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  he  High Line is an abandoned  1.5-mile  stretch of overgrown railroad viaduct that runs from  the Meatpacking  district  to Hell's Kitchen  — and straight into  the imaginations  o f a grow- ing number of New Yorkers who see t as proof  that,  even in an urban  still  work. (1) The  explicit coup by  Feld Operations  in winning its second major urban d esign competition within t he  span of  four  years in New York City  (the  irm  also  won the  Fresh Kills Landfill  to  Landscape End- Use  Master  Plan  Competition) underscor es  several  points  a ll at once regarding the present-day prospects for new urban landscape. First and foremost is the paucity of uncontam- inated open space in the contemporary  city  for new  parks,  while  at the  same time urban brown- fields continue to come up for redevelopment. In the  case of the High Line (an ageing elevated rail bed  spanning 22 blocks and running  just  west of Tenth Avenue, from  34th Street,  south  to  Gan- sevoort Street), the coordinates for context ualiz- ing such a project are quite literally off the map in the sense that this  stretch  of  concrete  and  steel runs as  much through  irreal  as  well  as real  terri- tory. Passing through  the  heart  of  Chelsea's fashionable arts district, and  situated in a portion of Manhattan that  still  retains an urban industrial edginess, he High Line is unnaturally given to  acts of design  provocation.  The  four finalist  master plan teams (selected from 52  entries) represent various aspects  of the  professional  colo- nization of a fashi onable and somewhat profit able sub-genre  within urban design  -  that  is, the  re-appropriation  of  spent infrastructure. The  composition  of  each team, incorporating an  array of technical and  creative sub-consultants,  suggests that the significance of the High Line lies as  much  in its incommensurate, cinematic qualities  (a strip of  urban  celluloid') as in its normative iconic status  as  decaying urban infrastructure. It is not surprising, then, to find in  several  of the  schemes a  ver- sion of montage utilized (as n the  films  of  Eisenstein (or  Greenaway) to register multiple frames of reference and multiple narratives. The Weak design  is  often the  result  of  design  b y committee,  or abdication on  t he  part  of the  party ultimately responsible fo r making  sense  of the conflicting  claims  of vested  interests... Holl- and  Hadid-led teams, n particular, indulge in lacerating imagery, fusing  time  and  space through  iconic  intensity  -  i.e.. a  type of architectural gesturalism h at  implies  through  snapshots a  criti- cally-inflected assault on present-day urbanism. Yet the winning Field Operations  Hadid or  Holl  plans, as t is miles  from  the  TerraGRAM  plan. The  Terra- GRAM plan, while citing Archigram  and Robert Smithson  as  spiritual forebears,  makes  ittle  headway  n  actual program  and  much noise about open-ended planning  with  unfortunate swipes at formalism (for m obsess ion') .  It is the  rhetoric  of the  team  that  tells  the  greater tale insofar as the principal excuses for temporizing (e.g., deferring to  future  processes,  inclusive  of  public charrettes)  represent what  i s past  versus what  is upon us. Weak design is  often  the result of design by committee, or  abdication  on the  part  of the  party ultimately responsible or making sense of the  con- flicting claims of vested interests ('shareholders')  and the  abstract 'public'. Whereas the  four  High Line teams have,  in several instances,  identical sub-consultants  -  part  and  par- cel  of the game today in assembling he large  inter- disciplinary teams required - it is he  distinct differences between  the  lead players that  mark this competition  as a signal  event on the horizon of cont emporary urban design. As a result, the High Line represents a type of suture between the recent past and the  near future, both in terms of design and  process. Ever since the Pare de la Villette competition  (Paris,  1982-1983),  the archi- tectonic 'anti-nature' of new urban  parks has  generally foregrounded an  anti-pastoral, anti-picturesque anima  -  notwithstanding  th e Mau/Koolhaas stab at pastoral  scenography for  Pare Downsview  Park, Toronto. (2) While nature may be fashionable  again,  today, it remains nonetheless  chained to the prison-house wall.  Past representations of this mxed  legacy, this proverbial tug-of-war between nature and  cul ture (now typically  dismiss ed as a  useless dialectical exercise), nclude the  innumerable waterfront redevelopment schemes  of the  1980s  and 199 0s, at whi ch  Hargreaves  and Van  Valkenburgh  Associates - Field Operations  and  Diller Scofidio +  Renfro with Olafur Eliasson,  Piet Oudolf, and Biiro  Happold OPPOSITE PAGE tvent perspective ABOVE Grasslands •fIGHT  ANDBELOW Partial  competition  board indicating various options for different sections of  theline PT 0 :  100 PLAINS 40 : 60 BRIDGE 50 : 50 MOUND 55 : 45 RAMP 60 : 40 FLYOVER 100 : 10 TfffflTT  ME DOW WTLAND  t WOODLAND TWCKET MXED PERtWUL  MEADOW YOUHG WOODLAND 12 COMPETITIONS  Winter 2004/2005

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  • T he High Line is an abandoned 1.5-mile stretch of overgrownrailroad viaduct that runs from the Meatpacking district toHell's Kitchen and straight into the imaginations of a grow-ing number of New Yorkers who see it as proof that, even in an urbanjungle, the forces of nature are still at work."(1)

    The explicit coup by Field Operations in winning its secondmajor urban design competition within the span of four years in NewYork City (the firm also won the Fresh Kills Landfill to Landscape End-Use Master Plan Competition) underscores several points all at onceregarding the present-day prospects for new urban landscape.

