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In an archive deep inside what was once East Germany, | 0:00:24 | 0:00:29 | |
safely under lock and key, | 0:00:29 | 0:00:31 | |
are documents which tell a remarkable story. | 0:00:31 | 0:00:34 | |
11 years of work is represented by nearly 3,000 files, | 0:00:34 | 0:00:39 | |
stacked into 352 metres of shelving. | 0:00:39 | 0:00:43 | |
These are from a pre-digital world. | 0:00:45 | 0:00:47 | |
Every plan, purchase order, design decision placed on paper, | 0:00:47 | 0:00:52 | |
over a million pages, of which nearly 400,000 are letters and faxes. | 0:00:52 | 0:00:58 | |
It is a paper trail from an epic process - | 0:01:00 | 0:01:04 | |
a single architectural project. | 0:01:04 | 0:01:06 | |
There is human drama here, conflict and collaboration. | 0:01:09 | 0:01:13 | |
A discussion about a staircase that went on for over a year. | 0:01:15 | 0:01:19 | |
The name on the files is David Chipperfield. | 0:01:22 | 0:01:26 | |
The project is the Neues Museum in Berlin. | 0:01:26 | 0:01:30 | |
Few buildings are more symbolic of the history of Germany | 0:01:31 | 0:01:35 | |
in the last century, but its restoration has transformed | 0:01:35 | 0:01:39 | |
it into something more powerful, more affecting | 0:01:39 | 0:01:43 | |
than anyone could have imagined. | 0:01:43 | 0:01:46 | |
A new building created from the remains of the old. | 0:01:46 | 0:01:49 | |
A fusion of past and present and a moment in architecture | 0:01:50 | 0:01:53 | |
that will be remembered long into the future. | 0:01:53 | 0:01:57 | |
I don't know any architect who hasn't been to the Neues Museum | 0:02:00 | 0:02:04 | |
and felt it was a masterpiece. | 0:02:04 | 0:02:06 | |
To spend 11 years on a museum in Berlin, | 0:02:06 | 0:02:10 | |
to go through the drudgery, the bureaucracy, | 0:02:10 | 0:02:13 | |
the sense that everyone is trying to stop what you are doing, | 0:02:13 | 0:02:16 | |
and to go through all of that | 0:02:16 | 0:02:17 | |
and still keep an idea alive - that is a remarkable achievement. | 0:02:17 | 0:02:21 | |
You walk around it and you think this is the work of madmen. | 0:02:21 | 0:02:26 | |
For a whole century, you know, including the architect. | 0:02:26 | 0:02:30 | |
I think that's so powerful. It changes you, going to that building. | 0:02:30 | 0:02:33 | |
Chipperfield is one of the few architects in the world who | 0:02:33 | 0:02:38 | |
can create a cocktail of conservative, almost a classicism, | 0:02:38 | 0:02:44 | |
and a very crisp modernism. | 0:02:44 | 0:02:46 | |
I think he's trying to cultivate a conversation, | 0:02:46 | 0:02:49 | |
not just within the office but within a wider society. | 0:02:49 | 0:02:52 | |
He's a very articulate architect. | 0:02:52 | 0:02:54 | |
The work begins with words, in a way. | 0:02:54 | 0:02:57 | |
But he lets beautiful materials, great spaces | 0:02:57 | 0:03:01 | |
and light do the talking for him. | 0:03:01 | 0:03:03 | |
I don't think he's trying to change the world other than to make it | 0:03:06 | 0:03:11 | |
a more civilised place. | 0:03:11 | 0:03:12 | |
APPLAUSE | 0:03:25 | 0:03:27 | |
Sir David Chipperfield, CBE, | 0:03:29 | 0:03:32 | |
Royal Gold Medallist, Stirling Prize winner, | 0:03:32 | 0:03:35 | |
is among the most admired and sought after architects in the world. | 0:03:35 | 0:03:39 | |
Earlier this year he was chosen to design a new contemporary wing | 0:03:41 | 0:03:45 | |
for that temple of culture, | 0:03:45 | 0:03:48 | |
New York's Metropolitan Museum Of Art. | 0:03:48 | 0:03:51 | |
Commissions don't come more prestigious than this. | 0:03:51 | 0:03:55 | |
What's more, the new building will replace the current galleries | 0:03:55 | 0:03:59 | |
which face onto the hallowed ground of Central Park. | 0:03:59 | 0:04:02 | |
He's come a long way from the frock shop in Sloane Street which | 0:04:04 | 0:04:07 | |
began his career. | 0:04:07 | 0:04:08 | |
To visit David Chipperfield in his office, you ascend a slightly tatty | 0:04:13 | 0:04:17 | |
'60s office block from a windswept corner next to Waterloo Station. | 0:04:17 | 0:04:22 | |
This is how you might imagine an architect's office should be - | 0:04:23 | 0:04:27 | |
space and light, tables for meeting and eating, | 0:04:27 | 0:04:31 | |
where even the tableware is designed by Chipperfield | 0:04:31 | 0:04:34 | |
for the Italian design house Alessi. | 0:04:34 | 0:04:36 | |
And have you noticed? | 0:04:40 | 0:04:41 | |
No computers, only models, and they are everywhere. | 0:04:41 | 0:04:46 | |
The physical model in our office remains the tool of exploration | 0:04:47 | 0:04:52 | |
and communication. I will only look at projects through physical | 0:04:52 | 0:04:55 | |
models because I think it gives us something to talk about | 0:04:55 | 0:04:59 | |
as a third person. | 0:04:59 | 0:05:01 | |
This is the Met. | 0:05:01 | 0:05:02 | |
The project is that we take this away, | 0:05:02 | 0:05:05 | |
even though it was built in the '80s, and build a new building. | 0:05:05 | 0:05:10 | |
So, you can see all of these different iterations which | 0:05:10 | 0:05:13 | |
have been going on through the competition stage of nearly | 0:05:13 | 0:05:17 | |
a year, and now were in a concept stage again | 0:05:17 | 0:05:21 | |
of developing the project. | 0:05:21 | 0:05:23 | |
So, even though they commissioned you, | 0:05:23 | 0:05:25 | |
that dialogue continues. | 0:05:25 | 0:05:28 | |
Yes, it starts again. | 0:05:28 | 0:05:29 | |
Since we have become much more digital in every aspect of life, | 0:05:33 | 0:05:38 | |
I think this physical presence of buildings has a lot more power. | 0:05:38 | 0:05:43 | |
In David's buildings, there's rarely a single image. | 0:05:48 | 0:05:51 | |
It's more complex. | 0:05:51 | 0:05:53 | |
It's not a one-liner. | 0:05:53 | 0:05:54 | |
I think David Chipperfield buildings don't come and grab you. | 0:05:54 | 0:05:59 | |
You have to sort of enter into his world to get it. | 0:05:59 | 0:06:02 | |
I've seen it happen before. | 0:06:02 | 0:06:03 | |
A month down you say, "Why was that stair there?" | 0:06:03 | 0:06:06 | |
"Well, it's... I thought it had to be there." | 0:06:06 | 0:06:08 | |
Just gotta be careful that it | 0:06:10 | 0:06:11 | |
doesn't become a wrong piece of information. | 0:06:11 | 0:06:14 | |
So, this is your eagle's nest here. | 0:06:18 | 0:06:20 | |
You're surrounded by the London that you, | 0:06:21 | 0:06:25 | |
well, I won't say - the London that you what? | 0:06:25 | 0:06:28 | |
Well, there is something sobering when you sit here | 0:06:29 | 0:06:36 | |
and you discuss architecture | 0:06:36 | 0:06:41 | |
and you stress about a staircase | 0:06:41 | 0:06:45 | |
or a plan or something small, | 0:06:45 | 0:06:50 | |
and then you lift your head up, and you look at that and you think, | 0:06:50 | 0:06:53 | |
"What's the important thing? | 0:06:53 | 0:06:56 | |
"Does designing a staircase have any relevance | 0:06:56 | 0:07:00 | |
"compared to designing a city?" | 0:07:00 | 0:07:03 | |
I mean, what's architecture for? | 0:07:03 | 0:07:05 | |
That's my worry. What are we doing as architects? | 0:07:05 | 0:07:08 | |
We're leveraging value on projects where value can be leveraged. | 0:07:08 | 0:07:13 | |
Architecture has always depended on investment, | 0:07:13 | 0:07:16 | |
but at the moment investment is a sort of wild beast. | 0:07:16 | 0:07:19 | |
The money that's coming here isn't just from someone | 0:07:19 | 0:07:22 | |
walking down the street and saying, "Oh, that's a nice site, | 0:07:22 | 0:07:24 | |
"maybe I could go to the bank and raise some money and develop it." | 0:07:24 | 0:07:28 | |
It's global money hovering around, trying to find a place to land. | 0:07:28 | 0:07:33 | |
London has changed dramatically | 0:07:34 | 0:07:37 | |
since Chipperfield started out as a young architect, | 0:07:37 | 0:07:39 | |
working in the offices of both Norman Foster and Richard Rogers. | 0:07:39 | 0:07:44 | |
There was still a heroic social aspect to the modern | 0:07:44 | 0:07:47 | |
architecture of the hi-tech era. | 0:07:47 | 0:07:49 | |
-Richard and Norman both had strong... -Social. | 0:07:49 | 0:07:53 | |
-..utopian background. -Yes. | 0:07:53 | 0:07:55 | |
I think the Pompidou Centre is the last great utopian building. | 0:07:55 | 0:08:00 | |
Willis Faber, | 0:08:01 | 0:08:03 | |
which I used to take people around as a member of the office, | 0:08:03 | 0:08:08 | |
is one of the great office environments, | 0:08:08 | 0:08:13 | |
very socially inventive. | 0:08:13 | 0:08:16 | |
We came out of school...with a completely different expectation. | 0:08:16 | 0:08:21 | |
Sitting in Richard Roger's office with about 12 people | 0:08:21 | 0:08:24 | |
after he'd built Pompidou, | 0:08:24 | 0:08:26 | |
you think, "Well, if he can't...." | 0:08:26 | 0:08:28 | |
-He built Pompidou and that's all... -That's all... What chance for the rest of us? | 0:08:28 | 0:08:32 | |
Salvation came in the shape of a shop. | 0:08:35 | 0:08:40 | |
