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	<title>AlvaroSizaVieira.com &#187; Life Resumed</title>
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	<description>Life and Work of the Greatest Portuguese Architect</description>
	<pubDate>Tue, 07 Sep 2010 06:02:17 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Alvaro Siza Vieira Resumed</title>
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		<dc:creator>Alvaro</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Life Resumed]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Alvaro Siza (born 1933) is considered Portugal's greatest living architect and possibly the best that country has ever produced.]]></description>
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</script></div><p><a href="http://alvarosizavieira.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/siza.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-144" title="siza" src="http://alvarosizavieira.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/siza.jpg" alt="siza" width="523" height="471" /></a><br />
Alvaro Siza (born 1933) is  considered Portugal&#8217;s greatest living architect and possibly the best that  country has ever produced. His works are internationally renowned for their  coherence, clarity, and what Siza calls simplism - a quality that recognizes the  complexity and contradictions of a project without trying to impose artificial  control over them.</p>
<p>Siza was born in the town of Matosinhos, near Oporto,  Portugal, in 1933. He studied architecture at the Escola de Belas Artes in  Oporto from 1949 to 1955, and his first design was built in 1954. From 1955 to  1958, he worked with architect Fernando Tavora. Through the 1950s, Siza  developed several projects in Matosinhos, including private houses, a Parochial  Center, a Tourist Office, and a low-cost housing project as well as the  acclaimed Boa Nova restaurant (1958-63; renovated 1992) and a public swimming  pool in Leca da Palmeira (1958-65). These early projects indicated Siza&#8217;s  characteristic ability to integrate his designs with the distinct qualities of  their environments.</p>
<p><strong>&#8220;Embracing the Rhythm of the Air&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>Siza&#8217;s work,  though linked to Minimalism, is considered rooted in Expressionism. These roots  can be seen in the formal structures of his designs, which, according to Oriol  Bohigas, are &#8220;always based on unity of space and volume&#8221; and possess &#8220;an  absolute coherence of function and form.&#8221; These qualities are already apparent  in the Boa Nova project, chosen in a competition sponsored by the Matosinhos  City Council in 1958. The building&#8217;s dramatic site on a rocky coastline is  integral to Siza&#8217;s spectacular design. The completed work, which was restored in  1992, inspired the poem &#8220;Alvaro Siza&#8217;s Restaurant in Boa Nova&#8221; by Eugenio de  Andrade: &#8220;The musical order of the space, / the manifest truth of stone, / the  concrete beauty/of the ground ascends the last few steps, / the contained/and  continuous and serene line/embracing the rhythm of the air, / the white  architecture/stripped/bare to its bones/where the sea came in.&#8221;</p>
<p>In 1966,  Siza joined the faculty at the School of Architecture in Oporto (ESBAP), and in  1976 he was appointed Assistant Professor of Construction. Through the 1960s and  early 1970s, he continued to design private houses as well as commercial  buildings near Oporto. His second swimming pool for Leca da Palmeira displays  his brilliant use of space. The design uses a natural rock formation to  complement the man-made sides of a large pool placed as if carved out of the  sand and rock of the coastline. A smaller children&#8217;s pool, changing building,  and cafe are also included, and the building is set below the level of the  access road to provide an uninterrupted view of the ocean. José Paulo dos Santos  has noted in his Alvaro Siza: Works &amp; Projects 1954-1992 that the design  contains formal references to Finnish architect Alvar Aalto and to neoplasticist  architecture.</p>
<p><strong>Public Housing and Urban Design</strong></p>
