..."
by William Higgins
Late last summer, Aldo Rossi's design for a new office building
in Soho received its final city approvals. Within a few weeks,
the architect was dead, following a car accident near his home
on Lago Maggiore in northern Italy. Rossi will be missed by all
who know his work, and especially by those who knew the man.
I came to know Aldo Rossi through our work together on his only
New York project. My memories of him are grounded in many months
of meetings, conversations, presentations, drinks, and meals--the
close interactions that ultimately result in buildings, and occasionally
in friendships. Like his buildings, Rossi was at once serious
and whimsical, magisterial and accessible, popular and retiring.
Although an influential teacher and theoretician, he was at heart
an artist and a visual poet, and that is the way he designed his
buildings.
Rossi's Soho project, an extension of Scholastic Publishing's
headquarters on lower Broadway, is a case in point. The building's
columnar Broadway facade, in steel, terra-cotta, and stone, echoes
the scale and the formal, Classical character of its commercial
neighbors. The rear facade, on Mercer Street, extracts a gritty
essence from its more utilitarian surroundings of plain cast iron
and weathered masonry. Paul Goldberger has praised the Scholastic
design as "a building that will teach generations of architects
the proper way to respond to historic contexts." True enough,
but it will teach more than propriety. It will teach poetry as
well.
Rossi loved New York's skyscrapers and its orderly grid, but he
also had an eye for the city's accidents and mysteries, for the
New York of unfinished lot-line walls, dark side streets, and
rusting fire escapes. One of the architect's best sketches for
the Soho building shows the Broadway facade in mist and shadow,
under the kind of irregular light that might have filtered through
nineteenth-century coal smoke. Rossi's mind was in this time and
place when he first conceived the building. I remember him at
an early meeting in his studio on East 20th Street, when he looked
out a rear window toward a chance landscape of common brick walls,
asphalt roofs, and wooden water tanks. The towers of Madison Square
and Midtown were visible, but only at a distance. He said simply,
"This is the New York I love."
Publicly and privately, Rossi always said it would be an honor
to have a building in New York, and especially on Broadway. There
was a real, unforced humility in this. Rossi had built all over
the world, and had received the highest praise for it; but he
talked about the Scholastic building with the enthusiasm of a
young architect celebrating his first big commission. After years
of design and review, it finally looks as though there will be
an Aldo Rossi building on Broadway. Sadly, the honor will come
posthumously for Aldo, but his building will be an honor to New
York for as long as it stands.
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