    First and foremost is the paucity of uncontam-inated open space in the contemporary city fornew parks, while at the same time urban brown-fields continue to come up for redevelopment. Inthe case of the High Line (an ageing elevated railbed spanning 22 blocks and running just west ofTenth Avenue, from 34th Street, south to Gan-sevoort Street), the coordinates for contextualiz-ing such a project are quite literally off the map inthe sense that this stretch of concrete and steelruns as much through irreal as well as real terri-tory.

    Passing through the heart of Chelsea's fashionable arts district,and situated in a portion of Manhattan that still retains an urbanindustrial edginess, the High Line is unnaturally given to acts ofdesign provocation. The four finalist master plan teams (selectedfrom 52 entries) represent various aspects of the professional colo-nization of a fashionable and somewhat profitable sub-genre withinurban design - that is, the re-appropriation of spent infrastructure.The composition of each team, incorporating an array of technicaland creative sub-consultants, suggests that the significance of theHigh Line lies as much in its incommensurate, cinematic qualities (astrip of urban "celluloid') as in its normative iconic status as decayingurban infrastructure.

    It is not surprising, then, to find in several of the schemes a ver-sion of montage utilized (as in the films of Eisenstein (or Greenaway)to register multiple frames of reference and multiple narratives. The

    Weak design is oftenthe result of design bycommittee, or abdicationon the part of the partyultimately responsiblefor making sense of theconflicting claims ofvested interests...

    Holl- and Hadid-led teams, in particular, indulge in laceratingimagery, fusing time and space through iconic intensity - i.e.. a typeof architectural gesturalism that implies through snapshots a criti-cally-inflected assault on present-day urbanism. Yet the winningField Operations proposal is significantly different than the Hadidor Holl plans, as it is miles from the TerraGRAM plan. The Terra-GRAM plan, while citing Archigram and Robert Smithson as spiritualforebears, makes little headway in actual program and much noiseabout open-ended planning with unfortunate swipes at formalism('form obsession'). It is the rhetoric of the team that tells the greater

    tale insofar as the principal excuses for temporizing(e.g., deferring to future processes, inclusive of publiccharrettes) represent what is past versus what isupon us. Weak design is often the result of design bycommittee, or abdication on the part of the partyultimately responsible for making sense of the con-flicting claims of vested interests ('shareholders') andthe abstract 'public'.Whereas the four High Line teams have, in severalinstances, identical sub-consultants - part and par-cel of the game today in assembling the large inter-disciplinary teams required - it is the distinct

    differences between the lead players that mark this competition as asignal event on the horizon of contemporary urban design. As aresult, the High Line represents a type of suture between the recentpast and the near future, both in terms of design and process. Eversince the Pare de la Villette competition (Paris, 1982-1983), the archi-tectonic 'anti-nature' of new urban parks has generally foregroundedan anti-pastoral, anti-picturesque anima - notwithstanding theMau/Koolhaas stab at pastoral scenography for Pare Downsview Park,Toronto. (2)

    While nature may be fashionable again, today, it remainsnonetheless chained to the prison-house wall. Past representations ofthis mixed legacy, this proverbial tug-of-war between nature and cul-ture (now typically dismissed as a useless dialectical exercise), includethe innumerable waterfront redevelopment schemes of the 1980s and1990s, at which Hargreaves and Van Valkenburgh Associates

    -

    Field Operations and DillerScofidio + Renfro withOlafur Eliasson, PietOudolf, and Biiro Happold

    OPPOSITE PAGE

    tvent perspectiveABOVE

    GrasslandsfIGHT AND BELOW

    Partial competition boardindicating various options fordifferent sections of theline

    PIT0% : 100%

    PLAINS40% : 60%

    BRIDGE50% : 50%

    MOUND55% : 45%

    RAMP60% : 40%

    FLYOVER100% : 10%

    iTfffflTT

    ULL MEADOW WtTLANDAlt*

    WOODLAND TWCKET MIXED PERtWUL MEADOW YOUHG WOODLAND

    12 COMPETITIONS Winter 2004/2005

  • 14

    excelled. Thus, even though both firms are tobe found here, we also are fortunate to findZaha Hadid and Steven Holl in commandof two of the four High Line competitionteams. Their presence more than proves thepoint that multiple agendas are at stake: 1/formally addressing the aforementioned issueof diminishing returns in public open spaceplanning; 2/ the necessity of highly interdis-ciplinary teams to tackle the unresolvedstandoff between so-called formal (active)and informal (passive) urban park design; 3/countering the lead role played by economicdeterminism in urban design; 4/ bypassingthe entirely ludicrous arguments regardingnature versus the city; and 5/ overcoming the1990s fetishization of crumbling infrastruc-ture as a type of sublime surplus 'after mod-ernism' and after Robert Smithson.(3)

    If proposals to bury the High Line or theBrighton West Pier in surreal and simulatednatural systems are in fact signs of some-thing else dawning in the imaginativelabyrinth of urban design (perhaps a tilttoward ?purposeless beauty?), such projectsmay also indicate that it is again acceptablefor an urban park (naturalistic or otherwise)to do virtually nothing much at all.

