10 arquitectos verdes influyentes

May 08 2012
Muchos dicen que el pionero del diseño verde fue el irascible Frank Lloyd Wright, pero otros señalan que la arquitectura sostenible existe desde siempre. Independientemente, ¿quiénes son algunas de las figuras líderes en el campo hoy?
Muchos llaman a Wright, quien diseñó la ahora famosa Fallingwater, el pionero del diseño ecológico. Ver más fotos de diseño de casas.

Muchos dicen que el pionero del diseño verde fue el irascible Frank Lloyd Wright , cuya innovadora filosofía de arquitectura orgánica se centró en crear estructuras que parecieran ser parte de su entorno. Pero otros refutan esto, señalando que la arquitectura sostenible ha existido desde siempre. O, por lo menos, sus principios son antiguos. Solo piense en los famosos acueductos romanos, muchos de los cuales todavía se usan en la actualidad. Las estructuras impulsadas por la gravedad no solo distribuyeron agua y eliminaron los desechos, sino que proporcionaron energía hidráulica renovable para minas, forjas y molinos. Y cuando los antiguos griegos comenzaron a quedarse sin fuentes de combustible, comenzaron a colocar edificios e incluso ciudades enteras para captar los rayos del sol [fuente: WebEcoist ].

No importa cuándo comenzó la arquitectura sostenible, la mayoría estará de acuerdo en que hoy está en la vanguardia de nuestras mentes colectivas, tanto para nuestros hogares como para los lugares de trabajo. El gobierno también se está involucrando, con códigos de construcción con respecto a la eficiencia energética y la huella de carbono cada vez más estrictos. Esto significa que todos los involucrados en la construcción deben ser un poco más creativos, un poco más reflexivos, un poco más ágiles. Especialmente los arquitectos y diseñadores, quienes ponen en marcha el proceso.

Entonces, ¿qué arquitectos, pasados ​​y presentes, se consideran los mejores en el juego verde? Eso está en constante evolución, ya que más y más diseñadores se sienten atraídos por el campo. Pero aquí hay 10 cuyas contribuciones no se pueden negar.

Contenido
  1. Pedro Busby
  2. normando adoptivo
  3. Eric Corey liberado
  4. R. Buckminster Fuller
  5. thom mayne
  6. Guillermo McDonough
  7. glenn murcutt
  8. Renzo Piano
  9. Frank Lloyd Wright
  10. ken yang
  11. 10 arquitectos verdes influyentes

10: Peter Busby

Considerado el principal arquitecto ecológico de Canadá, Peter Busby fue nombrado director gerente de la oficina de San Francisco de Perkins + Will, una gran firma de arquitectura internacional conocida por sus proyectos sostenibles , en abril de 2012. Mucho antes de que Busby uniera fuerzas con Perkins + Will en 2004, sin embargo, estaba viendo verde; El mentor de Busby fue el gurú de la sustentabilidad Ray Cole, y Busby predica que el diseño ecológico siempre es parte del buen diseño. Busby también cofundó el Canada Green Building Council e intenta dedicar el 20 por ciento de su tiempo a la defensa del medio ambiente [fuente: Keegan , Weeks ].

Busby ha trabajado en una amplia variedad de proyectos durante su carrera, incluidos notables como Dockside Green, una comunidad de uso mixto en Victoria, BC, el Centro de Visitantes del Jardín Botánico VanDusen 2012 y el Centro de Investigación Interactiva sobre Sostenibilidad de la Universidad de British Columbia. Columbia, que abrió en 2011 [fuente: PR Newswire ]. En la última década, recibió dos premios Top 10 del Comité de Medio Ambiente de la AIA (uno de los cuales fue para Dockside Green), un AIA "¿Qué lo hace verde?" Premio (nuevamente, para Dockside Green). En 2009 y 2010, fue reconocido como uno de los 50 principales empleadores ecológicos de Canadá [fuente: Weeks ].

9: Norman Foster

Norman Foster en la sede de Foster + Partners en 2005.

El protagonismo del arquitecto británico Norman Foster es indiscutible. El estudio de arquitectura que fundó en 1967, Foster + Partners, ha recibido cientos de premios y menciones a la excelencia a lo largo de los años. Ahora que tiene presencia mundial, la firma también ha ganado más de 100 concursos internacionales y nacionales [fuente: The Telegraph ].

Un fanático de la sostenibilidad, el sitio web de Foster señala que los edificios consumen la mitad de toda la energía que generamos, además de causar la mitad de las emisiones de carbono del mundo, por lo que los arquitectos tienen la responsabilidad de ayudar a cambiar estos números [fuente: Foster + Partners ]. ¿Cómo? Si bien se pueden realizar numerosos cambios pequeños, no está de más pensar en grande. Foster y sus asociados están diseñando actualmente Masdar en Abu Dhabi, una ciudad sin emisiones de carbono ni residuos . Foster dice que Masdar, la primera entidad de este tipo en el mundo, establecerá nuevos puntos de referencia para futuras ciudades sostenibles [fuente: Lee ].

