Wednesday 23 December 2020

Carbon net-zero design for Delhi Noida International Airport revealed

Delhi Noida International Airport

Architecture firms Nordic Office of Architecture, Grimshaw, Haptic and consultants STUP have won the competition to design a carbon-neutral terminal for Delhi Noida International Airport in India.

Delhi Noida International Airport will be built in Jewar, 25 miles south of Delhi, by developer Zurich Airport International.

The winners, who promised to design "India's greenest airport", saw off competition from rival teams Gensler and Arup, and SOM and Mott McDonalds.

Interior of Delhi Noida International Airport
Top: the winning airport design. Above: renders show a tree-filled interior

A goal of carbon net-zero and a LEED Gold standard certification has been set for the airport terminal, which will have the capacity to serve 30 million passengers per year.

Carbon net-zero, also known as carbon-neutral design, is a term for buildings that seek to remove as much carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as they put in.

The winning design for the terminal building features indoor trees and a landscaped courtyard within the building, to bring in the light and to ventilate the space. Green spaces are also planned for the airport forecourt.

"Delhi Noida International Airport will become a unique new gateway to the world city of Delhi and to the state of Uttar Pradesh," said Nordic founding partner Gudmund Stokke.

"Nordic, Grimshaw, Haptic and STUP will combine the collective experience and knowledge from the airports in Hyderabad, Oslo, Istanbul and Zurich to create a truly modern, innovative and green airport, based in a region of strong historic and cultural tradition."

Exterior of Delhi Noida International Airport
Green spaces are planned for outside the terminal

The team has previously collaborated on Istanbul New Airport Terminal One in Turkey. Nordic designed the Oslo Airport and extended it in 2017 and, along with Haptic, has master-planned a "sustainable city of the future" to be built next door to the terminal.

Grimshaw's plans to expand London's Heathrow airport have been given the go-ahead once more, after climate change activists' argument that the expansion would contravene the UK's commitment to the Paris Agreement was overturned in the country's top court.

Foster + Partners and Zaha Hadid Architects, two top British practices, opted out from climate change network Architects Declare over their decision to continue designing airports for clients.

Images courtesy of Grimshaw.


Project credits:

Master architect team: Nordic Office of Architecture, Grimshaw, Haptic Architects, STUP Consultants
Consultants: NACO – Netherlands Airport Consultants, Urban Systems Design, AKTII, SLA, COWI, Alan Thompson, Studio Fractal, AEON Consultants, T2 Consulting
Developer: Zurich Airport International

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Tuesday 22 December 2020

Artist Alicja Biała decorates MVRDV project in Wrocław with floor-to-ceiling murals

Alicja Biala mural for Concordia Design by MVRDV

Polish visual artist Alicja Biała has painted a set of colourful large-scale murals inside the Concordia Design building in Wrocław, Poland, as part of its renovation and extension by architecture firm MVRDV.

The murals cover 500 square metres of the office building and rise as high as ten metres. The art was informed by the architecture of the building, as well as local folklore.

Exterior of Concordia Design by MVRDV and Alicja Biala
Top image: the mural reaches ten metres to the ceiling. Above: the building on Słodowa Island

Biała, who also designed a large light sculpture for the project, lived on-site for five months while painting them and used discarded materials from the site for some of her designs.

She worked around the existing architecture to design the murals that depict characters, some of them mythical, as well as flora and fauna.

Mural at Concordia Design by MVRDV and Alicja Biala
Folklore and mythical figures feature in the mural

"It was quite complex to plan out and design, given that it's not one wall, it's not flat," Biała told Dezeen.

"The main painting consists of connected two walls and ceilings. All had to work well from all perspectives, different angles and be coherent."

Dutch architecture firm MVRDV renovated and extended an existing 19th-century building on the Słodowa Island in Wrocław to create Concordia Design, keeping the facade of the historical building.

Restaurant at Concordia Design by MVRDV and Alicja Biala
Concordia Design's restaurant is covered in murals

It now houses co-working spaces, an event space, a food hall, and a roof terrace as well as a restaurant and cafe.

