COMMENT / NIC MONISSE
Elementary solutions
The architects and journalists currently in Venice (including yours truly) are hoping that the weather stays kind for the Architecture Biennale’s preview days, which run until the grand opening this Saturday. But the city will be hoping that the long-term forecast is favourable too.
After all, buildings and urban centres must be continually adapted to prevailing site conditions. And there are few places in the world where this relationship is as pronounced as it is in Venice. Built on sandbanks in the middle of a coastal lagoon, the city symbolises, according to Unesco, “the people’s victorious struggle against the elements”, with its built environment constantly battling rising tides, stifling air pollution and slowly sinking ground.
It’s only appropriate then that this year’s biennale will have exhibitions addressing architecture’s relationship with immediate surroundings. Denmark, for instance, will look to foster a feeling of connectedness with water, encouraging architects to build with it, rather than against. Catalonia will develop this idea by showing how air-pollution mapping in Barcelona could shape the city to give it cleaner air. And the United Arab Emirates will unveil a new kind of cement inspired by the geology of the country’s salt flats.
But in the lead up to the festival’s public opening on Saturday, what lessons do each of these offer Venice? Perhaps simply that the city’s battle with water levels, air pollution and sinking soils shouldn’t be viewed as a struggle in which humans need to triumph over the elements. Rather, it’s a situation best tackled by embracing them and unpacking their inherent potential. As for tonight, well, maybe I just need to embrace the prospect of rain and carry an umbrella.