Justin Davidson: Why glass towers are bad for city life -- and what we need instead
Justin Davidson writes about a broad range of urban, civic, design and arts issues. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
in here this evening,
looked almost exactly the same:
idiosyncratic inner life,
the same blank expression all the time.
that is taking over cities,
of great individuality and character
splendor of cities.
is that the need for shelter
the human desire for beauty.
give us a touchable city.
over brick and stone.
made of concrete and steel
all over the world --
of high-gloss robots
the full range of available materials.
and limestone and sandstone
and terra-cotta and brick
all of the world's cuisines
like this one in Moscow
and communal aspects of urban living.
to enrich their owners and tenants,
the lives of the rest of us,
the spaces between the buildings.
and killing off public space.
as being like makeup,
to a building that's effectively complete.
affect the way we live in it.
sunlight rakes the facades,
segments the buildings
of visual activity.
where the generations can meet.
sprawling on the pavers,
like an opera set.
about the exteriors of buildings,
give texture to our lives,
create the spaces around them,
with the quality of those exteriors.
of the Plaza Mayor in Salamanca
to their cubicles
as little time in as possible.
the architect Philip Johnson
European plaza in Pittsburgh.
encircled by commercial buildings
with metal trim and bays
through the fountain
of a leisurely hangout.
you really want to just hang out and chat.
for many different reasons.
excessively on glass.
from enormous, ultraclear sheets
it has the magical power
real estate values by allowing views,
that developers have to offer
of the Crystal Palace in London,
of quintessentially modern substances.
the downtowns of some American cities,
really spectacular office buildings
designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill.
advanced to the point
structures so transparent
of the high-rise city,
powerful reason for that.
converge on cities,
into jerry-built shantytowns.
need apartments and places to work
to put up towers
and practical curtain walls.
in southern Mexico.
of high ritual significance.
a historical and textural continuity
the mountains all around
on top of the ruins
even ordinary plaster buildings
bright colors, political murals
would simply wipe out.
that architects and developers
the joys of texture
for old materials like brick
like the molded panels that Snøhetta used
Museum of Modern Art
even created living facades.
a pair of apartment towers in Milan,
for Nanjing in China.
were as ubiquitous as glass ones
in Chinese cities would become.
that these are mostly one-offs,
that have a local significance,
from all looking the same.
to cover the American Copper Building,
on the East River.
sunset lights up that metallic facade,
pretty much the same way it did before
have the ability
in Salt Lake City in copper and zinc,
in the area for 150 years
against the ochre hills
natural history.
Pritzker Prize winner Wang Shu
a wrapper for the past,
that had been demolished.
and this one by Frank Gehry
that they toss back and forth
of concentrated variety
and languages and lifestyles
of crushing sameness,
the full range of the urban experience.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Justin Davidson - Architecture criticJustin Davidson writes about a broad range of urban, civic, design and arts issues.
Why you should listen
Justin Davidson is the author of Magnetic City: A Walking Companion to New York (Spiegel & Grau), which leads readers through a portrait of the city told through its history, architecture, music, art and literature.
Davidson has been the architecture and classical music critic at New York magazine since 2007. Before that, he spent 12 years as classical music critic at Newsday, where he also wrote about architecture and was a regular cultural commentator. He won a Pulitzer Prize for criticism in 2002, an American Society of Newspaper Editors criticism (ASNE) award and the 2015 Stephen A. Kliment Oculus Award for Architectural Journalism from the American Institute of Architects, New York Chapter.
A native of Rome, Davidson graduated from Harvard and later earned a doctoral degree in music composition at Columbia University. He has contributed to many publications, including The New Yorker, Smithsonian, W., The New York Times Book Review, Travel & Leisure, Condé Nast Traveler and Pursuits. He was a columnist for the website Wondering Sound and has appeared regularly on WNYC and other radio and television outlets. He has taught at the Design Criticism program at the School of Visual Arts, the Goldring Arts Journalism Program of Syracuse University and NEA Arts Journalism Institutes. He lives on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.
Justin Davidson | Speaker | TED.com