Biała's large entrance artwork is visible through the glass facade of the extension and covers about 400 square metres, before transitioning for another 100 square metres throughout the corridor that connects the two main spaces of Concordia.

Concordia Design by MVRDV and Alicja Biala at night
An opening towards a park shows off the work

The studio created the opening towards the park, where the mural is displayed, early on in the design process to make the building more inviting.

"On both ends of the building we wanted to open up the building with a large void space in order to be inviting visitors and by-passers into the building," MVRDV partner Fokke Moerel told Dezeen.

"In the extension, we could also make the void transparent, while on the existing side, it hides behind the old, monumental facade."

"The mural was an early concept to align with the presence of this type of art in Wroclaw and to create an inclusive message towards the surroundings: joyful, playful and stories of the history," she added.

Biała also created art "interventions" in each of the 75 office spaces and on the reception desks on two floors.

Reception desk at Concordia Design by MVRDV and Alicja Biala
Biała reglazed 19th-century tiles for the reception desk

She used 19th-century tiles which she found onsite to clad a large reception desk, after cleaning them and then reglazing them with two human figures and decorative patterns and flowers.

“It’s quite difficult to reglaze something from so long ago without issues," she said. "They warp and crack, the glaze crawls off. But in the end, the pieces and their history speak their own design; we just give them another chance."

Lighting design at Concordia Design by MVRDV and Alicja Biala
A light sculpture weighs half a ton

The artist also designed a colourful four-by-four metres light sculpture for the project, which weighs half a ton and hangs in the foyer on the historical side of the building.

"It was inspired by pagan folk decoration called traditionally 'spider' or 'chandelier,'" she said.

"It is a colourful ornament made usually out of paper, straw, textiles. Those folk 'installations' were to symbolise happiness, harmony, good harvest."

Mural by Alicja Biala for Concordia Design by MVRDV
The murals cover 500 square metres of the building

Biała, who won a competition to create the Concordia Design project, had previously created totem poles that sit underneath MVRDV's Baltyk building in Poznan and visualise climate-change statistics.

She will paint a final large mural on Concordia Design's top floor next year.

“The island has always been a gathering place for the city, a space of many different people," she said. "I wanted to show this multiplicity in a way that is similar to sitting on a bench on the island and watching the many stories pass by."

Swedish design duo Folkform also recently created a mural for a public swimming pool in Spånga, while London-based artist Camille Walala revived an east London high street with a community-funded mural.

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Curved facade of BIG's Harlem development looks "great in the photos" says commenter

The Smile by BIG

In this week's comments update, readers are discussing BIG's mixed-use development in Harlem, New York, and sharing their views on other top stories.

Architecture firm BIG has built The Smile in New York's Harlem neighbourhood to house a nursing school and 223 residential apartments.

Situated at East 126th Street the development is named for its curved, stainless-steel facade, which the studio designed to recall the "textured surface of the moon".

"Does that building actually lean back from the street?"

Readers are torn. "Facade looks great in the photos," said Z-Dog, on one hand.

Troels Steenholdt Heiredal disagreed: "Does that building actually lean back from the street as if it is physically embarrassed by its traditional neighbours? Nothing says Harlem like a rooftop pool from where you can look down on the neighbourhood."

"Italian kitchens, steel panels made in Germany... Harlem is certainly not what it was once," replied Apsco Radiales.

"It looks like a very fancy student accommodation to me," concluded Louis.

Does The Smile make you smile? Join the discussion ›

Humboldt Forum in Berlin by Franco Stella
German royal palace reconstructed to become Humboldt Forum on Berlin's Museum Island

"This building seems to express its split personality" says commenter

Italian architect Franco Stella has sparked debated with his reconstruction of the baroque Berlin Palace. Damaged during world war two, the former home to Prussian kings and German emperors will now house the Humboldt Forum museum.