I remember talking to one of my professors, | 0:08:40 | 0:08:42 | |
who was a university builder, | 0:08:42 | 0:08:44 | |
just couldn't believe that I was going to design a shop. | 0:08:44 | 0:08:47 | |
Why would I humiliate myself? | 0:08:47 | 0:08:49 | |
And I just thought, well, this is the best chance I'd ever seen. | 0:08:49 | 0:08:53 | |
The Miyake job was a quiet building, it was beautifully done, | 0:08:53 | 0:08:57 | |
very polished, very elegant, very minimal. | 0:08:57 | 0:09:00 | |
You could call what David was doing | 0:09:01 | 0:09:03 | |
sensual born-again modernism. It was a different take. | 0:09:03 | 0:09:07 | |
His shops were incredibly simple and he was trying to focus | 0:09:07 | 0:09:12 | |
people's perception of the store on the little shifts you can do at | 0:09:12 | 0:09:16 | |
that scale, whether it was change of materials or change of levels etc. | 0:09:16 | 0:09:21 | |
Rather than selling the shop as a kind of a market. | 0:09:21 | 0:09:25 | |
The success of the Issey Miyake store led to more stores | 0:09:25 | 0:09:29 | |
and to more work in Japan. | 0:09:29 | 0:09:32 | |
Japan became a huge patron for a whole emerging generation | 0:09:32 | 0:09:37 | |
of radical young architects. | 0:09:37 | 0:09:39 | |
A country which had | 0:09:39 | 0:09:41 | |
its own indigenous avant-garde architectural culture. | 0:09:41 | 0:09:44 | |
And David benefitted from that. | 0:09:44 | 0:09:47 | |
His first two or three stand-alone buildings were all built in Japan. | 0:09:47 | 0:09:52 | |
And those buildings were often built in urban contexts | 0:09:52 | 0:09:56 | |
which were very poorly defined or sometimes even rather hostile | 0:09:56 | 0:10:00 | |
and they have the character of castles, when I look at them. | 0:10:00 | 0:10:03 | |
They seem fortified, as if turning in on themselves. | 0:10:03 | 0:10:08 | |
Very preoccupied with an interior space, | 0:10:08 | 0:10:11 | |
and an interior passage of movement. | 0:10:11 | 0:10:13 | |
So they become these sort of worlds unto themselves. | 0:10:13 | 0:10:16 | |
Japanese culture seemed to value an appreciation of simple things, | 0:10:17 | 0:10:21 | |
clean lines, | 0:10:21 | 0:10:23 | |
the everyday made special. | 0:10:23 | 0:10:25 | |
It allowed Chipperfield space to be modern. | 0:10:25 | 0:10:29 | |
I was hired for three weeks to help on a Japanese competition | 0:10:29 | 0:10:32 | |
and I stayed for eight-and-a-half years. | 0:10:32 | 0:10:35 | |
And those first five years David struggled, it was very hard. | 0:10:35 | 0:10:40 | |
Very few people in Britain were interested in contemporary things. | 0:10:42 | 0:10:46 | |
Chipperfield's breakthrough in England occurred when he won | 0:10:50 | 0:10:54 | |
the competition for | 0:10:54 | 0:10:56 | |
the Museum Of River And Rowing in Henley Upon Thames. | 0:10:56 | 0:10:59 | |
A town where modern architecture was regarded with suspicion. | 0:10:59 | 0:11:03 | |
And at some point one of the planners said, | 0:11:03 | 0:11:06 | |
"You just have to think - would Prince Charles approve?" | 0:11:06 | 0:11:08 | |
I thought, hang on, this is not the criteria on which planning | 0:11:08 | 0:11:11 | |
applications should be considered. But, in a way, it was then. | 0:11:11 | 0:11:14 | |
And I think architects had underestimated | 0:11:14 | 0:11:17 | |
the need for the familiar as well as the strange. | 0:11:17 | 0:11:21 | |
In this case, the touch of the familiar was | 0:11:22 | 0:11:25 | |
the inclusion of a pitched roof in the design. | 0:11:25 | 0:11:28 | |
I realised if I didn't do a pitched roof I'd have no chance. | 0:11:28 | 0:11:32 | |
And actually it was shortlisted for the Mies van de Rohe prize, | 0:11:32 | 0:11:36 | |
and gossip had it that Prince Charles, | 0:11:36 | 0:11:39 | |
it was one of his favourite modern buildings at that time. | 0:11:39 | 0:11:42 | |
-Which I probably shouldn't boast about too much. -No, don't. | 0:11:42 | 0:11:46 | |
But in a way why not? One liked the building. | 0:11:46 | 0:11:49 | |
He did have a very hard time from, among others, | 0:11:49 | 0:11:52 | |
the Evening Standard, which launched a crusade | 0:11:52 | 0:11:55 | |
to stamp out Chipperfield in London. | 0:11:55 | 0:11:57 | |
Partly it was to do with this house for Nick Knight, | 0:11:57 | 0:12:00 | |
the photographer. | 0:12:00 | 0:12:01 | |
To me, it's a modestly scaled, | 0:12:01 | 0:12:03 | |
quiet, sensible addition to the street. | 0:12:03 | 0:12:06 | |
A street that I have been to, | 0:12:06 | 0:12:08 | |
characterised by militant pebbledash and half-timbering. | 0:12:08 | 0:12:12 | |
I think it actually contributed to | 0:12:12 | 0:12:14 | |
David's slight paranoia about the British press | 0:12:14 | 0:12:16 | |
and the sense that people were out to persecute him. | 0:12:16 | 0:12:19 | |
The lack of reception for his work did form him | 0:12:19 | 0:12:22 | |
to some extent. | 0:12:22 | 0:12:24 | |
I think there was an ever so slight bitterness, | 0:12:24 | 0:12:27 | |
if I can say that, and that fostered a kind of determination that | 0:12:27 | 0:12:30 | |
you see later, a kind of steeliness that you see in his work. | 0:12:30 | 0:12:33 | |
He is absolutely determined | 0:12:33 | 0:12:35 | |
to do things the way he wants to do things. | 0:12:35 | 0:12:38 | |
One of his early clients, converts even, | 0:12:42 | 0:12:44 | |
was the sculptor Antony Gormley. | 0:12:44 | 0:12:46 | |
We go to work in a David Chipperfield studio. | 0:12:47 | 0:12:51 | |
We live in a house that David helped us convert. | 0:12:51 | 0:12:54 | |
And we eat with David Chipperfield knives and forks. | 0:12:54 | 0:12:59 | |
So, we genuinely do depend on David Chipperfield | 0:12:59 | 0:13:03 | |
for our, as it were, external body. | 0:13:03 | 0:13:06 | |
The brief that we gave David was space, light and silence. | 0:13:11 | 0:13:15 | |
But there was immediately this understanding | 0:13:16 | 0:13:18 | |
about material and about volume | 0:13:18 | 0:13:23 | |
that absolutely caught Vicken and I | 0:13:23 | 0:13:28 | |
as being somebody who understood | 0:13:28 | 0:13:31 | |
about the relationship between light and material and space. | 0:13:31 | 0:13:38 | |
You could say that IS what architecture is. | 0:13:39 | 0:13:42 | |
It is bare architecture. | 0:13:44 | 0:13:46 | |
That bareness is put at the service of human life. | 0:13:47 | 0:13:53 | |
So that life itself, the way that human bodies occupy his spaces, | 0:13:53 | 0:13:58 | |
is its decoration. | 0:13:58 | 0:14:00 | |
And I respect and admire the way David has upheld | 0:14:00 | 0:14:06 | |
that notion of, in a way, the humanity of architecture. | 0:14:06 | 0:14:11 | |
Throughout the '90s, work of any note in Britain was hard to come by, | 0:14:19 | 0:14:23 | |
and the place where David Chipperfield came | 0:14:23 | 0:14:25 | |
to feel most at home was Berlin. | 0:14:25 | 0:14:28 | |
It's always intriguing to see what architects build for themselves | 0:14:30 | 0:14:34 | |
and in David's case this was the place to be. | 0:14:34 | 0:14:38 | |
In a typical Berlin courtyard, | 0:14:41 | 0:14:43 | |
there are a group of simple concrete buildings. | 0:14:43 | 0:14:46 | |
He has an apartment on the street side, | 0:14:51 | 0:14:54 | |
so you could say he lives above the shop. | 0:14:54 | 0:14:56 | |
I love his own house in Berlin, | 0:14:57 | 0:14:59 | |
I love that. | 0:14:59 | 0:15:01 | |
I think that's a kind of a dream house. | 0:15:01 | 0:15:04 | |
There's a Kantine, which is open to the public. | 0:15:06 | 0:15:09 | |
And at the back, offices occupy what was once a piano factory. | 0:15:14 | 0:15:19 | |
David's architecture begins with the city. | 0:15:25 | 0:15:29 | |
And that's a very different way of working | 0:15:31 | 0:15:34 | |
from most celebrity architects today, | 0:15:34 | 0:15:36 | |
who really are driven by the idea of architecture as an image. | 0:15:36 | 0:15:41 | |
Sharing this philosophy, | 0:15:42 | 0:15:44 | |
there are now over 200 architects working for Chipperfield, | 0:15:44 | 0:15:48 | |
with offices run by directors in Milan, Shanghai, London | 0:15:48 | 0:15:53 | |
and, of course, Berlin. | 0:15:53 | 0:15:55 | |
When we go for lunch and we see people coming from outside, | 0:15:55 | 0:15:58 | |
people from inside, sitting in the sun, enjoying their lunch... | 0:15:58 | 0:16:01 | |
-Even other architects. -That's the biggest reward! | 0:16:01 | 0:16:04 | |
That's the biggest reward, architects from across the street. | 0:16:04 | 0:16:08 | |
I mean, how much can you get? | 0:16:08 | 0:16:09 | |
Hosting events, entertaining, | 0:16:14 | 0:16:17 | |
mixing clients, neighbours, friends and, above all, artists - bringing | 0:16:17 | 0:16:22 | |
people together is clearly important for David and his wife, Evelyn. | 0:16:22 | 0:16:27 | |
I think she's had a very strong impact on bringing out | 0:16:27 | 0:16:30 | |
the European-ness in David. | 0:16:30 | 0:16:32 | |
She's managed to create a kind of, not exactly a salon culture, | 0:16:32 | 0:16:36 | |
but there is a circle around the Chipperfields. | 0:16:36 | 0:16:38 | |
