The Pritzker prize, once reserved for flamboyant creators of icons, has gone to Lacaton & Vassal, whose rallying cry is: ‘Never demolish, never remove – always add, transform and reuse’

When Lacaton & Vassal were commissioned to redesign a public square in Bordeaux, their response was unusual. The French architects told the client to leave it alone. They thought the square was perfectly good as it was, and that public money would be better spent elsewhere.

“When you go to the doctor,” said Jean-Philippe Vassal, “they might tell you that you’re fine, that you don’t need any medicine. Architecture should be the same. If you take time to observe, and look very precisely, sometimes the answer is to do nothing.” In Bordeaux, the architects’ diagnosis was that the square just needed some new gravel.

Vassal and his partner, Anne Lacaton, have built a 30-year career on knowing how to intervene with the most economical of means, for which they have now been recognised with the Pritzker prize, architecture’s highest honour. In an age of demolishing public housing and replacing it with shiny new carbon-hungry developments in the name of “regeneration”, Lacaton & Vassal have worked tirelessly to expand and upgrade existing buildings with surgical precision, transforming the lives of thousands of people in the process.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

New DUP leader targets end to Northern Ireland protocol

Sir Jeffrey Donaldson seeks to draw line under party infighting and adopts…

Arsenal will not sell Partey despite Rice’s arrival, insists Arteta

‘Thomas Partey is a super-important player for us’ says manager Zinchenko thanks…

Canada’s Justin Trudeau greets political opponent with awkward handshake

The prime minister’s meeting with Alberta premier, Danielle Smith, got off to…