"This building seems to express its split personality," said 竜皐. "Is this something people want? It makes things frustrating, confused."

"That modern façade is just an oozing gash, isn't it?" asked Sharad Majumdar. "Are modern architects really so lacking in imagination that they couldn't create some original designs that would be sympathetic to the historically accurate façades?"

James Coulee replied: "Nothing wrong with having a façade with a contemporary language. But there's such a lack of a sense of scale and detail in the new façade and interiors... new and old are not in harmony here."

Are readers being harsh? Join the discussion ›

Unbuilt shipping container house for Joshua Tree on sale for $3.5 million
Unbuilt shipping container house for Joshua Tree on sale for $3.5 million

"The man is certainly a genius" says reader

Commenters are divided over news that James Whitaker's starburst-shaped shipping container house intended for Joshua Tree, California, has gone on sale for $3.5 million. Construction is yet to start.

"Well, the man is certainly a genius," said Grey. "Excellent project. This is undeniably a commercial success. Many non-architects will find this pretty cool. Remember kids, architects don't pay architects – clients do."

Talk disagreed: "Complete nonsense. Normally shipping container architecture is depicted as being pragmatic but this is pointless formalism, incredibly inefficient use of materials with massive amounts of unusable volume, no atmosphere and an interior that looks like a bad showroom."

"$3.5m to be cooked alive in a student project," concluded What.

Is Wagon Wheel Road house worth $3.5 million? Join the discussion ›

The limestone exterior of the Kunsthaus Zurich museum extension by David Chipperfield
David Chipperfield adds limestone-clad extension to Kunsthaus Zurich

"Modernism doesn't care what you think of it" says commenter

Readers are critiquing David Chipperfield Architects' extension for the Kunsthaus Zurich museum in Switzerland. It features concrete interiors wrapped by a Jura limestone exterior.

"Overall it looks really great," said Rd. "I'm impressed with the interior, but the outside's a bit harsh in its environment for my taste."

"The exterior is too relentless in its pursuit of rationality for me," continued Heywood Floyd. "But things on the interior loosen up quite nicely. Immaculate detailing and interesting material contrasting as expected. Nice work overall, as usual."

"Harsh, hostile, relentless, rational, are all qualities of modernist architecture actively sought by modernist architects," concluded Jb. "They are not resultant qualities. Modernism is not concerned with context. Modernism doesn't care what you think of it."

What do you think of the Kunsthaus Zurich museum? Join the discussion ›

Read more Dezeen comments

Dezeen is the world's most commented architecture and design magazine, receiving thousands of comments each month from readers. Keep up to date on the latest discussions on our comments page.

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I started my fashion brand to do architecture says Virgil Abloh

Virgil Abloh portrait

Fashion designer Virgil Abloh doesn't "believe in disciplines" and instead thinks architecture should be used to explore many things. In this interview, he explains how his architectural training helped create his brand Off-White.

Abloh told Dezeen that after receiving a master's degree in architecture from the Illinois Institute of Technology, he chose to build a fashion brand rather than take the traditional architectural route to continue his career.

"I don't believe in disciplines," Abloh told Dezeen. "We can use our architecture brain and do many things, not just what we're supposed to do."

"I started a career to make a brand to do architecture rather than just work at SOM, or wherever I would have naturally gone starting my architecture career," he added. "I made a brand to sort of investigate architecture in a way."

AMO and OMA "leaping point for my fashion career"

Abloh, who established Off-White in Milan in 2012, spoke to Dezeen earlier this year ahead of the opening of the brand's flagship store in Miami's Design District.

To design the store, Off-White collaborated with AMO, the research arm of firm OMA founded by Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas. Abloh said the firms' practice underpins the concept of new architectural thinking among the next generation of architects.

"The contemporary research of AMO and OMA has been the leaping point for my fashion career," he said. "Most specifically AMO is almost the most important nucleus within this modern approach to sort of a cultural understanding of what architecture it actually is."