There's a sense of creating a conversation around them. | 0:16:38 | 0:16:42 | |
'Tonight's discussion is all about the city, | 0:16:42 | 0:16:45 | |
'with his friend, the artist and photographer | 0:16:45 | 0:16:47 | |
'Thomas Struth.' | 0:16:47 | 0:16:49 | |
The picture I had of architects was quite negative. | 0:16:49 | 0:16:53 | |
I thought when I met an architect, | 0:16:53 | 0:16:56 | |
they were pretty arrogant and I always felt that they are | 0:16:56 | 0:17:00 | |
mostly vain and self-centred. | 0:17:00 | 0:17:02 | |
You'd better leave now! | 0:17:02 | 0:17:04 | |
LAUGHTER | 0:17:04 | 0:17:05 | |
'I think we get the picture.' | 0:17:05 | 0:17:07 | |
But Chipperfield has proved himself to be an architect who listens, | 0:17:07 | 0:17:12 | |
and that makes his a voice to be taken | 0:17:12 | 0:17:15 | |
seriously in the debate about the future of Berlin. | 0:17:15 | 0:17:18 | |
'And it all began with the Neues Museum.' | 0:17:20 | 0:17:22 | |
The Neues Museum was an amazing project for us, and it put us | 0:17:24 | 0:17:30 | |
very much into the middle of a reflection and a discussion | 0:17:30 | 0:17:37 | |
about Germany. | 0:17:37 | 0:17:39 | |
German history and German... and about Berlin. | 0:17:39 | 0:17:41 | |
How the city should... So, as the city's forming, | 0:17:41 | 0:17:45 | |
trying to deal with past and future, | 0:17:45 | 0:17:49 | |
the Neues Museum was seen as | 0:17:49 | 0:17:52 | |
a valuable contribution to that discussion. | 0:17:52 | 0:17:56 | |
You were doing it from '97 till... Took you how many years? | 0:17:56 | 0:18:00 | |
The first competition we started in '94, the first round was '94, | 0:18:02 | 0:18:05 | |
so we started thinking about that project | 0:18:05 | 0:18:08 | |
five years after the Wall came down. | 0:18:08 | 0:18:11 | |
Did you see this as something to help bring | 0:18:11 | 0:18:14 | |
Germany and Berlin together? | 0:18:14 | 0:18:15 | |
Was it part of the project? | 0:18:15 | 0:18:18 | |
-I was only an architect. -Oh, come on. | 0:18:18 | 0:18:21 | |
Chipperfield's campus is in the Mitte district, | 0:18:22 | 0:18:25 | |
once part of East Berlin. | 0:18:25 | 0:18:28 | |
It is a mixed area, with Plattenbau, the concrete prefab blocks | 0:18:28 | 0:18:32 | |
so characteristic of the GDR, just at the end of the street. | 0:18:32 | 0:18:37 | |
David says he loves the neighbourhood because it has | 0:18:37 | 0:18:40 | |
room for the unexpected. | 0:18:40 | 0:18:42 | |
Today, that includes a visit from | 0:18:42 | 0:18:44 | |
film director Wim Wenders, | 0:18:44 | 0:18:45 | |
who is joining us on a walk through the city. | 0:18:45 | 0:18:48 | |
So, our common neighbourhood. | 0:18:50 | 0:18:52 | |
-You live near here? -I am just around the corner. -He lives up there. | 0:18:52 | 0:18:55 | |
I can look into their shower. | 0:18:55 | 0:18:57 | |
Yeah...we've got a sort of anti-Wim curtain on our shower. | 0:18:57 | 0:19:02 | |
Because when they found out I could see them | 0:19:02 | 0:19:04 | |
taking a shower they got scared. | 0:19:04 | 0:19:07 | |
In the aftermath of the Second World War, | 0:19:09 | 0:19:12 | |
when the reconstruction of Berlin began, | 0:19:12 | 0:19:14 | |
it soon became clear that two distinct cities were emerging. | 0:19:14 | 0:19:19 | |
The division between East and West was made concrete | 0:19:19 | 0:19:22 | |
by the building of the Berlin Wall. | 0:19:22 | 0:19:24 | |
Were you from the East or the West? You're from the West. | 0:19:24 | 0:19:27 | |
I'm from the West, but the first thing I did was moving here | 0:19:27 | 0:19:31 | |
because I thought it was so much more interesting. | 0:19:31 | 0:19:34 | |
Wenders was in Australia when the Wall came down. | 0:19:36 | 0:19:39 | |
Like many of the rest of us, he watched it on TV, | 0:19:39 | 0:19:42 | |
with its news reports of Stasi archives, and banana shortages, | 0:19:42 | 0:19:47 | |
and close encounters with that symbol of the East, the Trabant. | 0:19:47 | 0:19:51 | |
Friends of mine | 0:19:51 | 0:19:52 | |
whose parents had ordered one a couple of years before the Wall | 0:19:52 | 0:19:56 | |
fell down, and they were delivered one after the wall fell down! | 0:19:56 | 0:20:00 | |
And nobody wanted them any more. | 0:20:00 | 0:20:02 | |
They got that Trabant a year too late. | 0:20:03 | 0:20:05 | |
So, you were working across with people in East Germany. | 0:20:07 | 0:20:11 | |
I had friends there, directors and stuff, | 0:20:11 | 0:20:14 | |
but we couldn't really work here, you see. | 0:20:14 | 0:20:17 | |
For Wings Of Desire, I tried very hard to shoot in East Berlin, | 0:20:17 | 0:20:21 | |
-but they wouldn't let me. -They wouldn't? | 0:20:21 | 0:20:23 | |
No, they wouldn't let me because I made a movie without a script. | 0:20:23 | 0:20:26 | |
-They were afraid? -Yeah, they were afraid. | 0:20:28 | 0:20:29 | |
Wenders' angel's-eye view looks down upon Berliners | 0:20:35 | 0:20:38 | |
of a divided city. | 0:20:38 | 0:20:40 | |
The pattern of courtyards revealed is a survival from | 0:20:40 | 0:20:44 | |
the 19th century, but it still helps to make Berlin what it is today. | 0:20:44 | 0:20:48 | |
The courtyard system is a fairly unique Berlin typology. | 0:20:50 | 0:20:56 | |
It's a way of getting more density into the centres. | 0:20:58 | 0:21:02 | |
You couldn't get more dense in a way. Look, here. | 0:21:02 | 0:21:06 | |
-You can see all the way. -Oh, yeah. | 0:21:06 | 0:21:08 | |
And some were very regulated, like no kid was allowed to play. | 0:21:08 | 0:21:13 | |
And you still sometimes see the signs. | 0:21:13 | 0:21:15 | |
No playing, and no cleaning of carpets. | 0:21:15 | 0:21:19 | |
Well, I suppose they felt there had to be rules? | 0:21:22 | 0:21:25 | |
-Yeah, Germans love rules. -Do they? | 0:21:25 | 0:21:28 | |
They invented all the rules. | 0:21:30 | 0:21:31 | |
We could have picked a nicer day. | 0:21:33 | 0:21:35 | |
Yeah, that was Alan's fault. | 0:21:36 | 0:21:37 | |
Funny to get to see your own city like this. | 0:21:41 | 0:21:44 | |
So now we come to one of the landmarks, | 0:21:45 | 0:21:48 | |
and one of my favourite places. | 0:21:48 | 0:21:50 | |
This is one of the last remaining dance halls, | 0:21:51 | 0:21:54 | |
and there's dancing still there every night of the week. | 0:21:54 | 0:21:57 | |
This has all been stage managed by Wim. | 0:22:06 | 0:22:09 | |
I mean, this is a film set. It's not for real, surely. | 0:22:09 | 0:22:12 | |
HE HUMS | 0:22:12 | 0:22:14 | |
There's a Berlin factor | 0:22:15 | 0:22:17 | |
that heightens the meaning of things. | 0:22:17 | 0:22:19 | |
You scratch the surface and you find history. | 0:22:19 | 0:22:22 | |
These photographs were taken in the mid-'70s, | 0:22:24 | 0:22:27 | |
at the height of the Cold War. | 0:22:27 | 0:22:29 | |
This dance hall. is a Berlin survivor. | 0:22:29 | 0:22:32 | |
So many stories, so many ghosts. | 0:22:35 | 0:22:38 | |
This becomes very nostalgic, | 0:22:43 | 0:22:45 | |
and in a way unsustainable. | 0:22:45 | 0:22:47 | |
On the other hand, it's a shame | 0:22:47 | 0:22:49 | |
that the texture of East Berlin has been lost. | 0:22:49 | 0:22:53 | |
And then you've got to hold on to it through something | 0:22:53 | 0:22:55 | |
like this, which is in a way an unsustainable level of dilapidation. | 0:22:55 | 0:23:00 | |
I love this place. | 0:23:01 | 0:23:02 | |
And you can still play soccer in the middle of the city. | 0:23:05 | 0:23:08 | |
This is what a city should be like, no? | 0:23:10 | 0:23:12 | |
Destruction and dilapidation have defined Berlin - | 0:23:23 | 0:23:26 | |
a legacy of the war and the Wall. | 0:23:26 | 0:23:29 | |
There was one grand public building | 0:23:29 | 0:23:31 | |
in the heart of the city | 0:23:31 | 0:23:32 | |
which remained a ruin for over 50 years. | 0:23:32 | 0:23:36 | |
The Neues Museum. | 0:23:36 | 0:23:37 | |
It was designed by neoclassical architect | 0:23:39 | 0:23:42 | |
August Stuler for King Friedrich Willhelm IV of Prussia. | 0:23:42 | 0:23:46 | |
It was a way of affirming power through art when it was | 0:23:48 | 0:23:51 | |
built in the 19th century, | 0:23:51 | 0:23:54 | |
but the 20th all but destroyed it. | 0:23:54 | 0:23:57 | |
It was bombed by the Allies, pockmarked by bullets | 0:24:01 | 0:24:04 | |
and shrapnel as the Red Army took possession of the city, | 0:24:04 | 0:24:08 | |
and left to rot during the GDR. | 0:24:08 | 0:24:10 | |
The weight of all this history would eventually | 0:24:13 | 0:24:16 | |
fall on the shoulders of this quietly spoken Englishman. | 0:24:16 | 0:24:19 | |
The restored Neues Museum today, | 0:24:22 | 0:24:24 | |
looks at a distance like what it was meant to be, | 0:24:24 | 0:24:27 | |
an evocation of Classical Greece transported to Berlin. | 0:24:27 | 0:24:31 | |
But look closer and you can see the scars of history. | 0:24:33 | 0:24:36 | |
They are there because of a decision taken not to restore, but | 0:24:38 | 0:24:42 | |
to keep, clean and repair the fabric of the building that survived. | 0:24:42 | 0:24:46 | |
