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Piet Blom: Turning Architecture Upside Down
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17020 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
Date : |
8 / 1990 |
1,981 Words |
| Author
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Marcus Binney Marcus Binney, is president of Save Britain's Heritage. |
For sheer originality, indeed perversity, Piet Blom's architecture is in a class of its own. Single handedly he has revolted against the concrete slabs of postwar Rotterdam, creating new housing as fantastic in conception as Gaudi's Parc Guell in Barcelona or Guimard's Metro entrances in Paris.
The first sight of his development at Overblaak turns conventional views of architecture upside down. Indeed, his apartment block, Blaaktoren, has almost literally been stood on its head as all the arches of the windows point down, not up. But the truly surreal part of the complex is the cluster of cube houses (pole houses he calls them), which are so disorienting that you have to stand still for several minutes before you can begin to work out how anyone can live in such a place.
The essential concept is very simple - a tilted cube resting on a hexagonal pillar containing the entrance and staircase. It might almost be a modern reinterpretation of Holland's classic building type, the windmill with its crossed sails.
More mischievously, it brings to mind the famous nursery rhyme:
There was a crooked man,
And he walked a crooked mile,
He found a crooked sixpence
Against a crooked style.
He bought a crooked cat,
Which caught a crooked mouse,
And they all lived together
... (1990 of 11703 Characters)
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