Abloh said the project is an example of how to challenge archetypes. Working closely with AMO director Samir Bantal, he created a flagship to rethink the typical retail store by creating a store to function as both a fulfilment centre and events space.

"What does architecture mean today?"

"Instead of us having dinner conversations at lobbies at restaurants, I said, hey, let's put something on paper, let's put some skin in the game to say, what does the retail look like and let's start challenging it," he said. "What does architecture mean today?"

The store is the most recent collaboration between AMO and Off-White, which also collaborated to design Figures of Speech – a retrospective exhibition of Abloh's career at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago.

It is also one of a number of projects Abloh has completed this past year – including expanding Off-White's offering to the HOME collection featuring umbrellas, dressing gowns and doorstops.

He also designed a brutalist fashion collection and a race-car version of Mercedes‑Benz G‑Class.

Read on for an edited transcript of our interview with Abloh and Bantal:


Eleanor Gibson: Virgil could you tell me about the collaboration between Off-White and AMO?

Virgil Abloh: Yeah, you know, to me, that's almost the most important part, you know, philosophically is, obviously, the history of architecture has had, you know,

We're inserting ourselves in the larger history of architecture, and, and most specifically AMO is sort of like a research thinking arm to me is, you know, almost the most important nucleus within this modern approach to sort of a cultural understanding of what architecture it actually is.

For me, the contemporary research of AMO and OMA has the leaping point from my fashion career.

In an ironic twist, obviously, I don't believe in disciplines. I only believe in theory and in sort of research and so I started a career almost to make a brand to do architecture rather than just like work at SOM, or you know, wherever I would have naturally gone, starting my architecture career. So it's like, I made a brand to sort of investigate architecture in a way.

When I met Samir, the important thing to note is that we're both a sort of like age, generation like demographic under the sort of like, contemporary layer, that's the foundation.

We have a diverse background, and we have our own sort of career and we bring that to whatever institutions we work at, you know, and so, I was like, not only is this a client, this is a conversation. And it's also the young generation, you know, I'm 30 in my late 30s. And it's like, What does architecture mean today? You know, instead of like us having dinner conversations at lobbies at restaurants, I said, hey, let's, let's put something on paper, let's, let's say, like, let's put some skin in the game to say, what's the retail look like, from those who sort of studied under, you know, spent years in normal sort of practices and let's start challenging it.

That's where, you know, the crystal starts to sort of shine with, like, why fashion is important. You know, I don't believe that fashion is needed to make fashion. That could have been 50 years before. I think our generation is more like what does fashion mean? What does retail mean? What does ground floor real estate look like in a world post-Google and Amazon.

To round out my sort of feel it's like, the ethos is important the research the logic, but then we're actually putting, you know, studs in, we're putting a material and concrete. So it's just as much theoretical, as it is practical. So Samir and I sort of formed this unit that's like, Hey, we can use our architecture brain and do many things, not just what we're supposed to do.

Eleanor Gibson: Do you think that kind of the traditional modes of architecture in architecture, education is becoming outdated? And do you think that needs shaking up in some way?

Virgil Abloh: Yeah, but I don't think it's somewhat novel. You know, I think every role through art history or architecture history needed the younger generation to sort of like feel a tension with what they were taught, you know, like, that's just humanity.

But I think it's ever more important to look at what year we're in 2020 and look at how far the ideals are from just the generation just above us. And, you know, with a man's relation to the environment, but also man's relationship to each other, we see just in a 10-year generation gap, how far off that we thought it could be.

But architecture is an industry that sort of passes through, like you can kind of be hands-off and be like, "oh, this is a client they just asked for a building" or, "they just wanted another store".

We're both niche entities, I would say AMO, Off-White, Samir and myself, so we're able to sort of wear our heart on our sleeve or brain on our sleeve.

The first slide that Samir sent for the development was like, is shopping relevant? As the brand owner, I have sort of final say but I'm not like, "oh, wait, he doesn't want to do a store". I was more like, yeah, shopping is irrelevant.