To treat it in effect like the fragments of a precious Greek vase. | 0:24:47 | 0:24:52 | |
Some spaces required dramatic intervention. | 0:24:54 | 0:24:58 | |
The grand staircase hall, linking the three storeys of the museum, | 0:24:58 | 0:25:03 | |
had been bombed right through to the basement. | 0:25:03 | 0:25:06 | |
It would need something special from the architects to live up to | 0:25:06 | 0:25:09 | |
what had been lost. | 0:25:09 | 0:25:10 | |
This is quite a bold proposition. | 0:25:16 | 0:25:19 | |
In a way, that's what we thought, | 0:25:19 | 0:25:21 | |
but interestingly all alternative ideas didn't work with the room. | 0:25:21 | 0:25:26 | |
And then you realise that the room and the stair | 0:25:26 | 0:25:29 | |
are dynamically integrated. | 0:25:29 | 0:25:30 | |
This diagonal experience of the space leading to the light. | 0:25:30 | 0:25:34 | |
This one coming up to this light. You just couldn't get | 0:25:34 | 0:25:37 | |
anything else to be as convincing. | 0:25:37 | 0:25:39 | |
Preservation of the ruin meant listening to all its stories. | 0:25:41 | 0:25:44 | |
The fabric showed the scars of war, | 0:25:45 | 0:25:47 | |
and in one corner the walls were blackened by fires | 0:25:47 | 0:25:51 | |
from the Battle for Berlin, when the women and children of the city | 0:25:51 | 0:25:55 | |
were among the last left to fight against the advancing Russians. | 0:25:55 | 0:25:59 | |
Did you have to look at each of these areas | 0:25:59 | 0:26:02 | |
and these spaces and think, "What's the story here? | 0:26:02 | 0:26:05 | |
"Why is this here? Should we keep it? Should we not keep it?" | 0:26:05 | 0:26:07 | |
Is that what you did? | 0:26:07 | 0:26:09 | |
It's a detail and it's hidden there. | 0:26:09 | 0:26:11 | |
Just at a second glimpse, | 0:26:11 | 0:26:13 | |
you realise suddenly where it comes from. And that's it. | 0:26:13 | 0:26:16 | |
At the concept stage, not all Berliners were convinced. | 0:26:20 | 0:26:24 | |
Some continued to demand full restoration. | 0:26:24 | 0:26:28 | |
A campaign was mounted against the Chipperfield plans. | 0:26:28 | 0:26:32 | |
Watercolours showing the polychromatic glories | 0:26:32 | 0:26:35 | |
of Stuler's interior were compared to stark concrete. | 0:26:35 | 0:26:39 | |
There was a confrontational atmosphere, | 0:26:41 | 0:26:43 | |
the citizens almost rose up. | 0:26:43 | 0:26:45 | |
SHE SPEAKS IN GERMAN | 0:26:45 | 0:26:46 | |
But Chipperfield, interestingly, didn't see that as a problem, | 0:26:46 | 0:26:51 | |
he saw that as a wonderful opportunity. | 0:26:51 | 0:26:53 | |
It meant that the citizens were interested in what's going on. | 0:26:53 | 0:26:56 | |
Once people are passionate, and interested, | 0:26:56 | 0:26:59 | |
then they become involved in the process, | 0:26:59 | 0:27:01 | |
and it was a dialogue in a way that I think | 0:27:01 | 0:27:04 | |
a lot of other buildings are not. | 0:27:04 | 0:27:06 | |
The starting point for the process was an analysis of the ruin, | 0:27:09 | 0:27:13 | |
by Julian Harrap, the conservation architect. | 0:27:13 | 0:27:16 | |
We'd be involved in actually trying | 0:27:16 | 0:27:20 | |
to give, if you like, a rating to each piece of fabric. | 0:27:20 | 0:27:24 | |
And it might go from utter and total deconstruction, | 0:27:24 | 0:27:29 | |
wrecked walls, missing brickwork, and then it might | 0:27:29 | 0:27:34 | |
move along to a point at the other end of the room where you've | 0:27:34 | 0:27:38 | |
got wall paintings in almost perfect condition. | 0:27:38 | 0:27:42 | |
And so this idea of graduating each space | 0:27:42 | 0:27:46 | |
according to its components was fundamental. | 0:27:46 | 0:27:53 | |
The dialogue around the building extended to craftsmen, conservators, | 0:27:54 | 0:27:59 | |
and contractors, all dedicated to the same brick-by-brick | 0:27:59 | 0:28:03 | |
problem solving that was becoming an adventure in architecture. | 0:28:03 | 0:28:07 | |
There was some stereotypical Germanic precision involved too. | 0:28:08 | 0:28:12 | |
The concrete pieces are enormous but they are produced | 0:28:13 | 0:28:18 | |
with an incredible precision. | 0:28:18 | 0:28:21 | |
They have 5mm joints. | 0:28:21 | 0:28:23 | |
And if you imagine 5mm and they have plus minus 1mm, | 0:28:23 | 0:28:29 | |
and if you go ten metres like that, | 0:28:29 | 0:28:31 | |
four metres up and then plus minus one, this is very precise, | 0:28:31 | 0:28:36 | |
almost Egyptian, I would say. | 0:28:36 | 0:28:38 | |
Stuler's original museum changed themes and structure | 0:28:41 | 0:28:44 | |
from room to room. | 0:28:44 | 0:28:46 | |
Greek, Egyptian, vaulted, columned. | 0:28:46 | 0:28:50 | |
It gave the architects license to change their approach | 0:28:50 | 0:28:53 | |
room by room in response. | 0:28:53 | 0:28:56 | |
The museum's curators and directors were part of the conversation. | 0:28:56 | 0:29:01 | |
The collection to be displayed influenced decisions at every turn. | 0:29:01 | 0:29:05 | |
Some of the Egyptian collection was quite literally brought into | 0:29:05 | 0:29:09 | |
the sun by a new cage-like construction | 0:29:09 | 0:29:12 | |
designed by Chipperfield. | 0:29:12 | 0:29:15 | |
The way the new inserts itself within the old is surprising. | 0:29:15 | 0:29:20 | |
Because you are always aware that there are new acts in the building, | 0:29:23 | 0:29:27 | |
but not in the way that is let's say contradictory with what's there. | 0:29:27 | 0:29:31 | |
Somehow the whole is bigger, more alive, | 0:29:31 | 0:29:35 | |
and actually richer with David's intervention. | 0:29:35 | 0:29:39 | |
And that richness is very appealing. | 0:29:39 | 0:29:43 | |
The decoration had been lost, | 0:29:55 | 0:29:57 | |
in many places, so where we had lost it completely, | 0:29:57 | 0:30:00 | |
we faked the grid again. | 0:30:00 | 0:30:03 | |
Just did that as an impression. | 0:30:03 | 0:30:05 | |
So you got the sense of pattern. | 0:30:05 | 0:30:07 | |
Every single square inch of that building is | 0:30:10 | 0:30:13 | |
denoted on a drawing like this. | 0:30:13 | 0:30:15 | |
It's one of those drawings that links...that really tells you | 0:30:15 | 0:30:18 | |
what architects do. | 0:30:18 | 0:30:19 | |
And I get really excited to see this | 0:30:19 | 0:30:21 | |
because it is as authored as the napkin sketch, | 0:30:21 | 0:30:24 | |
this is as much what David is as that little doodle. | 0:30:24 | 0:30:28 | |
This is really the work of David Chipperfield architects. | 0:30:28 | 0:30:30 | |
That kind of ruin was a problem, it was a really big problem, | 0:30:30 | 0:30:35 | |
no-one knew what to do with it, how to handle its neoclassical | 0:30:35 | 0:30:38 | |
heritage, or its GDR heritage, or the World War II heritage | 0:30:38 | 0:30:42 | |
and all of those things were impossible to deal with. | 0:30:42 | 0:30:46 | |
There was a desire by the client to have a much flashier, | 0:30:46 | 0:30:49 | |
much more 21st century-looking building. | 0:30:49 | 0:30:51 | |
Renowned American architect Frank Gehry was Chipperfield's | 0:30:51 | 0:30:55 | |
chief rival in the architectural competition for the project. | 0:30:55 | 0:30:59 | |
The process was tortuous and the presentations took place | 0:31:00 | 0:31:03 | |
in this room. | 0:31:03 | 0:31:05 | |
As a young architect I had the drawings | 0:31:05 | 0:31:07 | |
pinned on the wall and the general director, | 0:31:07 | 0:31:10 | |
who had wanted Gehry, | 0:31:10 | 0:31:14 | |
after about five minutes, stood up, came to my drawings, hit them | 0:31:14 | 0:31:18 | |
and said, "This is shit." | 0:31:18 | 0:31:19 | |
"I do not need this, this is shit. This is absolute shit." | 0:31:20 | 0:31:24 | |
And walked out. | 0:31:24 | 0:31:26 | |
And I was like five minutes... And there was like 30 people there. | 0:31:26 | 0:31:29 | |
And I said, "So now what do I do?" | 0:31:29 | 0:31:31 | |
And I thought, "The most important person in the jury | 0:31:31 | 0:31:34 | |
"has just left the room." | 0:31:34 | 0:31:36 | |
Then we got a phone call after saying, | 0:31:36 | 0:31:38 | |
look, we've decided to do a second round with you | 0:31:38 | 0:31:40 | |
and Gehry. So, congratulations... | 0:31:40 | 0:31:42 | |
So we were given another two months and it was head-to-head. | 0:31:45 | 0:31:48 | |
And, in fact, recently someone said to me, "During high noon..." | 0:31:48 | 0:31:51 | |
And I said, "What's high noon?" | 0:31:51 | 0:31:53 | |
"You know when you and Gehry were..." | 0:31:53 | 0:31:56 | |
-It became a sort of... -So, it was on the same day? | 0:31:56 | 0:31:59 | |
Yeah, I mean, we didn't literally... | 0:31:59 | 0:32:01 | |
And so we presented and at the end of the presentation, | 0:32:01 | 0:32:06 | |
the director came up to me and said, "Fantastic." | 0:32:06 | 0:32:09 | |
What happened in the interim? | 0:32:11 | 0:32:13 | |
You can't... In England, you don't talk to each other for 20 years. | 0:32:13 | 0:32:16 | |
That's also where I got my CBE, in that room. | 0:32:19 | 0:32:23 | |
-Oh, really. -Deliberate. | 0:32:23 | 0:32:26 | |
