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inaccuracy in architectural magazines

msulli

how many people believe what they read in the media about architecture? and what are these beleifs based on? have you been published incorrectly or know for a fact information is incorrect?
what overall impression does this give you about the magazine?

I am doing a research project on one project, tracing it through the media and it is amazing the discrepencies from magazine to magazine.

I am also wondering if blogs and websites are the new way to "know" architecture. Whether the information is true or false may be unimportant to people, but merely the fact the information is circulating is telling. any thoughts on this topic would be appreciated.

 
Dec 23, 04 9:50 pm
Observer

i represent a firm that served as the design architect on a major facility that recently opened. we were subconsultants to the executive architect, who received credit for the design in the national media. when we informed the new york times that an "executive architect" who has hired a "design consultant" is not the designer of the building (nomenclature alone would suggest the "design consultant" is...), the new york times responded as follows:

"It would be wonderful if in every story we could stop and give credit to every facet of the design, and explain the complexity of the design team structure. When someone is credited as lead architect, I'm
afraid that is the lead we would follow."

i'm afraid too that that is the lead they would follow. the dismissal of the design work behind a project as merely a "facet" of the design is discouraging. additionally, is it really that "complex" to say that so-and-so-firm-1 was the executive architect and held the contract while so-and-so-firm-2 designed the building? finally, when a source calls itself a "lead architect" and an editor fails to substantiate that claim, can the publication claim to be doing serious fact-checking? in this case, a mere visit to the public website of the institution would have informed the author of the roles of other partners in the project.

Dec 29, 04 7:37 pm  · 
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Observer

Try this article from the Saturday, October 30th, 2004, Washington Post for more discussion:

Press May Ignore Architects, but So Does (Almost) Everyone Else
By Roger K. Lewis

When buildings are featured in the media, often the architects responsible for their design and execution are not mentioned.

Architects regularly complain that their names do not appear in articles about their work. They assume that reporters and their editors, for some reason, consciously choose to disregard the architect's contribution. Unless an article or review specifically focuses on architectural issues, design authorship of buildings is frequently overlooked. And even when architecture is discussed, the architect still may not be mentioned.

For example, the new glass-clad, energy-conscious National Association of Realtors' headquarters building on New Jersey Avenue NW, near the Capitol, was the subject of The Washington Post's "K Street Confidential" column earlier this month. While the generally laudatory report included color photographs of the exterior and described in some detail the building and many of its aesthetic and technical features, it never cited Graham Gund Architects, the designers.

Why don't architects get credit more often in the press? And does it matter?

The most obvious explanation is that journalists may consider attribution of design authorship irrelevant to a story that, while concerned with a building, is not about architecture per se. Others who are key to the process, including engineers and construction contractors, also may not be named.

In writing a business story about a building, or a story about public controversy surrounding a project, a reporter understandably may think naming the architect is not germane. In researching a building-related story, the reporter may never even learn the identity of the architect.

Even when the architect's identity is known, a reporter may decide not to cite the designer because the architect is not sufficiently famous or considered a star. This reflects an infatuation with celebrity -- and helps account for why design attribution may be left out.

Reporting on architectural authorship also can be tricky. Today, many large-scale projects are designed by joint ventures in which multiple firms collaborate. Often one design firm is primarily responsible for establishing the basic design concept while another firm, acting as the "executive" architect, prepares detailed drawings and specifications, based on the lead designer's concept, and administers the overall design and construction process.

From a reporter's perspective, who gets credit?

The lead designer is clearly the conceptual author, the creative generator of architectural form visible to the public. But the executive architect usually can claim credit for project realization, for refining and detailing the design, and for doing much of the heavy lifting required to produce contract documents, coordinate engineers and other consultants, obtain building permits, and watch over construction.

Assigning credit can get even messier and more mysterious when the design process is complex and problematic.

When the National Museum of the American Indian opened its doors last month, The Post gave it extensive coverage. Reporters credited Canadian architect Douglas Cardinal as the primary designer of the building. But there was not a single mention, in any of the stories I read, of the critical role played by Polshek Partnership Architects.

Polshek's firm is the architect of record, having executed the project after the Smithsonian Institution terminated its contract with the original design team, GBQC of Philadelphia, and Cardinal. Asked to carry out Cardinal's basic architectural intention with modifications deemed necessary by the client, Polshek reluctantly accepted the task, which entailed refining and completing a revised design, preparing construction drawings and specifications, and then helping administer construction.

The articles also sometimes failed to mention other key design collaborators that contributed significantly to the aesthetic outcome: SmithGroup, Jones & Jones, and the landscape architecture firm EDAW. Meanwhile, feeling that he was unfairly treated and inadequately compensated for his work, and strongly condemning all the changes made to his original design, Cardinal has disavowed the project.

Sometimes architects themselves can mislead the press and public. When projects are designed and executed collaboratively, each firm tends to see its participation as the most indispensable. News releases, announcements, advertising or portfolios disseminated by a firm may give the impression that it alone was responsible for carrying out the project.

There is one other explanation for why architects often may be left out of stories. Unlike Europe and Japan, the United States does not have a fundamentally design-conscious culture. Most American consumers never interact with architects, and few care about architectural authorship, good or bad, associated with buildings they use.

By contrast, in Italy, France, England, Germany or Finland, architecture enjoys high cultural status. When European journalists write about buildings, they routinely identify the architects, who are seen as artists akin to authors, composers or film directors.

American architects are not disrespected by the media or the public. They just haven't had much effect on, or been able to influence, mainstream American culture. If people cared more about the art of architecture, I'm sure the press would report on it.

Roger K. Lewis is a practicing architect and a professor of architecture at the University of Maryland.


Dec 29, 04 7:39 pm  · 
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LFLH

We have occasionally had projects published which were submitted not by us but by the client or the client's other designers (interior designer, kitchen designer, landscape designer, etc.) In these cases we've sometimes recieved a copy of the text in advance to check for accuracy regarding anything having to do with our firm. Everytime this has happened we've attempted to include the names of contractors and subconsultants on the project - as well as names of those in our office who worked on the project, beyond those whose names are in the firm name! But the publications usually say they don't have space for these credits and they rarely get in (and if they do they're in tiny print on page 217.)

Dec 29, 04 7:55 pm  · 
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Devil Dog

Observer, when you say you represent an architecure firm, does that mean you're a lawyer or are you a publicist? or other?

Dec 29, 04 8:11 pm  · 
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Observer

as the firm's marketing manager, i do the internal coordination of our pr strategy (goal setting, oversight and review of consultant work, photography commissioning, et cetera) and we have a consultant for execution.

Dec 29, 04 8:34 pm  · 
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msulli

observor, thank you for your response and link to a very helpful article.

Dec 29, 04 9:24 pm  · 
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trace™

The issue of credit is a problem.
It irks me to see photographers credited at every turn, but no mention of the architect. This is obviously due to copyrights where the photogrqapher owns the rightst to the photo.
Renderings are also rarely credited, but they should be. I make sure that mine have my name below it, but most don't, especially those that are furnished by the architect.

Dec 30, 04 8:38 am  · 
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Contrary to what the above article says, I've often seen mention of both the contractor and developer of a building and still no mention of an architect.

Dec 30, 04 6:27 pm  · 
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