We're thought leaders, we're not just like trying to make commerce. I want to see the art of retail advance just the same way. You know, we saw the product store in the epicentres rollout and we saw, you know, just great retail, you know, across the world. So it's like pretty young architects and designers trying to provoke thinking, you know, not just commerce.

Samir Bantal: I think what is interesting, of course, in working with Virgil is that every idea that you think was kind of done or solidified, needs to be broken up again and needs to be dismantled and questioned. Whether it's through fashion, whether it's through art, whether it's through music, I think that is also what connected us that, you know, that's exactly the reason why AMO was also initiated. You can indeed work through a brief develop a design and that's it or you can basically start by dismantling the principle first and placing within a kind of larger context.

Virgil Abloh: Our generation is a little bit like we sort of poked a hole through the curtain. And we're like, "Wait a second". It's like the millennials or the internet that was like, wait, what were we taught in history? You know, hey, wait, let me see that again because there's other information that tells me there's another scenario that never crossed that path.

Off-White, you know, I made it as like this crowbar. I was like actually drawing this logo somewhere that we have to develop. Like AMO, Off-White as an actual crowbar, because that's the relationship, it's like, I made this thing to basically take the fashion industry and just like look under it.

I developed it as this brand that you don't need to wear to be in the tribe. You know, like that's, that's the literal sort of thing. It's like usually when I grew up in fashions, like, you had to sort of wear it to be like, Hey, I'm, this is my brand, you know? And amongst me and my friends and the people that develop it, it's like, no, this is not like a uniform, like you don't want to wear Offf-White. To be in the Off-White logic is just to think outside the box and you don't have to wear Off-White, you're better off wearing your own clothes. You know, the clothes are just representative of like, whatever, you know, it's a different conversation.

So that's where when I started taking the physical manifestation of this thing, it's the relationship between Samir and I that was like, okay, like, how does this manifest itself in an architecture, rather than, you know, and so we, you know, it's a part of like a whole nucleus of physical representation.

Eleanor Gibson: People are calling on the design industries, architecture, fashion, to think more about how they can be proactive in terms of improving social equity and everything. I wondered what your thoughts are on how the industry can do better in that respect?

Virgil Abloh: I have a short answer, and I'll toss it to Samir as well, but it's like it's basically you know, we're both minorities. You know, like that's just like on paper and having minority points of view in sort of mass industry or, you know, we have square footage. Both him and I have authority to sort of put our ideas to the forefront without having to run them through a filter.

I think the short answer is more like diversity is not like a novel or like a kumbaya or something nice to say. It literally means that different ideas will percolate and you'll get a, you know, a better thing. But Samir, what would you say?

Samir Bantal: Especially this strange situation that we're currently in; we not only have a kind of, you know, a global pandemic but there's also a kind of increasing awareness of that cities, the way that we live, the way that we consume, the way that we basically enjoy our lives, in a way is also kind of really scripted. According to you could almost say like a source code.

And the way that I think some time ago there was this discussion about how, you know, the fact that a lot of these tech companies produce products that actually are almost like focused towards a specific demographics, it's almost as if that can also be translated to architecture. Architecture often is, is developed and prescribed according to certain demographics and that is something that we are trying to challenge away as well. This is part of our responsibility, but also part of what we need to do in order to have architecture answer to the answer to these questions, for example, social justice.

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I started my fashion brand to do architecture says Virgil Abloh

Virgil Abloh portrait

Fashion designer Virgil Abloh doesn't "believe in disciplines" and instead thinks architecture should be used to explore many things. In this interview, he explains how his architectural training helped create his brand Off-White.

Abloh told Dezeen that after receiving a master's degree in architecture from the Illinois Institute of Technology, he chose to build a fashion brand rather than take the traditional architectural route to continue his career.

"I don't believe in disciplines," Abloh told Dezeen. "We can use our architecture brain and do many things, not just what we're supposed to do."

"I started a career to make a brand to do architecture rather than just work at SOM, or wherever I would have naturally gone starting my architecture career," he added. "I made a brand to sort of investigate architecture in a way."

