Charlie Rose - The Future of Architecture

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An hour about the future of architecture with:
Peter Eisenman, Architect/Eisenman Architects
Jay Chaterjee, University of Cincinnati Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, (R)President, Ohio Senate
David Childs, Architect/Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP
Henry N. Cobb, Architect/Pei Cobb Freed & Partners
Michael Graves, Architect/Michael Graves Architect
Charles Gwathmey, Architect/ Gwathmey Seigel & Associates
Richard Meier, Architect/Richard Meier & Partners
Stanley Tigerman, Architect/Tigerman McCurry Architects
Sanford Kwinter, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Ralph Lerner, Princeton University
Greg Lynn, Columbia University
Donna Robertson, Illinois Institute of Technology
Bernard Tschumi, Columbia...

Channel: News & Politics
Uploaded: August 25, 2007 at 12:54 am
Author: CharlieRose

Length: 00:55:13
Rating: 4.57
Views: 41776

Tags: charlie_rose tvshow charlie_rose_archive

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Video Comments:
persepolis80 (November 29, 2008 at 11:09 pm)
Eisenman is crazy, I cant understand what his talking about. I went to his office in NYC and he was giving his lecture to his office, people were falling asleep. I was praying he would stop talking. His models and working models are so old school, they were all in chipboards. Any who, he is still a Starchitect.
ogfunk187 (November 27, 2008 at 3:40 pm)
I would'nt get a man who wears a bowtie to design anything for me.
tomfoxbenton1986 (November 18, 2008 at 3:54 am)
Peter Eisenman is full of nonsense. He is a terrible influence on architecture. You wouldn't ignore history 'the reservoir of human experience' when designing art for human experience, unless you are an arrogant prat.

His egotistical chat about creating purely spacial experience, has created an architecture that is actually silent. Whatever space and time mean, place and occasion mean more. please take not Eisenman
georgewu5 (September 20, 2008 at 9:30 am)
learnv: Le Cobusier's " Toward An Architecture" "...Auguste Perret's Tower-city (1922)sketched but not planned bridges link the towers to one another.(P.126)--- "for what purpose?"--- The reporter of L'Intransigeant argued. But there was no 9/11 then. Now, it is about time to look into what they thought about and did not have been examined yet.Instead of wasting the resources to build rotating towers,etc., why don't we do something wonderful to the world, save the green space....dancewu(dot)net
rageofsalvation (September 19, 2008 at 2:50 am)
Such a brilliant knowledge.
Just what i needed to know.
Thank you Charlie Rose!
hosweetim89 (September 15, 2008 at 1:27 pm)
I think its safe to assume that the future would be the introduction of Green Buildings. As people are now more concerned about the planet's health there is more emphasis on plants and energy consumption. I look forward to seeing buildings with some kind of unique form that blends in nature with structural design.
georgewu5 (September 15, 2008 at 10:56 pm)
hosweetim89: if you go to my web-site, you will see the future of the housing will be like the Great wall of China, "Great Wall Village" I called it, to be built over the million miles of existing highways with sound and fume insulation....To save green space!--- dancewu(dot)net
hosweetim89 (September 15, 2008 at 12:39 pm)
It's like hearing a conversation with ascended beings. Everything just falls in place.
LandosMomma (August 31, 2008 at 3:04 am)
I think that this instills a great insight into architecture.. I love seeing "intelligent" people debate with eacother.. some of these people are just arguing to argue.. and some are only declaring points with questions.. in other words :I just want to hear myself talk, and I have no idea where I am going with this".. I found this as a result of potential persuit of future in architecture.
richardtraylor (August 22, 2008 at 6:12 pm)
Read "Choosing a Skyline:How intelligently are we recognizing urban context as a feature of environmental responsibility?" by Nicholas J. Slabbert -- it's available online on the "Virtual Adjacency" website. (You can also look it up in the British Library's list of online articles by N.J. Slabbert.)