In the very room where you were humiliated. | 0:32:26 | 0:32:28 | |
From the Queen personally. | 0:32:32 | 0:32:34 | |
Yes. | 0:32:34 | 0:32:36 | |
'And as if that wasn't enough, Prince Charles | 0:32:36 | 0:32:39 | |
'and the Duchess of Cornwall came for a personal tour, | 0:32:39 | 0:32:43 | |
'and so did the most powerful woman in Europe, | 0:32:43 | 0:32:46 | |
'rumoured to be David Chipperfield's newest and biggest fan, | 0:32:46 | 0:32:51 | |
'the President of the German Republic, Angela Merkel.' | 0:32:51 | 0:32:54 | |
It does have a very special character. | 0:33:07 | 0:33:10 | |
Even as I walk round today, there are certain sorts | 0:33:10 | 0:33:14 | |
of things - the fall of the light in the western sun is fantastic. | 0:33:14 | 0:33:19 | |
And the discovery of tiny little things which happen | 0:33:19 | 0:33:25 | |
is going to keep me going there for a very long time. | 0:33:25 | 0:33:30 | |
Every decision had to be formulated by us, | 0:33:36 | 0:33:38 | |
then had to be proposed by us, then had to be | 0:33:38 | 0:33:42 | |
approved by the user group and a delivery agency... | 0:33:42 | 0:33:46 | |
I felt it could have stayed empty | 0:33:49 | 0:33:51 | |
because the building as such was so extraordinary. | 0:33:51 | 0:33:56 | |
It was such an incredible document of history. | 0:33:56 | 0:33:59 | |
A tasting of everything that happened to this city over... | 0:34:00 | 0:34:05 | |
Yes, what a great narrative that suddenly came to life. | 0:34:05 | 0:34:08 | |
The story was all there, and it almost seemed a waste to put | 0:34:08 | 0:34:12 | |
it full of art. | 0:34:12 | 0:34:13 | |
Just saying that when he went to the Neues Museum that it seemed | 0:34:15 | 0:34:18 | |
a waste to put any art in it | 0:34:18 | 0:34:19 | |
because the narrative and the story was so rich. | 0:34:19 | 0:34:22 | |
You didn't need all the art in there. | 0:34:22 | 0:34:25 | |
-We'd better cut that out. -Can we cut that out? | 0:34:25 | 0:34:27 | |
-No, why? -Makes it even richer. | 0:34:27 | 0:34:29 | |
# This time tomorrow | 0:34:34 | 0:34:37 | |
# Where will we be? | 0:34:38 | 0:34:40 | |
# On a spaceship somewhere | 0:34:42 | 0:34:45 | |
# Sailing across an empty sea | 0:34:45 | 0:34:51 | |
# This time tomorrow... # | 0:34:52 | 0:34:55 | |
It is a mess, Berlin, but it's a nice mess, no? | 0:34:55 | 0:34:57 | |
'The success of the Neues Museum has led to an even more ambitious | 0:34:57 | 0:35:02 | |
'role for David Chipperfield in the future of the city he loves.' | 0:35:02 | 0:35:06 | |
He is now responsible for the master plan for Museum Island | 0:35:06 | 0:35:10 | |
in the heart of Berlin. | 0:35:10 | 0:35:11 | |
It began as King Frederich Willhelm's romantic sketch | 0:35:13 | 0:35:16 | |
for a "sanctuary of art and science" in 1841. | 0:35:16 | 0:35:20 | |
Prince Charles would definitely approve. | 0:35:20 | 0:35:23 | |
Admittedly, he couldn't | 0:35:23 | 0:35:25 | |
have predicted that a railway would run through the middle of it. | 0:35:25 | 0:35:28 | |
The long term timescale of this city plan is unbelievably | 0:35:30 | 0:35:34 | |
rare in architecture these days. | 0:35:34 | 0:35:36 | |
In England, you have discussion about planning things | 0:35:38 | 0:35:41 | |
about three years ahead or something, maximum. | 0:35:41 | 0:35:44 | |
Here you're in meetings and they say, | 0:35:44 | 0:35:47 | |
"Well, if we open the south wing in 2019 | 0:35:47 | 0:35:51 | |
"we could do the north wing in 2024, it means | 0:35:51 | 0:35:55 | |
"that we can bring the connection to..." | 0:35:55 | 0:35:57 | |
And you're sitting in this room... | 0:35:57 | 0:35:59 | |
You're thinking, "Will I still be here?" | 0:35:59 | 0:36:02 | |
# I can see the world and it ain't so big at all... # | 0:36:03 | 0:36:10 | |
Whatever the future brings, Chipperfield has | 0:36:12 | 0:36:14 | |
already made his mark. | 0:36:14 | 0:36:16 | |
That's a Chipperfield building, | 0:36:16 | 0:36:19 | |
And so is this, a townhouse art gallery on a prize site that | 0:36:19 | 0:36:24 | |
rather playfully seems to both fit in and stand out at the same time. | 0:36:24 | 0:36:29 | |
Those windows are really tall. | 0:36:31 | 0:36:33 | |
So this is our corner of Berlin. | 0:36:34 | 0:36:36 | |
It's a ringside seat for the main event, | 0:36:37 | 0:36:40 | |
a view of the Neues Museum. | 0:36:40 | 0:36:42 | |
But even that is changing as another Chipperfield building | 0:36:42 | 0:36:46 | |
rises from the construction site opposite. | 0:36:46 | 0:36:49 | |
It's a new gallery and a grand public entrance to Museum Island. | 0:36:49 | 0:36:53 | |
So what this building does is add a whole load | 0:36:55 | 0:36:59 | |
of facilities that the Museum Island doesn't have. | 0:36:59 | 0:37:03 | |
And then it sort of helps bind together all the buildings. | 0:37:03 | 0:37:06 | |
So it's both familiar and unfamiliar. | 0:37:07 | 0:37:10 | |
You know, it's somehow both... | 0:37:10 | 0:37:11 | |
It actually has the illusion of being quite historical, | 0:37:11 | 0:37:14 | |
but actually it's extremely minimal and modern. | 0:37:14 | 0:37:18 | |
It's going to be heroic. | 0:37:18 | 0:37:20 | |
It's not as soft as people might think it might be, | 0:37:21 | 0:37:24 | |
it's going to be a little bit shocking. | 0:37:24 | 0:37:26 | |
Chipperfield's vision in columns and glass is a bold one, | 0:37:32 | 0:37:36 | |
and it's inspired by a monumental work of modernism by his great hero, | 0:37:36 | 0:37:41 | |
the German-born architect, Mies van der Rohe. | 0:37:41 | 0:37:44 | |
It's a building which plays an important role | 0:37:44 | 0:37:47 | |
in the story of West Berlin. | 0:37:47 | 0:37:49 | |
Once the city was divided, of course, | 0:37:49 | 0:37:51 | |
the west had lost all its museums, | 0:37:51 | 0:37:55 | |
so then they had to build these alternative institutions. | 0:37:55 | 0:37:59 | |
And a rather strange place to build it in a way. | 0:37:59 | 0:38:02 | |
So, this new centre - the cultural centre - | 0:38:02 | 0:38:06 | |
was not in the centre of the west, | 0:38:06 | 0:38:09 | |
but as close to the wall as possible. | 0:38:09 | 0:38:11 | |
Provocatively, in a way, | 0:38:11 | 0:38:15 | |
reminding people just over there how good it was over here. | 0:38:15 | 0:38:20 | |
It's a strange moment when a temple of modernism begins to show its age. | 0:38:23 | 0:38:29 | |
Chipperfield has won the job of refurbishing it. | 0:38:29 | 0:38:32 | |
You can just see the level of trust that the German people | 0:38:33 | 0:38:38 | |
have in David to feel comfortable | 0:38:38 | 0:38:41 | |
to let him deal with this masterpiece of Mies van der Rohe's. | 0:38:41 | 0:38:46 | |
It's an unique opportunity to get forensically close to the | 0:38:46 | 0:38:50 | |
work of the man who famously pronounced that, "Less is more," | 0:38:50 | 0:38:54 | |
and that, "God is in the detail." | 0:38:54 | 0:38:56 | |
The roof was built as a plate on the floor | 0:38:58 | 0:39:01 | |
and, as it went up, the legs swang in. | 0:39:01 | 0:39:05 | |
And no-one had done something like that before. | 0:39:05 | 0:39:07 | |
Was he on the site when this was all done? | 0:39:07 | 0:39:09 | |
Well, he came to see the lifting of the roof and he, | 0:39:09 | 0:39:13 | |
I think as an act of bravado, went underneath the roof to prove how... | 0:39:13 | 0:39:17 | |
-Do you do things like that yourself? -No, no! | 0:39:17 | 0:39:21 | |
Restoring a Mies building is not going to be easy. | 0:39:21 | 0:39:25 | |
Every element, every joint, is part of the architecture. | 0:39:25 | 0:39:28 | |
Even its plan has a graphic purity. | 0:39:28 | 0:39:31 | |
This is a formidable drawing of Mies's van der Rohe's | 0:39:31 | 0:39:34 | |
Neue Nationalgalerie Gallery in Berlin | 0:39:34 | 0:39:36 | |
and it's a reflected ceiling plan showing | 0:39:36 | 0:39:38 | |
that extraordinary grid within a grid within a grid | 0:39:38 | 0:39:40 | |
of the kind of Mies van der Rohe module | 0:39:40 | 0:39:43 | |
of this square temple in the centre of Berlin. | 0:39:43 | 0:39:46 | |
I must say, for me, it's one of those moments where the apprentice meets the master. | 0:39:47 | 0:39:52 | |
This is a glass and steel building. | 0:39:54 | 0:39:56 | |
It's also a gallery in which art has to be exhibited. | 0:39:56 | 0:40:01 | |
I mean, most people would say, "Well, most galleries, they have hardly any light coming in." | 0:40:01 | 0:40:05 | |
This is all about light. How do you deal with that in relation | 0:40:05 | 0:40:09 | |
to your responsibility towards what comes in here and how are you - | 0:40:09 | 0:40:13 | |
are you thinking hard about that? | 0:40:13 | 0:40:15 | |
Mies was challenged early on that | 0:40:15 | 0:40:19 | |
this was going to be a problem | 0:40:19 | 0:40:22 | |
and he amusingly said, | 0:40:22 | 0:40:25 | |
"I know, but I think it is such an interesting concept, | 0:40:25 | 0:40:30 | |
"I feel obliged to pursue it." | 0:40:30 | 0:40:32 | |
-Which, I think is... -Bugger off! -It's a good line to use against your clients, | 0:40:32 | 0:40:36 | |