AMO and OMA "leaping point for my fashion career"

Abloh, who established Off-White in Milan in 2012, spoke to Dezeen earlier this year ahead of the opening of the brand's flagship store in Miami's Design District.

To design the store, Off-White collaborated with AMO, the research arm of firm OMA founded by Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas. Abloh said the firms' practice underpins the concept of new architectural thinking among the next generation of architects.

"The contemporary research of AMO and OMA has been the leaping point for my fashion career," he said. "Most specifically AMO is almost the most important nucleus within this modern approach to sort of a cultural understanding of what architecture it actually is."

Abloh said the project is an example of how to challenge archetypes. Working closely with AMO director Samir Bantal, he created a flagship to rethink the typical retail store by creating a store to function as both a fulfilment centre and events space.

"What does architecture mean today?"

"Instead of us having dinner conversations at lobbies at restaurants, I said, hey, let's put something on paper, let's put some skin in the game to say, what does the retail look like and let's start challenging it," he said. "What does architecture mean today?"

The store is the most recent collaboration between AMO and Off-White, which also collaborated to design Figures of Speech – a retrospective exhibition of Abloh's career at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago.

It is also one of a number of projects Abloh has completed this past year – including expanding Off-White's offering to the HOME collection featuring umbrellas, dressing gowns and doorstops.

He also designed a brutalist fashion collection and a race-car version of Mercedes‑Benz G‑Class.

Read on for an edited transcript of our interview with Abloh and Bantal:


Eleanor Gibson: Virgil could you tell me about the collaboration between Off-White and AMO?

Virgil Abloh: Yeah, you know, to me, that's almost the most important part, you know, philosophically is, obviously, the history of architecture has had, you know,

We're inserting ourselves in the larger history of architecture, and, and most specifically AMO is sort of like a research thinking arm to me is, you know, almost the most important nucleus within this modern approach to sort of a cultural understanding of what architecture it actually is.

For me, the contemporary research of AMO and OMA has the leaping point from my fashion career.

In an ironic twist, obviously, I don't believe in disciplines. I only believe in theory and in sort of research and so I started a career almost to make a brand to do architecture rather than just like work at SOM, or you know, wherever I would have naturally gone, starting my architecture career. So it's like, I made a brand to sort of investigate architecture in a way.

When I met Samir, the important thing to note is that we're both a sort of like age, generation like demographic under the sort of like, contemporary layer, that's the foundation.

We have a diverse background, and we have our own sort of career and we bring that to whatever institutions we work at, you know, and so, I was like, not only is this a client, this is a conversation. And it's also the young generation, you know, I'm 30 in my late 30s. And it's like, What does architecture mean today? You know, instead of like us having dinner conversations at lobbies at restaurants, I said, hey, let's, let's put something on paper, let's, let's say, like, let's put some skin in the game to say, what's the retail look like, from those who sort of studied under, you know, spent years in normal sort of practices and let's start challenging it.

That's where, you know, the crystal starts to sort of shine with, like, why fashion is important. You know, I don't believe that fashion is needed to make fashion. That could have been 50 years before. I think our generation is more like what does fashion mean? What does retail mean? What does ground floor real estate look like in a world post-Google and Amazon.

To round out my sort of feel it's like, the ethos is important the research the logic, but then we're actually putting, you know, studs in, we're putting a material and concrete. So it's just as much theoretical, as it is practical. So Samir and I sort of formed this unit that's like, Hey, we can use our architecture brain and do many things, not just what we're supposed to do.

Eleanor Gibson: Do you think that kind of the traditional modes of architecture in architecture, education is becoming outdated? And do you think that needs shaking up in some way?

Virgil Abloh: Yeah, but I don't think it's somewhat novel. You know, I think every role through art history or architecture history needed the younger generation to sort of like feel a tension with what they were taught, you know, like, that's just humanity.

