♫musicjinni

Sam Hall Kaplan: Design critique (October 30, 1985)

video thumbnail
Rose Marie Rabin introduces Sam Hall Kaplan, the current design critic for the Los Angeles Times, the former chief editorial writer and assistant managing editor of the New York Post, as well as the former urban affairs writer for the New York Times. He has had numerous publications and awards. His writing style is breezy, upbeat and provocative from a personal perspective. His goal is to provoke non-architects and urbanists to have an opinion, while committed to holding those accountable for missed opportunities in design.

Sam Hall Kaplan describes his role as a critic to be one in which requires dialogue among architects and the non-architect. He sees himself as an educator, which has a responsibility to create awareness amongst his readers as a public advocate. Cities are comprised of people and focal points, or landmarks. He states cities are a marketplace for the exchange of materials, services, goods and ideas, while providing a meeting place for all people. He states that present day malls have become equivalent to the main streets of the past, and therefore improvement upon them is necessary. He emphasizes the importance of public plazas.

Kaplan discusses the relationships between buildings and their surrounding context, siting examples of good and bad zoning applications. He discusses the battle between the vehicle and pedestrians on roads and the implementation of green spaces along roadways, while discussing the question of values. He advocates contextualism, believing it is always appropriate to improve upon the context as it relates to the new building and access points. This can be noted in the alley system found in Santa Monica, California, which could serve as a pseudo-frontage, where the actual frontage is not available for use.

Kaplan discusses urban public spaces as they relate to development, zoning and public utilization. He discusses missed opportunities, such as the lack of development along the Los Angeles River. He discusses projects which utilize low cost materials and the artist’s understanding of their material, material properties and material limitations. It is the architect’s obligation to fight the box, however ultimately they are obligated to ensure that it works. He states that landmarks provide a sense of history and place to their urban environments.

Journalism, Architecture, & the Role of Criticism (Poynter)

Richard Meier - Architectural critics (32/36)

Sam Hall Kaplan: Design critique (October 30, 1985)

That Far Corner: Frank Lloyd Wright in Los Angeles | Artbound | Season 9, Episode 1 | KCET

Writing Architecture: Christopher Hawthorne, Florencia Rodriguez, Michael Sorkin...

What the Critic Sees: Ada Louise Huxtable and Her Legacy

Nicolai Ouroussoff - A Critic Converses

Confederacy Of Heretics Symposium: Media & the globalization Of L.A. architecture (June 15, 2013)

Paul Goldberger: Criticism, architecture & the Age of Twitter (September 19, 2012)

How L.A. Noire Captured 1940's Los Angeles

New City Critics Information Session

A New Deal for Los Angeles | Artbound | Season 13, Episode 4 | KCET

Los Angeles Reimagined - City at the Edge of Forever

Iris Nights: Tracking Time in America’s Inner Cities

A New Model for Criticism - Afterparti

Paul Goldberger (October 13, 1976)

History of Los Angeles

Eric Owen Moss: Los Angeles, we have only just begun (April 12, 2004)

Why the buildings of the future will be shaped by ... you | Marc Kushner

Norman Klein

Complexity Must Be Beautiful! Berlin, Los Angeles and the Re-Urbanization of the Modernist City

Building Fleet Street: The Golden Age of Newspapers | HENI Talks

Symposia: "Density: Through Thick and Thin, Los Angeles"

The Gilded Age | Full Documentary | AMERICAN EXPERIENCE | PBS

Daniel M. Abramson-Obsolescence

St. Louis’ Mid-Century Modern Architecture: The Matter of Materials by Mary Reid Brunstrom

Reinventing the City for a New Century: Landscape Architect James Burnett

Julia Morgan

Paul Goldberger at the Aspen Institute

Kowloon Walled City: Inside the Most Crowded Place on Earth

Disclaimer DMCA