but I'm not sure we could ever do that ourselves. | 0:40:36 | 0:40:39 | |
Mies had this idea about how you would do it. | 0:40:39 | 0:40:42 | |
So, he hung panels in here and you walked in and it sort of worked. | 0:40:42 | 0:40:46 | |
Now, the building has an authority and somehow it's part of nature, | 0:40:46 | 0:40:50 | |
it's part of the city and everyone recognises that this is | 0:40:50 | 0:40:53 | |
the great room of Berlin. | 0:40:53 | 0:40:54 | |
But you can see that simple things over the years | 0:40:56 | 0:41:00 | |
have just gradually eroded the quality. | 0:41:00 | 0:41:02 | |
I mean, one of the biggest problems has been the glass. | 0:41:02 | 0:41:05 | |
-I would say this architecture forgives... -Nothing. | 0:41:05 | 0:41:10 | |
Forgives nothing. Well, because... | 0:41:10 | 0:41:13 | |
God is in the detail, according to Mies. | 0:41:13 | 0:41:15 | |
And of course this is a very minimal building, obviously, in that sense, | 0:41:15 | 0:41:19 | |
-so every single... You've got very few materials you're using... -Uh-huh. | 0:41:19 | 0:41:23 | |
..and they've got to be right. | 0:41:23 | 0:41:25 | |
This materiality is fundamental, | 0:41:26 | 0:41:30 | |
but it's full of weaknesses in terms of how we now would build up | 0:41:30 | 0:41:35 | |
an isolation between inside and outside. | 0:41:35 | 0:41:38 | |
So, great sheets of condensation form on the inside of this building. | 0:41:38 | 0:41:43 | |
They even anticipated that moisture, cos this is like a rain... | 0:41:43 | 0:41:46 | |
This is like a gutter. | 0:41:46 | 0:41:48 | |
We're going to spend a lot of money restoring this building. | 0:41:48 | 0:41:51 | |
So, therefore, if we're going to restore it, surely we're going | 0:41:51 | 0:41:54 | |
to solve all the technical problems that the building carries. | 0:41:54 | 0:41:59 | |
Otherwise, why would you spend that money? | 0:41:59 | 0:42:02 | |
On the other hand, we are restoring Mies. | 0:42:02 | 0:42:04 | |
So, surely if you're going to restore Mies, | 0:42:04 | 0:42:06 | |
you're going to restore Mies. | 0:42:06 | 0:42:08 | |
You have to be true to Mies. | 0:42:08 | 0:42:09 | |
What's the point of killing Mies in protecting him? | 0:42:09 | 0:42:12 | |
So, you actually have to have a cross-cultural dialogue. | 0:42:12 | 0:42:17 | |
You know, in England I think it would get project managed out of it. | 0:42:17 | 0:42:21 | |
Yeah, and they would say, "I'm sorry that's costing that much more, | 0:42:21 | 0:42:24 | |
"no-one's going to tell the difference..." | 0:42:24 | 0:42:26 | |
We've talked about this enough, | 0:42:26 | 0:42:28 | |
we've had two meetings and we've just got to make a decision. | 0:42:28 | 0:42:30 | |
In Germany, you can have 20 meetings, you can have 40 meetings, | 0:42:30 | 0:42:33 | |
it doesn't matter. | 0:42:33 | 0:42:34 | |
-But you do, don't you? -Yeah, you do. Until you get it right. | 0:42:34 | 0:42:38 | |
How many meetings have there been about the carpet? | 0:42:45 | 0:42:48 | |
Quite a few! | 0:42:48 | 0:42:50 | |
-The carpet's not over. -The carpet's not over? | 0:42:50 | 0:42:53 | |
-Mies had nothing to do with this. -No, no, no. Of course, he chose that. | 0:42:56 | 0:42:59 | |
-He chose this? -This is sacred lino. | 0:42:59 | 0:43:03 | |
-Hello. -Hello. | 0:43:03 | 0:43:05 | |
He didn't just say, "You go through that door | 0:43:05 | 0:43:07 | |
"and it's all rubbish in there and I'm not interested." | 0:43:07 | 0:43:09 | |
This is really carefully thought through furniture. | 0:43:09 | 0:43:15 | |
-And the table... -The table? That's a Mies table? -Yeah. | 0:43:15 | 0:43:18 | |
-It's half of it. -Half a Mies table. -They cut it, they were too big. | 0:43:18 | 0:43:21 | |
God, that's the most shocking thing you've said today - | 0:43:21 | 0:43:24 | |
a Mies table was cut in half! | 0:43:24 | 0:43:26 | |
Look how beautiful that is. He did love the way to build. | 0:43:39 | 0:43:43 | |
I mean, he was absolutely interested in construction - | 0:43:43 | 0:43:49 | |
not image. I mean, the problem about architecture now is that | 0:43:49 | 0:43:52 | |
we've become more interested in the virtual | 0:43:52 | 0:43:55 | |
than we are in the experiential. And the problem is | 0:43:55 | 0:43:58 | |
that a lot of architecture is known through image anyway. | 0:43:58 | 0:44:02 | |
Well, it's an interesting point | 0:44:02 | 0:44:03 | |
that we never talk about with architecture, | 0:44:03 | 0:44:05 | |
which is how a building feels. You know, it's not a... | 0:44:05 | 0:44:09 | |
Absolutely. Very difficult to discuss. | 0:44:09 | 0:44:12 | |
And yet, that's what it's about. How does a building feel? | 0:44:12 | 0:44:16 | |
Thank you very much. Absolutely. | 0:44:16 | 0:44:18 | |
The last exhibition in the New National Gallery, a prologue | 0:44:25 | 0:44:28 | |
to renovation, was this installation by Chipperfield himself. | 0:44:28 | 0:44:33 | |
A play on the history of the column, called Sticks and Stones. | 0:44:33 | 0:44:37 | |
It's no accident today that he makes the core of his practice | 0:44:40 | 0:44:43 | |
in cultural buildings and he does them brilliantly. | 0:44:43 | 0:44:45 | |
He understands how artists want to work, | 0:44:45 | 0:44:47 | |
he understands how curators want to work. | 0:44:47 | 0:44:49 | |
He never seems to do a bad one when it comes to museums and galleries. | 0:44:49 | 0:44:53 | |
And of course those have become the cathedrals of our time. | 0:44:53 | 0:44:56 | |
I think David's work is always conceived | 0:45:00 | 0:45:03 | |
in response to the nature of the place in which it sits. | 0:45:03 | 0:45:08 | |
Something like Hepworth, it almost adopts the River Calder as a moat | 0:45:08 | 0:45:13 | |
with a bridge running across and it has those steep concrete walls, | 0:45:13 | 0:45:19 | |
with quite minimal fenestration. | 0:45:19 | 0:45:21 | |
What was so interesting about the site that we were given | 0:45:24 | 0:45:30 | |
is that it was, in my opinion, completely three dimensional. | 0:45:30 | 0:45:34 | |
And of course, that brought me into a nervous moment | 0:45:34 | 0:45:38 | |
of architecture as sculpture, which I am very nervous of. | 0:45:38 | 0:45:42 | |
But instead of just putting a shape on top of something, | 0:45:42 | 0:45:46 | |
I was interested in the idea of articulating the rooms of a museum | 0:45:46 | 0:45:52 | |
and extending those - extrapolating out of those rooms - form. | 0:45:52 | 0:45:57 | |
And the light is quite important, isn't it? | 0:45:57 | 0:45:59 | |
Where the light's coming into those spaces. | 0:45:59 | 0:46:01 | |
Well, that was the other part of this little jigsaw puzzle. | 0:46:01 | 0:46:04 | |
To bring light in through a roof in an even way | 0:46:04 | 0:46:09 | |
onto an art space is quite complex | 0:46:09 | 0:46:13 | |
and by the time it gets to the wall plane, to the picture plane, | 0:46:13 | 0:46:17 | |
it's sort of fizzled out a bit. | 0:46:17 | 0:46:19 | |
So, this was a strategy of not bringing real light onto the wall | 0:46:19 | 0:46:24 | |
or onto the floor but, in a way like church light, | 0:46:24 | 0:46:27 | |
I call it church light. | 0:46:27 | 0:46:28 | |
It was that connection to daylight | 0:46:28 | 0:46:32 | |
that reminded you of the weather and the fact that you're in a room. | 0:46:32 | 0:46:37 | |
Making architecture for art is a very specific task | 0:46:40 | 0:46:45 | |
because it's not about how you live, | 0:46:45 | 0:46:47 | |
it's not about your daily life, it's about a visit | 0:46:47 | 0:46:51 | |
and it's a completely different set of critical elements | 0:46:51 | 0:46:56 | |
between the viewer and the art work. | 0:46:56 | 0:46:58 | |
It's an architecture which must step back | 0:46:58 | 0:47:01 | |
and let the art work come forward. | 0:47:01 | 0:47:03 | |
And Hepworth does it incredibly well | 0:47:03 | 0:47:06 | |
and yet manages to be the closest thing, one might say, | 0:47:06 | 0:47:09 | |
to an iconic building that David has done. | 0:47:09 | 0:47:12 | |
But Wakefield needed a building that had presence in that way. | 0:47:13 | 0:47:18 | |
One of the questions that remains out there - | 0:47:28 | 0:47:31 | |
can we only find architecture now in museums? | 0:47:31 | 0:47:34 | |
I am very self-conscious that we are in a sort of green zone in | 0:47:34 | 0:47:39 | |
doing museum architecture because you are privileged generally to be | 0:47:39 | 0:47:45 | |
in an environment where everyone's roughly going in the same direction. | 0:47:45 | 0:47:48 | |
There are no explicit enemies. Um... | 0:47:48 | 0:47:51 | |
..at the same time, being an architect out there, | 0:47:52 | 0:47:57 | |
outside of the green zone in the commercial world | 0:47:57 | 0:48:02 | |
is becoming increasingly difficult | 0:48:02 | 0:48:04 | |
and architecture has become increasingly isolated. | 0:48:04 | 0:48:08 | |
Buildings have become isolated from the fabric of the city. | 0:48:08 | 0:48:12 | |
They don't just replace, you know, you don't take one building down, | 0:48:12 | 0:48:16 | |
