Young Architects Program 2009: Afterparty by MOS
June 28—October 26, 2009
The Museum of Modern Art and P.S.1 Contemporary Art
Center announce the
winner of the 2009 MoMA/P.S.1 Young Architects Program: the architectural firm
MOS. This year marks the tenth anniversary of the program, which affords
emerging architectural talents the opportunity to design and present innovative
projects. Five finalists selected by an invited nomination process were asked
to present an urban landscape for the large courtyard entrance of P.S.1, with
the allotted project budget of $70,000. The architects were required to
incorporate elements of shade, water, seating, and bar areas into a proposed
project. MOS's winning landscape, Afterparty, will be on view in P.S.1's
outdoor courtyard starting in late June, and will serve as an immersive
environment for the 2009 Warm Up summer music series.
Envisioned as an "urban shelter," Afterparty will serve as a cooling
escape at the heart of P.S.1's Warm Up music series. Before visitors enter the
courtyard, a series of tall hut-like "chimneys" with dark thatched
skin will be visible from the street. The interior of the conical shelter will
provide shade, similar to a Bedouin tent in which the dark textile creates its
own microclimate shielding from the summer heat. Cool air from the thermal mass
of the courtyard's shaded concrete walls and concrete water troughs located in
the center of the structure will be drawn up through a series of cooling
chimneys by induction. This will create a breeze and a "cool down"
atmosphere for the active Warm Up crowd.
In addition to MOS (New Haven, Connecticut
and Cambridge, Massachusetts),
the other finalists are !ndie architecture (Denver,
Colorado), Bade Stageberg Cox (Brooklyn, New York),
L.E.FT architects (New York, New
York), and PARA-project (Brooklyn,
New York). An exhibition of the
five finalists' proposed projects will be on view at MoMA over the summer. It
will be organized by Andres Lepik, Curator, Department of Architecture and
Design, The Museum of Modern Art.
Barry Bergdoll, the Philip Johnson Chief Curator of the Department of
Architecture and Design at MoMA, explains, "The project proposes to deal
with issues of sustainability and a return to basics, working towards climate
altering through passive means, even in the context of an exhibition/party
space in the P.S.1 courtyard. It consists of a lightweight aluminum frame of
recyclable parts clad in a weave, allowing some light and air to circulate but
at the same time shading visitors from the sunlight. Its combination of forms
includes tall, chimney-like shapes, heroic cones, and others that are evocative
at once of the vernacular village structures world-wide and of the open ruined
vaults of the Roman Forum."
Antoine Guerrero, P.S.1 Director of Operations and Exhibitions, adds,
"From the ground up, another exciting, ephemeral transformation of our
outdoor galleries will leave a lasting impression on over 50,000 summer
visitors who will have the chance to cool off."
MOS architects Hilary Sample and Michael Meredith say, "Today, we are
rethinking and resituating architecture-not only its conceptual and formal
economies but also its inherent ability to engage and produce visceral intimate
environments. This project, Afterparty, is a temporary urban shelter and
passive cooling station for P.S.1 and its Warm Up events, creating an escape
from the summer heat and constructing a network of large, medium, and small
cellular spaces that allow for intimacy and social formations to thrive."
SELECTION
PROCESS
For the Young Architects
Program 2009 selection process, MoMA and P.S.1 invited outside experts in the
field of architecture, including architects, curators, academics, and magazine
editors, to nominate the finalists from a pool of approximately 40 candidates
that included both recent graduates and established architects experimenting
with new styles or techniques. After
reviewing the candidates, five finalists were selected to present proposals to
a panel composed of Glenn D. Lowry,
Director; Kathy Halbreich, Associate
Director; Peter Reed, Senior Deputy
Director of Curatorial Affairs; Barry
Bergdoll, Philip Johnson Chief Curator, Department of Architecture and
Design; Klaus Biesenbach, Chief
Curator, Department of Media; and Andres Lepik, Curator,
Department of Architecture and Design, The
Museum of Modern Art; and Antoine
Guerrero, Director of Operations and Exhibitions, P.S.1 Contemporary Art
Center.
HISTORY
This year marks the twelfth summer that P.S.1 has hosted
a combined architectural installation and music series in its outdoor galleries,
though it is only the tenth year of the Young Architects Program, which began
in 2000. The inaugural project was an architecturally based installation in
1998 by an Austrian artist collective, Gelitin. In 1999, Philip Johnson's DJ
Pavilion celebrated the historic affiliation of P.S.1 and MoMA. The previous
winners of the Young Architects Program are SHoP/Sharples
Holden Pasquarelli (2000), ROY (2001),
William E. Massie (2002), Tom Wiscombe /
EMERGENT (2003), nARCHITECTS (2004),
Xefirotarch (2005), OBRA (2006), Ball-Nogues (2007), and WORKac (2008).
ABOUT
MOS
MOS is an interdisciplinary practice
engaging in architecture and design through an inclusive methodology of
research, expansive collaboration, and extensive experimentation. The work
develops through research ranging from typology, digital production, structure,
material, program and use, to larger networks of social, cultural, and
environmental consideration. The scope of MOS's research constantly shifts and
expands as each individual project has the potential to engage a unique set of
parameters, specific to its condition. This process of "radical
inclusion" allows MOS to participate in design at different scales-from
product design, to private residences, to cultural institutions to large-scale
urban infrastructure.
Lead by Michael Meredith and Hilary
Sample, MOS is based in New Haven, Connecticut and Cambridge,
Massachusetts. MOS has
received the P/A award, New York Urban League Emerging Voices series, Surface magazine's Avant-Guardian, and
Architectural Record's Design Vanguard award. Current projects include a villa
for Ordos 100, Inner Mongolia, China; The Ballroom Drive-In theater, Marfa, Texas; an
inflatable factory in Newfoundland, Canada; and a Teen
Center, Lowell, Massachusetts.
Michael Meredith is an Associate Professor at the Harvard University Graduate
School of Design and Hilary Sample is an Assistant Professor at the Yale
University School of Architecture.
MOS
Afterparty, 2009
Winning project for P.S.1 and MoMA's Young Architects Program
Photo: Courtesy Florian Holzherr.
MOS
Afterparty, 2009
Winning project for P.S.1 and MoMA's Young Architects Program
Photo: Zach Dilgard. Courtesy P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center
MOS
Afterparty, 2009
Winning project for P.S.1 and MoMA's Young Architects Program
Photo: Courtesy Florian Holzherr.
The 2009 Young Architects Program is sponsored by Bloomberg.
Additional support is provided by the Bertha and Isaac Liberman Foundation, Jeffrey and Michèle Klein, Agnes Gund, The Contemporary Arts Council of The Museum of Modern Art, Elise Jaffe + Jeffrey Brown, and Con Edison.