<p>Since the mid-1970s,  Siza has been involved in numerous designs for public housing. At that time,  overcrowding and lack of sanitary facilities plagued many old sections of  Oporto, and after Portugal&#8217;s revolution against dictator Salazar in 1974, the  political group SAAL (servicio de apoio ambulatorio local) responded to urban  problems by planning designs to remedy slum conditions. In 1974, Siza worked on  renovations for the Bouca quarter that would both resolve the problems that had  been characteristic of the antiquated buildings and also fit within the  historical context of the site. He used a vertebral wall to screen the project  from adjacent railroad tracks. Perpendicular to this wall were four linear  terraces of double maisonettes, forming long courtyards reminiscent of the type  of neighborhood the new project replaced.</p>
<p>Siza worked with SAAL again in  a design for the rehabilitation of the Sao Victor district of Oporto, then  embarked on the enormous subsidized housing project in Quinta de Malagueira,  Evora, in 1977. This design included 1, 200 housing units as well as  institutional and commercial facilities, with a raised service duct, similar to  the Renaissance aqueduct that had fed the old city, supplying utilities.  &#8220;Without grand polemic, &#8221; wrote dos Santos, &#8220;the scheme touches on the attitudes  and formal achievements of European Modernist settlements but rejects their  isolation from their contexts. The absorption of the cultural aspirations of  different social classes, the pressures placed on the public space by the car,  and the ambivalent requirements for communal identity are convincingly resolved  in this scheme.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Forming a Whole with Ruins</strong></p>
<p>Siza&#8217;s interest in  urban design soon brought him to projects outside of Portugal. In the late 1970s  he worked on an urban renewal design in the Kreuzberg district of Berlin, and in  1984 he won first prize in the International Building Exhibition (IBA) for the  rehabilitation of an entire block in the same district. The project  (Schlesisches Tor) was to have maintained the block&#8217;s mix of residential and  commercial space, but, because of financial considerations, the developer made  several changes in the design. The finished project, though, does retain the  curved, wave-like facade of the corner building. Doug Clelland commented in  Architectural Review that the scheme knits together the existing fabric of the  site well, but &#8220;lacks the presence and assurance of the decayed nineteenth  century block across the street.&#8221; Indeed, Siza himself has remarked that &#8220;The  problem is to form a whole with ruins.&#8221; This attention to the past, according to  Kenneth Frampton in Design Quarterly, is a quality that distinguishes Siza&#8217;s  approach from that of many contemporaries. He emphasized that in all of Siza&#8217;s  collective housing projects there is the &#8220;potential for establishing a critical  interaction between the new and the ruined.&#8221;</p>
<p>Among several other public  housing projects are Siza&#8217;s design for the Guidecca district of Venice, which  was first in the 1985 international competition for controlled-cost subsidized  housing in the Campo di Marte, and his design for 106 low-cost units in The  Hague. The Netherlands project, noted dos Santos, refers to the brick tradition  of such architects as Michel de Klerk and J. J. P. Oud, but also shows the  influence of Mendelsohn.</p>
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</script></div><p>During the 1980s, Siza expanded his  international repertoire when he was invited to enter several international  competitions, including the Expo 92 in Seville in 1986; Un Progretto per Siena,  Italy, in 1988; Bibliotheque de France, Paris, 1989-90; and the Helsinki Museum,  1993. He obtained first place in the Schlesisches Tor, Kreuzberg, Berlin in  1980; restoration of Campo di Marte, Venice, in 1985; redevelopment of the  Casino and Cafe Winkler, Salzburg, 1986, and La Defensa Cultural Centre, Madrid,  1988-89. During this period, he also worked on several institutional and  commercial projects. His Banco Borges &amp; Irmao in Vila do Conde, Portugal, is  notable for its vertical identity and its dramatic rotational character, with  all the interior floors visually related as in Le Corbusier&#8217;s Carthage villa.  &#8220;JoaÅo de Deus&#8221; kindergarten in Penafiel, Portugal, is built on a plinth to  respond to challenges of site and to integrate the structure&#8217;s various  uses.</p>
<p><strong>Wide Range of Concerns</strong></p>