replace it with something roughly the same size and slot it back in. | 0:48:16 | 0:48:19 | |
You take ten buildings down and build a tower. | 0:48:19 | 0:48:22 | |
When I was director of the Venice Biennale my theme was Common Ground, | 0:48:22 | 0:48:27 | |
and of course I was lamenting the lack of common ground between... | 0:48:27 | 0:48:32 | |
..society and the profession. | 0:48:34 | 0:48:36 | |
At first glance, this unassuming seaside village in a corner of Spain, | 0:48:46 | 0:48:52 | |
is the last place you'd expect a world-renowned architect | 0:48:52 | 0:48:55 | |
to build a home. | 0:48:55 | 0:48:56 | |
Initially, it was just the family's holidays, then extended a bit | 0:49:00 | 0:49:03 | |
and then gradually the opportunity arose to build a house there, | 0:49:03 | 0:49:08 | |
to invite people and actually we have meetings there | 0:49:08 | 0:49:11 | |
as much as he has his holidays. | 0:49:11 | 0:49:13 | |
That annual break, which isn't really a break because he invites | 0:49:14 | 0:49:19 | |
the world to come and join him and indeed see things his way. | 0:49:19 | 0:49:24 | |
There's the beauty of this natural environment, | 0:49:32 | 0:49:34 | |
but also it's a kind of quite ordinary | 0:49:34 | 0:49:36 | |
because some people might say even it's a quite ugly town. | 0:49:36 | 0:49:39 | |
-I think you can use the word ugly. -Can I? So, what brought you here? | 0:49:39 | 0:49:43 | |
I mean, it started off for us really innocently as, you know, | 0:49:43 | 0:49:47 | |
trying to work out where to take the kids in the summer for a few weeks | 0:49:47 | 0:49:51 | |
and it grew into something else. | 0:49:51 | 0:49:56 | |
To be in a place of such incredible natural beauty | 0:49:56 | 0:50:01 | |
and of people who actually, | 0:50:01 | 0:50:02 | |
I have to say, I've understood better and better | 0:50:02 | 0:50:05 | |
that they have a deep love of the place, a deep love for the place. | 0:50:05 | 0:50:10 | |
You know, there's something very content about that. | 0:50:10 | 0:50:15 | |
And that's something which I think societally we've sort of lost. | 0:50:15 | 0:50:19 | |
Globalisation puts us in a situation | 0:50:19 | 0:50:22 | |
where we always want to be somewhere else. | 0:50:22 | 0:50:24 | |
And... | 0:50:24 | 0:50:27 | |
what has been the great experience here is that | 0:50:27 | 0:50:31 | |
we've found a place to be, | 0:50:31 | 0:50:35 | |
we've tried to, um, be part of it. | 0:50:35 | 0:50:39 | |
You have a kind of quite benign view | 0:50:48 | 0:50:50 | |
of what people do to their own homes, right? | 0:50:50 | 0:50:53 | |
Typical Galician village was granite, granite, granite. | 0:50:53 | 0:50:57 | |
Then, they added. | 0:50:57 | 0:50:59 | |
They stuck tiles on things and, you know, they added areas. | 0:51:04 | 0:51:10 | |
That might cheer you up! | 0:51:10 | 0:51:12 | |
One person does it and then the next one decides to copy it. | 0:51:12 | 0:51:16 | |
And this has got a 3D print on it. | 0:51:17 | 0:51:20 | |
I wouldn't be at all surprised in another ten years, you know, | 0:51:29 | 0:51:32 | |
cos underneath that is real stone like that. | 0:51:32 | 0:51:35 | |
-So, they've just layered that on top? -They are just layers on top. | 0:51:35 | 0:51:39 | |
At least it is a sort of engagement. | 0:51:42 | 0:51:46 | |
Un pueblo bonito que tenemos. Si. | 0:51:46 | 0:51:49 | |
-Bonito y tranquilo y saludable, aqui si. -Exactamente. | 0:51:49 | 0:51:53 | |
-What did she say to you? -She said, | 0:52:01 | 0:52:03 | |
"It's a very pretty village and very tranquil and nice to be in." | 0:52:03 | 0:52:07 | |
No, but you know, there's something pleasant about it. | 0:52:07 | 0:52:12 | |
There is, there's something charming about it and, everywhere you go, | 0:52:12 | 0:52:15 | |
something hits you by surprise. | 0:52:15 | 0:52:16 | |
Yeah. It's full of texture, it's full of life. | 0:52:16 | 0:52:19 | |
And is a lot of it ugly? | 0:52:19 | 0:52:20 | |
Yeah, sure. But the problem with design and architecture - | 0:52:20 | 0:52:24 | |
and especially now - it takes itself too seriously. | 0:52:24 | 0:52:27 | |
And in the end you've gotta remember what it's for - | 0:52:27 | 0:52:30 | |
it's about people, it's not THAT important. | 0:52:30 | 0:52:34 | |
And here we are, actually, this is your home. | 0:52:35 | 0:52:38 | |
There was a gap in the village - and it's a really strange gap - | 0:52:38 | 0:52:42 | |
and you can see that the street turns, | 0:52:42 | 0:52:44 | |
all the buildings stick out in a funny way, | 0:52:44 | 0:52:46 | |
so I didn't know how to design a house | 0:52:46 | 0:52:51 | |
that fitted into this strange geometry. | 0:52:51 | 0:52:55 | |
It's very inspired by Alvaro Siza, whose... | 0:52:55 | 0:52:58 | |
CAR HORN TOOTS | 0:52:58 | 0:53:00 | |
Right by the traffic lights - the only traffic lights in town. | 0:53:00 | 0:53:04 | |
-Shall we go in? -Yes. | 0:53:06 | 0:53:08 | |
It's actually quite a small house. | 0:53:13 | 0:53:16 | |
So, how does he manage to get so many people into it? | 0:53:16 | 0:53:19 | |
Space, light and the right materials. | 0:53:31 | 0:53:34 | |
This is... | 0:53:42 | 0:53:44 | |
So, that's the view. | 0:53:44 | 0:53:46 | |
That is quite something! | 0:53:51 | 0:53:53 | |
It is interesting. Villagers will come in here, | 0:53:55 | 0:53:57 | |
then they stand and look at the view all the time. | 0:53:57 | 0:53:59 | |
They say, "Wow, that's a fantastic view," | 0:53:59 | 0:54:01 | |
and you say, "Well, you know, you've always had it!" | 0:54:01 | 0:54:04 | |
But there's something about framing a view, | 0:54:04 | 0:54:07 | |
or you know, intensifying something. | 0:54:07 | 0:54:10 | |
And I think that's something which, you know, interests me | 0:54:12 | 0:54:15 | |
is the idea of, you know, making ordinary things more special. | 0:54:15 | 0:54:20 | |
There's no hiding in a house. | 0:54:22 | 0:54:25 | |
It's like trying to write a poem, rather than a novel. | 0:54:25 | 0:54:29 | |
Because a novel is a big baggy thing, | 0:54:29 | 0:54:30 | |
which can allow all sorts of things to happen, | 0:54:30 | 0:54:32 | |
but the house is a way to develop ideas with great clarity. | 0:54:32 | 0:54:36 | |
And they all show - you can't bluff with a house. | 0:54:36 | 0:54:39 | |
He wants to make a building that... | 0:54:42 | 0:54:46 | |
..resonates with your life. | 0:54:48 | 0:54:50 | |
In that sense, he's a space doctor. | 0:54:50 | 0:54:53 | |
He knows that life is messy, | 0:54:55 | 0:54:57 | |
but he likes to make very beautiful cupboards | 0:54:57 | 0:55:00 | |
to put the mess away in. | 0:55:00 | 0:55:01 | |
We shouldn't leave Evelyn out of this | 0:55:15 | 0:55:17 | |
because together they've become an extraordinary team. | 0:55:17 | 0:55:20 | |
-I'm Manola. -Manola. Que pasa con Manola? | 0:55:23 | 0:55:26 | |
THEY SPEAK SPANISH | 0:55:26 | 0:55:28 | |
She's so, I think, emotionally intelligent | 0:55:28 | 0:55:31 | |
and Evelyn's interest in the human relations | 0:55:31 | 0:55:34 | |
within the Chipperfield practice | 0:55:34 | 0:55:37 | |
has been absolutely intrinsic to its success. | 0:55:37 | 0:55:41 | |
This house, the space that you've created, he's created, | 0:55:41 | 0:55:45 | |
it's quite small, isn't it? | 0:55:45 | 0:55:46 | |
Well, it was a tiny little triangle in the village | 0:55:46 | 0:55:49 | |
and the neighbour wanted it for his car | 0:55:49 | 0:55:52 | |
and I think the only reason why the man who owned it sold it to us | 0:55:52 | 0:55:56 | |
is because he started to worry that this neighbour - | 0:55:56 | 0:55:59 | |
who he really disliked intensely - | 0:55:59 | 0:56:01 | |
would actually get it for his car. | 0:56:01 | 0:56:03 | |
So, he sold it to us and it did look like a triangle, like something that | 0:56:03 | 0:56:07 | |
nobody could do anything with. | 0:56:07 | 0:56:09 | |
And I suppose I have a good architect! | 0:56:09 | 0:56:11 | |
I sense about David that somehow, | 0:56:11 | 0:56:14 | |
despite his passion for architecture, | 0:56:14 | 0:56:19 | |
I think, sometimes I feel he's disappointed | 0:56:19 | 0:56:21 | |
with what architecture is achieving. | 0:56:21 | 0:56:23 | |
Disappointment is not a word that I would associate with him - | 0:56:23 | 0:56:27 | |
he's never a victim. | 0:56:27 | 0:56:28 | |
You know, he always feels huge responsibility for... | 0:56:28 | 0:56:32 | |
..doing something in the way in which he feels it could be done, | 0:56:35 | 0:56:38 | |
or at least attempting to. | 0:56:38 | 0:56:40 | |
I mean, he never feels it's done well enough. | 0:56:40 | 0:56:43 | |
That is sometimes nerve-racking. I mean he always, you know, | 0:56:43 | 0:56:46 | |
to say, "Not bad," is the height of praise. | 0:56:46 | 0:56:53 | |
So, what would David be if he wasn't an architect? | 0:56:53 | 0:56:55 | |
What would be the thing that would give him satisfaction? | 0:56:55 | 0:56:58 | |
Oh, God. I would think he probably would do anything, you know, | 0:56:58 | 0:57:01 | |
anything in a very similar way. | 0:57:01 | 0:57:04 | |