8: Eric Corey liberado

A la tierna edad de 8 años, Eric Corey Freed ya sabía que quería ser arquitecto. Y en algún momento del camino, se enamoró de la arquitectura orgánica. Desarrollada por Frank Lloyd Wright , la premisa básica de la arquitectura orgánica es crear estructuras que se mezclen a la perfección con sus respectivos entornos, reflejando el clima y los materiales de los sitios de construcción individuales [fuente: Organic Architect ]. Freed trabajó en Nuevo México con un antiguo aprendiz de Wright durante un tiempo antes de mudarse a San Francisco, donde ayudó a desarrollar los programas de Diseño Sostenible tanto en la Universidad de California Berkeley Extension como en la Academia de la Universidad de Arte, además de crear su estudio de arquitectura, ARQUITECTO organico.

Freed's firm quickly became prominent in the Bay Area, as did Freed himself, named "Best Green Architect" (2005) and "Best Visionary" (2007) by San Francisco Magazine. While Freed still works on projects through his firm, he's also written several books on green architecture and frequently speaks on the topic [source: Eric Corey Freed].

7: R. Buckminster Fuller

R. Buckminster Fuller, striking a pose in front of a geodesic dome.

Ever seen a geodesic dome home ? You know, those sphere-like homes made from a rather complex network of triangles? You've got R. Buckminster Fuller, or "Bucky," to thank for that. Fuller was an early green architect whose primary passion was humanitarianism. He felt the main two problems in the world were homelessness and hunger, and worked his entire life to find simple, economical solutions to them. One example of this is his Dymaxion House, a pre-fab, round structure supported by poles. The home was heated and cooled by natural means, and its shape minimized heat loss and required fewer materials to construct than a typical home, making it environmentally friendly and affordable [source: Buckminster Fuller Institute]. Fuller worked on this project after World War II, when there was a housing shortage in the U.S. Unfortunately, although thousands of American eagerly placed orders, funding problems caused him to cancel the project [source: PBS].

It was after the Dymaxion House fiasco that he developed the geodesic dome, which quickly caught the attention of the American government because it was lightweight yet strong, and could be quickly assembled -- perfect housing for soldiers stationed overseas. He made thousands for the U.S. Army , and many others became homes -- very energy-efficient homes, thanks to the design; a dome's spherical structure allows air and energy to freely circulate, which means heating and cooling occurs naturally [source: Buckminster Fuller Institute]. Fuller lived in one himself in Carbondale, Ill., where he taught in the Design Department at Southern Illinois University. Restoration of his home is scheduled to be completed in 2012, and will eventually include a living museum and learning center [source: The Fuller Dome Home].

6: Thom Mayne

Many people recognize the term LEED, or Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design , as a positive, green designation. And it is -- it's an internationally recognized mark of excellence that's given to structures that meet certain sustainable qualifications [source: U.S. Green Building Council]. But architect Thom Mayne, the 2005 Pritzker Architecture Prize winner (aka the architect's Nobel), hopes people don't consider LEED standards the final word for sustainable architecture. More specifically, he doesn't believe buildings must sport a certain look, or meet very specific standards, to be considered green. Instead, he'd prefer to look more at a building's long-term environmental performance when deciding if it's sustainable or not [source: Bowen].

Mayne founded California-based architectural firm Morphosis in 1972, and focuses on creating innovatively designed structures offering long-range, eco-friendly benefits. Recent projects, such as the San Francisco Federal Building and the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) satellite operations center in Maryland, sport features such as green roofs , solar power and thermally efficient outer-wall designs. After Hurricane Katrina hit the Big Easy in 2005, Mayne -- in conjunction with actor Brad Pitt's Make It Right Foundation -- created the FLOAT house specifically for the families of New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward. These pre-fab, green homes sit above the ground on a chassis or sorts, which can rise up to 12 feet (3.7 meters) along guideposts in the event of flooding [source: Make It Right].

5: William McDonough

William McDonough (on right) posed for this shot after being honored at the Children's Health Environmental Coalition's (CHEC) annual benefit in 2006.

There's no denying William McDonough is an influential green architect. He received the Presidential Award for Sustainable Development -- America's highest environmental honor -- in 1996, the first U.S. EPA Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award in 2003, and, in 2004, the National Design Award for exemplary achievement in environmental design. He also designed such green flagship structures as Michigan's Ford Rouge truck plant, which includes an innovative air-delivery system that reduces the need for duct work, and the Adam Joseph Lewis Center for Environmental Studies at Oberlin College, which produces 30 percent more energy than it needs, then shares with the community [source: William McDonough]. And for those who are a bit star-struck, McDonough and actor Brad Pitt were founding partners of the Make It Right Foundation, which is creating affordable, green, storm-resistant homes -- different from the FLOAT homes mentioned on the previous page -- in New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward.