<p>Siza&#8217;s range of architectural  interests remains especially broad, from residences to churches, schools,  shopping centers, libraries, museums, and even, most recently, furniture. His  design for the Oporto Faculty of Architecture, a monumental project, is nearing  completion. This comprises several buildings placed along the banks of the River  Douro in an arrangement that, according to one critic, suggests an allusion to  the Acropolis. Another has noted the influence of Austrian and German  architecture in this design, pointing out that Siza&#8217;s precision of scale is  complemented by the architect&#8217;s &#8220;subtle understanding of the surroundings.&#8221; In  fact, Siza vigorously opposed a plan to construct a major automobile throughway  along the riverbank, arguing that unobstructed river frontage is integral to the  Faculty of Architecture&#8217;s overall design.</p>
<p>Among Siza&#8217;s other unusual  projects are a water tower for the University of Aveiro (1988-89), designed as a  reinforced concrete slab and parallel cylinder which rise out of a reflecting  sheet of water, and the cylindrical meteorological center for the Barcelona  Olympic Village (1989-92), built on the beach of the city&#8217;s Olympic Port.  Critics admired the way in which the design for the meteorological center &#8220;has  both presence and autonomy with respect to the grand dimensions of the  neighbouring volumes and the scale of the Port&#8217;s quays and harbor  wall.&#8221;</p>
<p>Other projects of the late 1980s and early 1990s include La  Defensa Cultural Centre, Madrid (1988); the Museum of Contemporary Art, Santiago  de Compostela, Spain (1988-93); the Rector&#8217;s Office and Law Library for the  University of Valencia (1990); the Vitra office furniture factory,  Weil-am-Rhein, Germany (1991); and the Contemporary Art Museum, Casa de  Serralves, Oporto (1991).</p>
<p>One of Siza&#8217;s most important ongoing projects  is the reconstruction of Lisbon&#8217;s historic Chiado district. This area, the  principal civic and commercial space for the neighborhood, was heavily damaged  by fire in 1988. Seventeen buildings had to be redesigned based on historic  plans. The project was complicated by damage from tunnel excavation under the  site, which badly weakened the foundations of several buildings, especially the  ancient ruins of the Carmo Convent. Siza has been active in seeking solutions  for this damage.</p>
<p><strong>International Renown</strong></p>
<p>In addition to his major  design projects, Siza remains deeply committed to teaching. He has participated  in numerous conferences and seminars throughout Europe, North and South America,  and Japan. He has been a visiting professor at the Ecole Polytechnique of  Lausanne, the University of Pennsylvania, the Los Andes School, the University  of Bogota, and Harvard University&#8217;s Graduate School of Design as Kenzo Tange  Visiting Professor. He continues to teach at the Oporto School of  Architecture.</p>
<p>Siza&#8217;s distinguished work has been widely recognized. In  1982, he was awarded the Prize of Architecture from the Portuguese Department of  the International Association of Art Critics, and in 1987 he received an award  from the Portuguese Architects Association. In 1988, Siza received the Gold  Medal for Architecture from the Colegio de Architectos, Madrid, the Gold Medal  from the Alvar Aalto Foundation, the Prince of Wales Prize in Urban Design from  Harvard University, and the European Architectural Award from the EEC/Mies van  der Rohe Foundation, Barcelona. In 1992, he was awarded the prestigious Pritzker  Prize from the Hyatt Foundation of Chicago, for lifetime achievement. That same  year, Siza was also named Doctor Honoris Causa at the University of Valencia. In  1993, he won the National Prize of Architecture from the Portuguese Architects  Association and was named Doctor Honoris Causa at the Ecole Polytechnique  Federal de Lausanne. In 1996, he received the honorary title of Fellow, American  Institute of Architects.</p>
<p>In May 1996, a major retrospective of Siza&#8217;s  work opened in his home town of Matosinhos. &#8220;Alvara Siza-Buildings and Projects&#8221;  included models of many of the architect&#8217;s projects since 1980, as well as  pieces of his furniture, drawings, sketches, and photographs. Portuguese  President Jorge Sampaio attended the exhibit&#8217;s opening ceremonies. The show,  which was scheduled to travel to Tenerife, Sardinia, Brussels, Brazil, and the  United States, was expected to draw more than 150, 000 people.</p>
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