He's often said he'd love to be a chef. | 0:57:09 | 0:57:12 | |
Apparently, before he was an architect he thought of being a vet, | 0:57:12 | 0:57:15 | |
which I can't imagine at all. | 0:57:15 | 0:57:17 | |
He'd love to write novels. | 0:57:17 | 0:57:19 | |
SHE LAUGHS | 0:57:19 | 0:57:21 | |
But I think he likes to be an architect! | 0:57:21 | 0:57:23 | |
David's sailing can be a metaphor for a man that has... | 0:57:27 | 0:57:30 | |
..sailed his own course. | 0:57:32 | 0:57:34 | |
With a distant horizon - he was never one for short gains. | 0:57:34 | 0:57:38 | |
David became fanatic over the years about sailing, | 0:57:42 | 0:57:46 | |
the whole family did and it's sort of great, you know. | 0:57:46 | 0:57:49 | |
He takes people on the big boat. | 0:57:49 | 0:57:52 | |
The children grew up sailing here | 0:57:59 | 0:58:02 | |
and so I had to try and keep up with them. | 0:58:02 | 0:58:05 | |
So, I learnt sailing at the same time as they did. | 0:58:05 | 0:58:07 | |
Of course, they are natural sailors and I'm not. | 0:58:07 | 0:58:10 | |
They, you know, I can't really sail without them, we do it as a family. | 0:58:10 | 0:58:14 | |
Essentially, what we do here is to swap our anxieties from, | 0:58:25 | 0:58:32 | |
you know, the abstract ones to the physical ones, the real ones. | 0:58:32 | 0:58:35 | |
But then people say to me, | 0:58:35 | 0:58:37 | |
"Yeah, but why do you have 18 people in your house? | 0:58:37 | 0:58:40 | |
"Why do you bring all these people here?" | 0:58:40 | 0:58:43 | |
I mean, you know, we have something like 150 people over the summer | 0:58:43 | 0:58:47 | |
or some ridiculous number. | 0:58:47 | 0:58:48 | |
For me, that's the other aspect, | 0:58:48 | 0:58:51 | |
that the world isn't just the physical, | 0:58:51 | 0:58:54 | |
it's also sitting down with people | 0:58:54 | 0:58:57 | |
and you know communing and enjoying that. | 0:58:57 | 0:59:01 | |
I mean, these sound terribly cliched ideas. | 0:59:01 | 0:59:06 | |
Gabriel tells me that when you were designing this kitchen | 0:59:06 | 0:59:09 | |
you were obsessive and fanatical | 0:59:09 | 0:59:12 | |
about every single thing in this kitchen. | 0:59:12 | 0:59:16 | |
If you're using something all the time and I know how to use it, | 0:59:16 | 0:59:19 | |
I know all the problems of it, when I redesigned it | 0:59:19 | 0:59:22 | |
I tried to solve all the issues that were there before. | 0:59:22 | 0:59:26 | |
The dishwasher used to be this side, so people used to come and... | 0:59:26 | 0:59:30 | |
So, I try to keep a barrier here. | 0:59:30 | 0:59:32 | |
I think, unlike quite a lot of architects, | 0:59:32 | 0:59:35 | |
you absolutely believe that it is a collaboration | 0:59:35 | 0:59:39 | |
and it's a collaboration with the environment, with the... | 0:59:39 | 0:59:41 | |
Because - A: I just don't like fighting. | 0:59:41 | 0:59:44 | |
I'm not confrontational and therefore I find that difficult. | 0:59:44 | 0:59:47 | |
And secondly, I think, instead of you there and me there, | 0:59:47 | 0:59:50 | |
-we should both be looking at the same thing. -Yeah. | 0:59:50 | 0:59:54 | |
You want everybody... | 0:59:54 | 0:59:56 | |
If that's the problem and that's the issue, | 0:59:56 | 1:00:00 | |
we should all be looking at it. | 1:00:00 | 1:00:02 | |
It's sort of a white colour, it's quite a modern bridge. | 1:00:12 | 1:00:14 | |
-It's concrete. -Yeah, exactly. | 1:00:14 | 1:00:16 | |
So, you've not really chosen to reference the brick in any way. | 1:00:16 | 1:00:20 | |
If you use the brick of the building, | 1:00:20 | 1:00:22 | |
you're not going to convince anybody | 1:00:22 | 1:00:24 | |
that that piece is part of the original building. | 1:00:24 | 1:00:27 | |
It seems that for Chipperfield the conversation really never stops. | 1:00:27 | 1:00:32 | |
So, you have the bridge and the bridge comes... | 1:00:32 | 1:00:35 | |
how do you actually get through that? | 1:00:35 | 1:00:38 | |
So, we bring this floor lower, | 1:00:38 | 1:00:41 | |
to the same level of this cast corridor. | 1:00:41 | 1:00:43 | |
If we take all of this back of house stuff away... | 1:00:45 | 1:00:48 | |
..take away all of this crap - | 1:00:50 | 1:00:53 | |
and it will become a rather beautiful introduction - | 1:00:53 | 1:00:57 | |
and another dimension to the Royal Academy. | 1:00:57 | 1:00:59 | |
And it will open in our 250th anniversary, which is 2018. | 1:00:59 | 1:01:04 | |
The new master plan will bring | 1:01:07 | 1:01:09 | |
all the buildings of the Royal Academy together, | 1:01:09 | 1:01:12 | |
along with the tribes that inhabit them - | 1:01:12 | 1:01:15 | |
the curators, the art handlers, the students, the academicians - | 1:01:15 | 1:01:19 | |
and they've all got a point of view. | 1:01:19 | 1:01:23 | |
This conversation has been going on for seven years. | 1:01:23 | 1:01:26 | |
And if that's not enough of a challenge, this could well be. | 1:01:31 | 1:01:35 | |
David Chipperfield comes to New York every month to meet with his clients | 1:01:36 | 1:01:41 | |
at the Met led by its director Thomas Campbell. | 1:01:41 | 1:01:44 | |
For the Met in New York, | 1:01:46 | 1:01:48 | |
perhaps the most well-endowed museum on the planet, | 1:01:48 | 1:01:52 | |
to choose an architect from London is a fantastic achievement. | 1:01:52 | 1:01:56 | |
It has to be the moment when David can finally relax. | 1:01:56 | 1:02:01 | |
He's made it. | 1:02:01 | 1:02:04 | |
Well, maybe. | 1:02:04 | 1:02:06 | |
Going round and round this building, | 1:02:08 | 1:02:11 | |
why one likes so much of the 5th Avenue side of the building | 1:02:11 | 1:02:15 | |
and other parts, is that you get the feeling that the architecture | 1:02:15 | 1:02:19 | |
is somehow part of the gallery spaces. | 1:02:19 | 1:02:23 | |
Why Modern Contemporary is so disappointing is that you feel | 1:02:23 | 1:02:26 | |
you are in a world of dry wall and panelling. | 1:02:26 | 1:02:29 | |
You don't feel that there's anything there that wouldn't just be | 1:02:29 | 1:02:32 | |
blown away by a strong wind. | 1:02:32 | 1:02:35 | |
-Things don't feel like they're on purpose. -No, exactly. | 1:02:39 | 1:02:43 | |
-And there's a competition, rather than a reinforcement. -Yeah. | 1:02:43 | 1:02:48 | |
The Met extension is a big deal. | 1:02:49 | 1:02:51 | |
It involves demolishing the whole Modern and Contemporary Wing, | 1:02:51 | 1:02:55 | |
designed in the 1980s by Kevin Roache and Partners. | 1:02:55 | 1:03:00 | |
What Roache did was just kind of bang something very new against | 1:03:00 | 1:03:03 | |
something old and say, "Talk to each other." | 1:03:03 | 1:03:06 | |
But they never really did talk to each other very well. | 1:03:06 | 1:03:09 | |
So, my hope is that what David Chipperfield does is in this | 1:03:09 | 1:03:13 | |
newer tradition of juxtaposing | 1:03:13 | 1:03:17 | |
modern and traditional architecture | 1:03:17 | 1:03:20 | |
in a way that actually encourages them to speak, | 1:03:20 | 1:03:23 | |
rather than having them stare at each other not talking. | 1:03:23 | 1:03:26 | |
Conventionally, you put the desk there, the coat check | 1:03:27 | 1:03:31 | |
and all that stuff. | 1:03:31 | 1:03:32 | |
The stakes are high and New York cultural politics is a tough game. | 1:03:32 | 1:03:37 | |
A lot of people will need persuading. | 1:03:37 | 1:03:39 | |
That is David's vision, under the drape, | 1:03:43 | 1:03:45 | |
but we're not allowed to show the model. | 1:03:45 | 1:03:48 | |
The Met will need to tread carefully, this is sensitive ground. | 1:03:49 | 1:03:54 | |
Two major New York institutions have recently had to abandon | 1:03:54 | 1:03:58 | |
expansion plans because of public opposition. | 1:03:58 | 1:04:01 | |
David, let me take a snapshot. | 1:04:01 | 1:04:04 | |
-An Instagram moment. -Of you! | 1:04:04 | 1:04:06 | |
HE LAUGHS | 1:04:08 | 1:04:11 | |
It is extraordinary. | 1:04:11 | 1:04:13 | |
What you're getting here is not only the New York skyline | 1:04:13 | 1:04:17 | |
but the Met is known as the only building in Central Park. | 1:04:17 | 1:04:21 | |
Everybody always wanted the museum and the park to connect better, | 1:04:21 | 1:04:25 | |
maybe now it can happen. | 1:04:25 | 1:04:28 | |
And if its better than what we see there now, | 1:04:28 | 1:04:31 | |
I would expect - and in fact hope - | 1:04:31 | 1:04:33 | |
that the public response would be positive. | 1:04:33 | 1:04:36 | |
But all of that said, in New York you really can't predict anything. | 1:04:36 | 1:04:40 | |
It is a bit strange to knock down a building that isn't so old. | 1:04:42 | 1:04:47 | |
I mean, the people in the museum remember the opening. | 1:04:47 | 1:04:50 | |
I've been looking at this for a long time, | 1:04:54 | 1:04:56 | |
so I see a lot of different things. | 1:04:56 | 1:04:59 | |
Everyone presumes that as an architect, | 1:05:01 | 1:05:03 | |
you're used to visualising, | 1:05:03 | 1:05:04 | |
therefore you know what it's going to look like. | 1:05:04 | 1:05:08 | |
But, to be honest, it's never that easy. | 1:05:08 | 1:05:12 |