Moshe Safdie Introduces Memoir at Skirball Cultural Center
20 January 2023 by Moshe Safdie & Associates
Panel discussion with Frances Anderton in celebration of Safdie's memoir release
Moshe Safdie joined in conversation with Frances Anderton, acclaimed reporter covering the architecture and cityscape of Los Angeles since 1987, to discuss his works and new memoir If Walls Could Speak at Skirball Cultural Center, a Safdie Architects design.
“Many visiting the Skirball Cultural Center have referred to it as an oasis. Skirball was built in four stages over a period of twenty-five years. Jewish history and philanthropy gave it context and life, and continue to do so, but it has become a place for all of Los Angeles,” writes Moshe Safdie in his memoir “If Walls Could Speak: My Life in Architecture.”
Jessie Kornberg, CEO and President of Skirball Cultural Center, opens the evening.
Moshe Safdie in conversation with architecture critic Frances Anderton.
Photo credit: (C)2022 Halban Photography
About Frances Anderton
Referred to as the “voice of design for the city” by Metropolis magazine, Frances Anderton has been covering reports on Los Angeles' landscape since 1987. She is the former host of the beloved program DnA: Design and Architecture, which aired on LA’s local NPR affiliate KCRW from 2002 until 2020. In this role, Anderton became a trusted and essential chronicler of the city’s development, from the LACMA redesign to the transformation of the L.A. River. Previous roles as editor of LA Architect and producer for the influential KCRW programs Which Way, L.A.? and To the Point have further grounded Frances’ understanding of the city and contributed to the dedicated following she’s developed over the years.
Moshe Safdie & Associates
Architect
Safdie Architects is a design studio driven by a spirit of innovation and idealism, founded upon the guiding principles that architecture should be inherently timeless, connected to nature, and profoundly humane.Our design philosophy is rooted in Moshe Safdie’s powerful metaphor: “For Everyone a Garden”, the beautifully simple notion that sees architecture as a generous act of connecting us to nature and creating meaningful spaces of community that serve as catalysts for vibrant public life. While globally active, the practice is intentional in its response to local context, maintaining a nimble and bespoke approach to delivering some of the world’s most imaginative commissions across diverse scales, geographies, and typologies.Safdie Architects is an extended family of partners and colleagues, working collaboratively, with a shared spirit and an uncommon skill in transforming the firm’s humanistic ideals into reality.How We WorkAt the heart of every design is a consideration of the project’s larger civic role. We have been deeply influenced by, and honored to work among, the widest range of communities and contexts. The buildings we design have become beloved resources for and symbols to the communities that they serve and, in many cases, have become regional and national landmarks.Our process blurs the boundaries between urban design and architecture. With the understanding that architecture and planning should work in tandem to preserve the human scale and sense of well-being, we’ve proven around the world that high density is not contrary to high amenities of shared gardens, open communal spaces, and access to nature and light. We do not specialize in one building type. We have extensive experience designing diverse buildings across typologies, including museums, cultural centers, libraries, residential developments, mixed-use centers and transportation hubs. We are able to effectively work on multiple design projects simultaneously because we are unusually nimble and flexible as a firm, adapting quickly without strict specialization. This open structure allows great flexibility and capacity to undertake a wide variety of projects of varying size, typology and complexity.We evolve an aesthetic in dialogue with the geographic location, cultural context and heritage, and particular nature of each building’s program. This results in a particular aesthetic that is unique and appropriate to each client and assignment.Our centralized design process allows us to undertake some of the largest and most complex projects in the world while also maintaining a personalized approach. Over 50 years, we have developed a personalized and hands-on approach to design, which starts with the creation of a core project team. Each project is served by a group of project architects directed by a single Principal, ensuring that the design intent is maintained and relationships are held from concept through completion.We leverage an expanded team of specialists and technical experts with whom we have been collaborating together for decades. Our professional network includes the world’s leading landscape architects, engineers, lighting designers, acousticians, graphic and signage designers and a full range of other specialists. We believe that a project’s success is founded on this collaborative and integrated team approach.Architectural model-making is at the center of our process. We start each design with scale models of the site and its surroundings, often working at different scales to test ideas and continually assess the project’s physical and spatial evolution together with our clients. We find that working with physical models result in the best understanding by the client team and minimizes the surprises that occur in later phases of the project. We employ an in-house team of expert model-makers who work side by side with our architects throughout the design stages. We match the traditional mode of making architectural models with the use of the most advanced digital computing tools. Our designs are informed by industry, and by an understanding of construction technology in the locales in which we work. We often begin our dialogue with industry professionals at early stages of our work. Our team understands that high-quality construction is best achieved by engaging issues of constructability during the design stages and find that one of the best tools to test our ideas are full-scale construction mock-ups. Working together with the builders, we review building assemblies and refine construction details concurrently as we document the project. This allows us to directly engage ideas together with our clients and adjust the design, often to the benefit to cut cost and recognize time-saving techniques before construction begins.Model ShopSince the founding of the office in 1964, an integrated team of expert model-makers has been essential to the collaborative exploration of design. While the technical tools may have changed, the fundamental role of the physical model, to explore ideas in three-dimensional form, has endured. The Safdie Model Shop uses every medium and tool, from Lego, clay, paper, foam and wood, to custom 3D printed and thermo-vacuum formed plastics and polymers. At the earliest stages of the design process, models are built to test scale, volumetric massing, materiality and site constraints. During the Construction Documentation stage, models and mock-ups test details at full scale. The powerful new digital tools used throughout the design process has not lessened the dependency on physical models, rather these act to complement the model studies. Models take a central role to the design discussion and are part of every project meeting with our clients.John Hill, correspondent for World-Architects, reviews how models not only convey the formal complexity of our buildings, but also their sensitivity to site and context. Download the report he filed below.