Wednesday 3 June 2015

O’Donnell + Tuomey Interview

Published Architecture NZ NO.3 2015

O’Donnell + Tuomey gave a stellar presentation at in:situ and I was bestowed the honor of a brief-but-informal  conversation with practice instigators, directors and partners in the sublime, Sheila and John.
 The pair are the recipients of a recent Royal Institute of British Architects Gold Medal, an award that is not just given for one project but a body of work – an ‘accumulation’ – where the sum of each individual project creates a whole of greater value, represented eloquently in the practice-generated hybrid drawing ‘composite functions, compatible plans connected’, seen in Space for Architecture: the Work of O’Donnell+Tuomey, the firm’s recently published monograph.
Each project is an opportunity for the practice to explore ideas across project scale and typology, to render them at different scales and levels of resolution. It is as if the practice is consumed by one continuous project, creating space for architecture “when there is never enough time.” 
‘Space for Architecture’ was also the title of their conference presentation, elaborated on by the pair as “a slow, continuous and un-folding business. On the one hand, architecture isn’t clearly defined – it has its own rules and its inherent logic – but it’s so complex and is so much a part of life and living that it’s influenced by and accommodates and maybe even contains many other aspects of human creativity and ingenuity. We think it extends beyond itself in a number of ways.”
These intelligent and considered conversationalists speak with a slight musicality, as is the Dublin tradition. Tuomey is provoking in his lyrical tone: “Even if architecture didn’t exist, there still would be architecture as an area of study.”
The couple’s practice of 25 years is a rags to riches story of sorts. Determination, passion, talent, a little bit of luck – as are all success stories – hard work and, in the end, there is no mincing words when these two place a building on site.
“When we came back to Dublin after five or six years (of education) in London, we thought we might build small-scale, socially-useful civic buildings in Irish towns,” says O’Donnell. But “as we left London, a good friend told us half-jokingly, ‘Go back and change the face of Irish architecture’ and we, half-jokingly, had, out of this, a kind-of idealistic dream. We were inspired by the idea that architecture could have a role in defining society and we came back to Ireland to find ourselves in a society undergoing great cultural and social change.”
Their youth-fuelled mission to rediscover Irish architecture and, by extension, a quest for post-colonial architectural identity is explained: “On consideration, when you go in search of something, it is often not the focus of your search that you find but something else… In the end, that search, we realised, perhaps, not an architecture of Ireland but an architecture of place not style. A way of thinking about architecture and place.”
O’Donnell+Tuomey’s architecture isn’t interested in a style nor, perhaps, does it claim to be of any nation. It is a process that discovers a place through rigorous investigation – “close noticing”, that focuses the essence of place, an attention on specifics, of site – be it a view or an urban or social or environmental condition. A result of immersion and analysis. “In that sense, the conference theme of in:situ is vital to our practice,” they state. A site becomes more about itself after an intervention than before, through an uncovering or discovering and revealing of what was there all along, as if through lifting a veil an architecture is quietly revealed.
When the couple arrived in Dublin, it was economically depressed wth no building happening, so their attention was focused on how they might contribute to the positive development of their city. “It was unpaid work, we were teaching and making proposals about the city. Political activism and interactions in that community lead us to our first clients,” they explain.  “There was no work for young architects but there was plenty to think about... While we were busy redesigning the city...we learned to think strategically and experientially at the same time. We realised that a house needs an urban strategy and a city block needs intimate space. But you have to make the work you believe in and you have to stick with it.”
 Toumey explains that they would like to see more relevance brought back to the profession, explaining their version of a future perfect: “I would like architects to be like the doctor who announces his presence when a crowd is gathered around an injured person. I want people to be genuinely relieved when a crowd gathers to discuss a design issue and someone announces they are an architect.”  

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