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Architect Drawings : A Selection of Sketches by World Famous Architects Through History

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Safdie, Moshe (1938)<br />

Exploration Place sketch, Exploration Place Science Museum, Wichita, Kansas<br />

Beginning his architectural career with the celebrated master plan for the 1967 <strong>World</strong> Exhibition and<br />

Habitat ’67, Moshe Safdie is an international figure in contemporary architecture, completing projects<br />

such as museums, airports, educational institutions, federal courthouses, performing arts centers, and<br />

libraries.<br />

Moshe Safdie was born in Haifa, Israel. After moving to Canada with his family, he studied architecture<br />

at McGill University. Upon graduating in 1961, he apprenticed with Louis I. Kahn in Philadelphia.<br />

He then moved to Montreal, where he became involved with the <strong>World</strong> Exhibition. In 1970, he established<br />

a Jerusalem branch <strong>of</strong>fice participating in the rebuilding <strong>of</strong> that city. There he was responsible for<br />

major segments <strong>of</strong> the restoration <strong>of</strong> the Old City and the reconstruction <strong>of</strong> the new center, along with<br />

projects such as the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum and the Rabin Memorial Center.<br />

Safdie has taught at Yale, McGill, and Ben Gurion universities and was Director <strong>of</strong> the Urban<br />

Design Program and the Ian Woodner Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Architect</strong>ure and Urban Design at the Harvard<br />

Graduate School <strong>of</strong> Design. He maintains <strong>of</strong>fices in Boston, Jerusalem, and Toronto. A few <strong>of</strong> his<br />

most renown projects include: Quebec Museum <strong>of</strong> Civilization, Vancouver Library Square, Telfair<br />

Museum <strong>of</strong> Art in Savannah, Khalsa Heritage Memorial Complex, United States Institute <strong>of</strong> Peace<br />

Headquarters in Washington, D.C., and the National Campus for the Archaeology <strong>of</strong> Israel in<br />

Jerusalem. Safdie has published many books and been the recipient <strong>of</strong> numerous awards including the<br />

Gold Medal <strong>of</strong> the Royal <strong>Architect</strong>ural Institute <strong>of</strong> Canada. 27<br />

This sketch (Figure 8.22) represents an early conceptual design for the Exploration Place Science<br />

Center and Children’s Museum in Wichita, Kansas. The project is a one hundred square foot building<br />

<strong>of</strong> galleries, theaters, and exhibit space. It is located in downtown Wichita where the Arkansas<br />

and Little Arkansas rivers meet. Constructed <strong>of</strong> toroid geometries that form a series <strong>of</strong> concave<br />

ro<strong>of</strong>s, the exhibition building becomes an ‘island’ extending into the river and, in contrast, the<br />

‘land’ building has been inserted deep into the earth.<br />

The sketch shows a series <strong>of</strong> unarticulated geometric shapes perched on a dark body <strong>of</strong> wavy lines.<br />

Safdie writes that this sketch ‘was done at the earliest design phases in which I had concluded that the<br />

museum should, in part, be an island within the river, expressive <strong>of</strong> the component parts <strong>of</strong> the individual<br />

galleries that make up the museum.’ The image appears to capture Safdie’s first thoughts. Unsure <strong>of</strong><br />

the shape the future structure would take, the sketch uses light lines to give the gesture <strong>of</strong> what the<br />

building will be. Because <strong>of</strong> the abstract form, he filled the shapes with color to articulate volumes, most<br />

likely to begin to view the combination <strong>of</strong> parts. The façades have not yet been given windows or<br />

materiality, but instead convey the shadows <strong>of</strong> planes. At this point the pieces could not be viewed as a<br />

building, but a suggestion that assisted Safdie in exploring the next iteration.<br />

Rendered with ink and either chalk or crayon, in values <strong>of</strong> blue and tan, the lines are expressive<br />

and brief; few strokes <strong>of</strong> the pen outline a possible building. The river in the foreground is the most<br />

worked feature, showing waves and areas <strong>of</strong> deep blue. Sensitive to the site, Safdie has chosen to view<br />

the building from the river. This emphasizes the strong relationship the building has with its site, and<br />

is most likely part <strong>of</strong> the impetus for the design conception.<br />

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