
OMA NY -- the New York office of OMA -- has just published its first monograph. It's called OMA NY: Search Term. For those of you who may be unfamiliar, Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) is an architecture firm that was founded by Rem Koolhaas in Rotterdam in 1975.
The firm is considered to be one of the most influential in the world because of their projects, the writing and thinking of Rem Koolhaas, and because of how many notable architects developed their craft under his tutelage.
When I was in architecture school, OMA was a firm that people wanted to work at and I had friends who did. You weren't paid very much from what I remember, but people put up with that because you wanted OMA on your resume and you wanted to learn things from Rem (apparently he's a big fan of Raisin Bran in the morning).
The New York office of OMA is run by Shohei Shigematsu and Jason Long who are both partners. The practice started out as an American outpost, but it has become more independent over the years and, from what I can gather, it now prides itself on having its own attitudes and views on architecture and urbanism.
This monograph is about that. Twenty radical projects from the firm's new guard. It also includes interviews from people like Virgil Abloh (Off-White). I don't have a copy yet, but if you're an architecture and urbanism person, you probably want this one on your bookshelf.
Image: Rizzoli
Back in 2008, Dasha Zhukova and Roman Abramovich hired starchitect Rem Koolhaas and founded a new contemporary art museum in Moscow called the Garage Museum. Supposedly this was the first philanthropic institution in Russia dedicated solely to contemporary art. (Here's a short video in case you're curious what it looks like.) After it opened, the founders apparently had a realization about the way people like to consume art. Yes, people like to look at art and ponder deep things. But it turns out that people also like just being around art and other art-like things. People started coming to the Garage Museum not only to view the various exhibitions, but also to just hang out.
This insight is now being used to inform a new real estate development company, also by Dasha, called Ray. The mission of the company is to create "architecturally-inspired homes at the intersection of art, culture, and community." Their first two projects are in Harlem and Fishtown, Philadelphia, but apparently they have something cooking in Miami as well. What Ray hopes to do is integrate art and culture in a more meaningful way through cultural programming, exhibitions in their buildings, artist studio spaces, and other creative ideas.
There's also an affordable housing angle. According to the WSJ, Ray's Harlem project is a joint venture with L+M Development Partners. I don't know any of the specifics of this deal, but I know L+M, because one of their founding partners, Ron Moelis, was a professor of mine in graduate school. L+M is focused on affordable and mixed-income housing and uses tools like the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) to make these sorts of projects financially feasible. They aren't, otherwise. I learned all about them in school and I always found it to be a great way to get the private sector building affordable housing.
"Art and culture, community, and accessible pricing."
Later this month a new exhibition will open at the Guggenheim Museum called Countryside, The Future. Produced by architect Rem Koolhaas and Samir Bantal (Director of AMO), the focus of the exhibition is on non-urban areas -- or, the 98% of the earth's surface not occupied by cities. The 21st century is being called an urban century. But the argument here is that "the countryside is now the site where the most radical, modern components of our civilisation are taking place." If you're going to be in New York, this one should be worth checking out. It's on my list. Here is a teaser video that was just released by the Guggenheim:
https://youtu.be/eTbH5RWb66o
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