But I think it's ever more important to look at what year we're in 2020 and look at how far the ideals are from just the generation just above us. And, you know, with a man's relation to the environment, but also man's relationship to each other, we see just in a 10-year generation gap, how far off that we thought it could be.

But architecture is an industry that sort of passes through, like you can kind of be hands-off and be like, "oh, this is a client they just asked for a building" or, "they just wanted another store".

We're both niche entities, I would say AMO, Off-White, Samir and myself, so we're able to sort of wear our heart on our sleeve or brain on our sleeve.

The first slide that Samir sent for the development was like, is shopping relevant? As the brand owner, I have sort of final say but I'm not like, "oh, wait, he doesn't want to do a store". I was more like, yeah, shopping is irrelevant.

We're thought leaders, we're not just like trying to make commerce. I want to see the art of retail advance just the same way. You know, we saw the product store in the epicentres rollout and we saw, you know, just great retail, you know, across the world. So it's like pretty young architects and designers trying to provoke thinking, you know, not just commerce.

Samir Bantal: I think what is interesting, of course, in working with Virgil is that every idea that you think was kind of done or solidified, needs to be broken up again and needs to be dismantled and questioned. Whether it's through fashion, whether it's through art, whether it's through music, I think that is also what connected us that, you know, that's exactly the reason why AMO was also initiated. You can indeed work through a brief develop a design and that's it or you can basically start by dismantling the principle first and placing within a kind of larger context.

Virgil Abloh: Our generation is a little bit like we sort of poked a hole through the curtain. And we're like, "Wait a second". It's like the millennials or the internet that was like, wait, what were we taught in history? You know, hey, wait, let me see that again because there's other information that tells me there's another scenario that never crossed that path.

Off-White, you know, I made it as like this crowbar. I was like actually drawing this logo somewhere that we have to develop. Like AMO, Off-White as an actual crowbar, because that's the relationship, it's like, I made this thing to basically take the fashion industry and just like look under it.

I developed it as this brand that you don't need to wear to be in the tribe. You know, like that's, that's the literal sort of thing. It's like usually when I grew up in fashions, like, you had to sort of wear it to be like, Hey, I'm, this is my brand, you know? And amongst me and my friends and the people that develop it, it's like, no, this is not like a uniform, like you don't want to wear Offf-White. To be in the Off-White logic is just to think outside the box and you don't have to wear Off-White, you're better off wearing your own clothes. You know, the clothes are just representative of like, whatever, you know, it's a different conversation.

So that's where when I started taking the physical manifestation of this thing, it's the relationship between Samir and I that was like, okay, like, how does this manifest itself in an architecture, rather than, you know, and so we, you know, it's a part of like a whole nucleus of physical representation.

Eleanor Gibson: People are calling on the design industries, architecture, fashion, to think more about how they can be proactive in terms of improving social equity and everything. I wondered what your thoughts are on how the industry can do better in that respect?

Virgil Abloh: I have a short answer, and I'll toss it to Samir as well, but it's like it's basically you know, we're both minorities. You know, like that's just like on paper and having minority points of view in sort of mass industry or, you know, we have square footage. Both him and I have authority to sort of put our ideas to the forefront without having to run them through a filter.

I think the short answer is more like diversity is not like a novel or like a kumbaya or something nice to say. It literally means that different ideas will percolate and you'll get a, you know, a better thing. But Samir, what would you say?

Samir Bantal: Especially this strange situation that we're currently in; we not only have a kind of, you know, a global pandemic but there's also a kind of increasing awareness of that cities, the way that we live, the way that we consume, the way that we basically enjoy our lives, in a way is also kind of really scripted. According to you could almost say like a source code.

And the way that I think some time ago there was this discussion about how, you know, the fact that a lot of these tech companies produce products that actually are almost like focused towards a specific demographics, it's almost as if that can also be translated to architecture. Architecture often is, is developed and prescribed according to certain demographics and that is something that we are trying to challenge away as well. This is part of our responsibility, but also part of what we need to do in order to have architecture answer to the answer to these questions, for example, social justice.

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