4: Glenn Murcutt

Glenn Murcutt's story is a bit unexpected. The Australian architect began his career about 50 years ago designing simple, Modernist buildings. Then, in the mid-'70s, he started gleaning inspiration from his country's traditional buildings, such as the wool sheds common in New South Wales. These long, narrow buildings were sensibly and sustainably built: set on stilts and positioned to take advantage of the sun and winds for heating and cooling , and with open floor plans to ensure good air circulation. Murcutt went to work creating homes based on these principles [source: Lewis].

For many years, Murcutt, who works alone out of his home and only builds in Australia, wasn't widely known throughout the world. But in 2002 -- by which time he was considered Australia's most famous architect -- Murcutt won the prestigious Pritzker Prize. In the award citation, Thomas Pritzker noted how all of Murcutt's designs are "tempered by the land and climate of his native Australia," and that while he normally builds homes, critics consider the Arthur and Yvonne Boyd Education Centre that Murcutt designed a masterwork [source: Ozetecture].

3: Renzo Piano

The Piano-designed California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park has a "living" roof.

Italian architect Renzo Piano is widely considered one of the most influential green architects today. Yet he doesn't let environmental considerations limit his ideas by forcing him to consider only stereotypical green building shapes or materials or components. Instead, he lets his imagination fly, then incorporates eco-friendly elements into the resulting structures [source: Green Architects].

One of Piano's more acclaimed buildings is the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. The museum houses an aquarium, planetarium and natural history museum, and appears as though it's tucked into two hills, which, in reality, are the building's 2.5-acre green, "living" roof that absorbs up to 2 million gallons (7.6 million liters) of rainwater annually. The building also has no air conditioning, relying on weather sensors that communicate with motorized windows to open and close at select times so the museum can be entirely cooled with outside air [source: Alter].

As of this writing, Piano was working on the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center in Athens, Greece, which -- by the time it's completed in 2015 -- will sport a green roof and, hopefully, will attain a platinum LEED certification , the highest-level sustainable building award currently achievable [source: Meinhold].

2: Frank Lloyd Wright

Wright pioneered organic architecture, which still has adherents today.

Frank Lloyd Wright is the architect most think of as the father of green, sustainable architecture . Working mainly in the first half of the 20th century, Wright pioneered the philosophy of organic architecture, beloved by Eric Corey Freed, which takes into account the nature of a site, needs of the client and nature of the materials before designing a building, rather than creating a design plan and then trying to make those three elements conform to the plan.

Because organic architecture is a philosophy and not a style, its principles allowed Wright to create diverse structures, such as the concrete Unity Temple in Illinois, his stucco-and-stone home and studio in Wisconsin, and Fallingwater, the famous house he built in Pennsylvania that was constructed from concrete, stone and glass and set over a waterfall [source: Taliesin Preservation]. While these buildings may not be considered green according to today's standards, whenever you build something in harmony with its surroundings -- that avoids bulldozing trees, for example, or filling in marshland -- that's a plus for the environment.

And Wright was definitely on to something; today more than one-third of his buildings are on the National Register of Historic Places or part of National Register Historic Districts ; 24 are National Historic Landmarks; and, in 2008, Taliesin, his Wisconsin home, was one of 10 Wright-designed buildings submitted by the U.S. National Park Service for World Heritage Status [source: Taliesin Preservation]. In addition, many of today's prominent green architects, including Freed and Glenn Murcutt, were influenced by Wright's philosophy and designs.

1: Ken Yeang

Architect Ken Yeang may hail from tiny Malaysia, but his achievements in green architecture loom large. Yeang first went green in the 1970s, penning a doctoral dissertation on ecological design and planning. From there, he went on to his much-lauded career, which includes creating the "bioclimatic skyscraper," a type of high-rise now used in various cities that performs as a passive low-energy building by being designed according to its particular location and the local climate. In other words, everything from the skyscraper's shape to its orientation to how vegetation is used will all affect how sustainable it is, by working with the surrounding environment, rather than competing with it. Yeang also coined the phrase "eco-mimicry" to describe the process of designing buildings to imitate the properties of nature. If you don't imitate nature, Yeang says, you're going against it [source: Koh].

Yeang also believes sustainable buildings should be pleasing to look at, because if they're ugly, they'll be rejected by the public. He has written several books on ecological design and planning. One of Yeang's more prominent projects is the 2005 Singapore National Library, which was awarded the highest rating (Platinum) under Singapore's Green Mark system, equivalent to the U.S.'s LEED [source: Hart].

Author's Note: 10 Influential Green Architects

I only live an hour from Taliesin, Frank Lloyd Wright's Wisconsin home, and also the site of his studio and school, where many a masterpiece was created. I admit, I'm not a huge fan of much of Wright's work -- the flat roofs, the furniture lined along the walls. But I certainly appreciate what he was trying to do by fitting structures to their surroundings and materials, and also what the 10 individuals I profiled strive toward. Green, sustainable architecture is important, and will only continue to be more so as time goes on.

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