LOS ANGELES, CA.- The Getty Foundation today announced $1.66 million in architectural conservation grants dedicated to twelve significant 20th century buildings as part of its Keeping It Modern initiative. Among this years most recognizable projects is Germanys Bauhaus Building, the revered Dessau structure designed by architect Walter Gropius, who incorporated design features that would ultimately become synonymous with modern architecture around the world. Since its inception in 2014, Keeping It Modern has supported 45 international conservation projects that collectively point to the importance of research and planning for the preservation of modern architectural heritage.
The twelve projects (full project summaries available here) selected to receive funding this year represent the work of innovative architects who pushed the boundaries of design and construction materials, including the Coventry Cathedral, Coventry, England (architect: Sir Basil Spence); Boston City Hall, Boston, Massachusetts (architects: Kallmann, McKinnell, & Knowles); Sidi Harazem Thermal Bath Complex, Sidi Harazem, Morocco (architect: Jean-François Zevaco); Yoyogi National Gymnasium, Tokyo, Japan (architect: Kenzo Tange); Faculty of Architecture Building, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey (architects: Altuğ and Behruz Çinici); Museu de Arte de São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand (MASP), São Paulo, Brazil (architect: Lina Bo Bardi); St Peters Seminary, Glasgow, Scotland (architects: Andy MacMillan and Isi Metzstein of Gillespie, Kidd & Coia architectural practice); Government Museum and Art Gallery, Chandigarh, India (architect: Le Corbusier); Price Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma (architect: Frank Lloyd Wright); Melnikov House, Moscow, Russia (architect: Konstantin Melinkov); Bauhaus Building in Dessau, Germany (architect: Walter Gropius); and Stadio Flaminio, Rome, Italy (architect: Pier Luigi Nervi).
Over the past three years, we have given 45 Keeping It Modern grants in 22 countries, and we bring together experts working on the conservation projects each summer to share their findings. Together our colleagues are building a critical body of knowledge for the stewardship of modern buildings, says Deborah Marrow, director of the Getty Foundation. This years 12 new projects, along with prior grants for landmarks all over the world, will provide models for the protection of modern architecture for future generations.
The Bauhaus Building is a sleek steel, concrete, and glass structure that was made to house the most progressive school of art and architecture of the early 20th century. This UNESCO World Heritage Site is both a clear statement of Walter Gropiuss visionary aesthetic and a monument to some of the 20th centurys most influential artists, architects, and designers. As part of the Keeping It Modern grant, experts will conduct new research on the buildings signature features, such as its glass curtain walls and original paint colors, and then combine their findings with the sites extensive historical and technical records to create a systematic conservation management plan.
A new theme evident in many of the 2017 grants is the pressing need to update 20th century buildings to meet 21st century demands. In the case of Yoyogi National Gymnasium in Tokyo, this site of Asias first Olympic Games in 1964 designed by Pritzker-Prize winning architect Kenzo Tange will once again be put to use for indoor sports competitions during the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2020. In order to ensure that any interventions on the site meet heritage as well as safety standards, the Japan Sport Council plans to work with a project team that includes distinguished architects, scholars, engineers, and advisors, including Fumihiko Maki, Kenzo Tanges student and a 1993 Pritzker Prize winner.
Additionally, Boston City Hall, with its Brutalist municipal architecture, faces a challenge to protect the buildings original design amidst necessary interventions, including honoring the idea of openness and accessibility in todays security-conscious world. In Morocco, the Sidi Harazem thermal baths represent an opportunity to convert an ancient spring and its surrounding complex into a thriving oasis for Moroccan citizens and international tourists.
This years grants also include the first project in Russia, a country that contributed greatly to the international development of modern architecture. Moscows Melnikov House is an excellent example of Soviet avant-garde architecture and is notable for its structural ingenuity. Built as two intersecting cylinders that are free of interior walls, the houses unconventional style reflects the boundary-pushing vision of architect Konstantin Melnikov, who designed the house as his studio and family residence. The Getty grant comes at a time of renewed national interest in conservation planning as the buildings stewards prepare to increase visitorship to the home, and the resulting conservation plan can serve as a model for the preservation of other avant-garde monuments from the 1920s-1930s in the country.
All of the new grants will support conservation planning and research, as successful interventions require the thorough assessment of current building conditions. The results will provide guidance for other projects in the future.
Now that Keeping It Modern is in its fourth year, with earlier projects already completed, we are starting to see a positive response from the field, says Antoine Wilmering, senior program officer at the Getty Foundation. There is a domino effect of research findings and planning methodologies developed for one context being applied to other sites, which is a valuable outcome.
Deadlines and criteria for the next round of Keeping It Modern applications will soon be announced on the Getty Foundation website at www.getty.edu/foundation. The Foundation developed Keeping It Modern to complement the Getty Conservation Institutes Conserving Modern Architecture Initiative (CMAI).