    The Hadid-led team is exemplary in itsapproach to re-envisioning such 'useless'form; indeed, it might be accused of 'formobsession.' Yet it is this very obsession thatmakes the plan compelling. It is Hadid's openthinking (thinking the complex, versus think-ing the reduction or the reaction) that isresponsible for her ascendancy this pastdecade, and it accounts for the seductivefolds, twists, and interweavings of the team'sproposal. As in most of the plans presented,Hadid et alia envision the terminus of the lineat Gansevoort Street as a type of elevatedPiccadilly Circus or event space. Hadid hasretained the essence of the radical construc-tivist and supremacist quest for evocativeform while adding the topological inversions(twists and turns) that have recently dis-placed purely orthogonal, architectonic sys-tems in instances where architecturebecomes site.

    The presence of Olafur Eliasson on theField Operations/Oilier Scofido + Renfroteam is a sign that in compiling its proposalField Operations looked straight into thelooking-glass of present-day installation artfor inspiration and talent. Eliasson's 'WeatherProject' at the Tate Modern drew recordcrowds in 2003-2004 with its simulation of asun shining through an artificial haze withinthe great void of the Turbine Hall.(4) What isafoot today, inclusive of topological andmorphogenetic extravagance (as was on dis-play in the architecture section at the 2004Venice Biennale), is a powerful re-animationof all the forces bracketed by the abstract

    COMPETITIONS Winter 2004/2005

    and functionalist bias of reductive architec-tural high modernism. Field Operations has,therefore, 'arrived' in the sense that theyacknowledge that the now past, 1990s neo-modernist fantasies regarding urban land-scape as synonymous with infrastructure (orjunkspace) are no longer quite good enough.And, as Fresh Kills proves, urban ecology is asmuch a spectral thing as it is a scientificundertaking.

    Brownfields are by naturehorrific sites given to thespecular, form-haunted ges-tures of art + landscape +archi tecture, a new-foundhybrid sensibility that doesnot merely fetishize dysfunc-tional and decaying urbansystems but also cr i t ica l lyengages what is wrong, whathas gone wrong, and why itwent wrong in the first place.Within the Field Operations plan, urban sim-ulations or unnatural passages quite literallyflow through the 1.45 miles of the elevatedviaduct, each portion mutating in relation orcontradistinction to what is above, below oralongside the rail bed. The transformationalgrammar of the compositional 'field' em-braces a form of urban ecology that is asmuch an artform as a science, wherein theirreal returns.

    This return, presently well underway inthe fine arts as an affective, post-metaphysi-cal Sublime, is now making inroads in land-scape + architecture, or in the increasinglysignificant instances where landscape and

    It is Hadid's openthinking (thinkingthe complex, versusthinking the reduc-tion or the reaction)that is responsible forher ascendance thispast decade.

    Finalist

    Zaha Hadid Archi-tects with BalmoriAssociates, Skid-more, Owings ftMerrill LLP, andstudio MDA

    LEFT

    Passageway to rampOPPOSITE, ABOVE

    rampOPPOSITE MIDDLEperspectiveOPPOSITE, BELOW

    birdseye view of ter-minal point

    architecture overlap and merge. Reloadingtranscendence in immanence is the newgame.

    Steven Holl's phenomenologically-informed investigations of architectural miseen scene (e.g., Kiasma, Helsinki, 1998, w/Juhani Pallasmaa) and his poetic turns into'parallax' and 'intertwining' (the topological-phenomenal intervals between things) has

    led, in turn, to a rich panoplyof projects that embrace eyeand mind, body and spirit,earth and sky. Here, where helooks out his office windoweveryday to see an actuallyexisting metaphor for all ofthat, he has also found anactually existing site for hisexperiments in form to takewing. The chief concern forthe Holl team seems to be topuncture, perforate and oth-

    erwise accentuate what moves above, belowand through the High Line corridor. Whilemany vignettes within the four proposals dojust this, Holl's plan is essentially theatricaland closer to Matta-Clark's legacy of slicinginto things than the TerraGRAM plan is,despite claims otherwise, to the phantas-matic and apocalyptic 'ruins' ironicized andromanticized by Robert Smithson.

    While Field Operations has managed tofold into its purview the manifold contin-gencies that come to reside in urban 'fields'without converting such things of 'purpose-less beauty' to mere datascapes or informa-tion flows - two slightly derelict strategies

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