For today, links to a selection of our interviews and encounters with architects down through the years. Most of them are from a while back. In some cases, they're from a time before a young architect's most famous buildings came into being. In others, they show a seasoned architect at the time of the opening of a major project. Whatever the context, each interview reveals different aspects of the thinking of some of most talented architects to work in Chicago.
Rem Koolhaas [2003] - “We're not trying to emulate the current mess. We are just as interested in the sublime . . .”
Carol Ross Barney [2004]: “When people comment on buildings, they're really talking about their comfort level . . . What they're really saying is ‘It's nothing I haven't seen before, so its OK with me!’”
John Ronan [2004]: “You don't see many great spaces anymore. What's the great space that's been built in Chicago in the past 25 years?”
Tod Williams and Bille Tsien [2012] “It really stems from a very deep desire to try to make the world better, which is both naive, but also very strong in what we do, a motivator in what we do.”
Jeanne Gang [2004]: “When we make form, we're thinking about how we can make the identity fluctuate. It doesn't have to be one thing all the time.”
Helmut Jahn [2003]: “Everything is left only as much as it needs to be . . . ”
Saturday Retro: The Architects Speak!
Billie Tsien
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Carol Ross Barney
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Chicago architect interviews
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Helmut Jahn
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Jeanne Gang
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John Ronan
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Rem Koolhaas
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Tod Williams
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