COMMENT / NOLAN GILES
More haste
By the time architect Karim Nader had finished explaining the difficulties that his home city of Beirut had gone through in the past year, including an economic collapse, protests on the streets and the port explosion that brought the place to its knees, I’d forgotten that it had also suffered through the pandemic – until he reminded me of that too. Yet, in conversation for a forthcoming edition of Monocle on Design, his tone remained upbeat. Brimming with the resourceful attitude that seems to define this city’s population, he took me through a project, funded by the Swiss Agency for Development and Co-operation, to rehabilitate 10 Beirut schools that had been laid to waste by the blast.
In dealing with this emergency, he had to design without hesitation. The pursuit of perfection that tends to define the ambitions of architects was thrown out of the window and in its place came a preference for productivity. “We learned to be quick decision-makers,” he said. “It’s a completely different approach to masterminding an architectural gem.” With this mindset, the repairs were done much faster than anticipated. Nader was able to go back to the project’s backers and ask for more funds to enhance the schools – to add rooftop greenhouses and better facilities – to which they agreed. Nader adds that this reactive approach to fixing the built environment in Beirut has been mirrored by many of his contemporaries, and great work is being done citywide.
In an industry that too often gets bogged down in defining the details, there’s much to learn here. It shouldn’t take a catastrophe to make us weigh up actually how quickly designers can do good work. Sometimes, simply getting stuck in to solve a problem and then refining the nuances at the end is the best approach.