Growing up in a poor village in
Burkina Faso, Francis Kéré did not play
soccer with the other boys. He helped fix houses.
اضافة اعلان
After winning a scholarship to a vocational school
for carpentry in Germany and attending architecture school at the
Technical University of Berlin, Kéré did not rush to join a prestigious firm. As an
architecture student, he had raised the money to build an elementary school in
his hometown, Gando, with construction help from local residents, drawing
blueprints for them in the sand.
And even after earning international acclaim at
exhibitions such as the Serpentine Pavilion in London and the Venice Biennale,
Kéré has continually directed his attention toward home.
(Photo: NYTimes)
It is this devotion to lifting up the community he came
from that has helped Kéré, 56, earn the
Pritzker Prize, architecture’s highest
honor, which was announced Tuesday.
“His buildings, for and with communities, are
directly of those communities — in their making, their materials, their
programs and their unique characters,” the jury said in its citation. “They are
tied to the ground on which they sit and to the people who sit within them.
They have presence without pretense and an impact shaped by grace.”
Kéré, in a telephone interview, said he was moved by
the Pritzker recognition — he said he cried — and that he was surprised to have
come to the jury’s attention.
“I still don’t believe” it, he said. “I’ve been
pushing this work in architecture to bring good-quality architecture to my
people.”
That work has taken the form of schools, libraries,
health care centers, and public spaces — often in underserved areas where Kéré
makes the most of limited resources and draws on West African traditions. His
projects have been concentrated in
Africa, including Benin, Burkina Faso, Mali,
Togo, Kenya, Mozambique, and Sudan.
In the absence of air-conditioning for his Gando
Primary School (2001), Kéré used cement-fortified bricks and an elevated,
overhanging roof to counteract conditions of extreme heat and poor lighting.
That project increased the school’s student body to
700 students from 120 and led to Kéré’s design for teachers’ housing (2004), an
extension (2008), and a library (2019). Last year, T Magazine named the primary
school one of the 25 most significant buildings built after World War II.
Similarly, Kéré enlisted the cooling effects of
quarry stone and stacked towers to minimize the air-conditioning needs of
Startup Lions Campus in Turkana, Kenya, an information and communication
technologies complex completed in 2021.
(Photo: NYTimes)
“Francis Kéré is pioneering architecture —
sustainable to the Earth and its inhabitants — in lands of extreme scarcity,”
Tom Pritzker, chair of the Hyatt Foundation, which sponsors the award, said in
a statement. “He is equally architect and servant, improving upon the lives and
experiences of countless citizens in a region of the world that is at times
forgotten.”
When it comes to materials, Kéré works with what is
available, whether that be wood, bricks or clay. “I will push for simplicity,
for modularity,” he said. “I am trying to be as efficient as possible, to build
little things that can be easily put together and create something holistic.”
(Photo: NYTimes)
“I love wood — it’s calming,” he added. “All this
material is grounding you.”
Growing up in Burkina Faso, where his parents were
farmers, Kéré said the hot classrooms made him want to learn carpentry and be
able to one day build better buildings.
While studying in
Germany, Kéré delivered newspapers
at night to be able to send money back home.
“I used my time to travel around Berlin to see how
buildings were done in the preindustrial time,” Kéré said, “because this is the
technique that would help my people.”
While still a student, Kéré in 1998 established the
Kéré Foundation, a nonprofit that serves Gando’s residents through project
development, partnerships and fundraising.
In 2005, he founded Kéré Architecture in Berlin. His
practice, which has grown to 21 people, is currently based in Munich.
Significant works also include his Xylem pavilion at
Tippet Rise Art Center in Montana (2019); the National Park of Mali (2010); and, in Burkina Faso, the Léo
Doctors’ Housing (2019), and Opera Village (Phase I, 2010).
“He works in marginalized countries laden with
constraints and adversity, where architecture and infrastructure are absent,”
the Pritzker said in its press materials. “The expression of his works exceeds
the value of a building itself.”
Kéré said he approaches each project from the
perspective of his clients, attempting to understand their goals and needs. “I
start to say, ‘OK, what do I have to give? Why does this person come to me?’”
Kéré said. “I’m taking time to listen. I’m listening to really see what has
pushed this person to come to me when the world is full of architects.”
Working in West Africa can present significant
challenges. The National Assembly of Burkina Faso, for which Kéré designed a
pyramidal building with exhibition spaces and courtyards, has been stalled
because of political uncertainty.
Working in impoverished areas demands skills beyond
design, Kéré said, namely patience. “You have power shortages, you have the
internet that is broken all the time — you have to be passionate and believe in
the project,” he said. “I make sure I don’t get frustrated, to imagine doing
architecture in a different way that is not very fast.”
Kéré’s projects are not only utilitarian; they can
also have a whimsicality and a serenity. For
Coachella’s California music festival in 2019, he enveloped 12 towers in colorful triangular screens.
(Photo: NYTimes)
For his Benga Riverside School in Mozambique (2018)
he patterned the walls with small recurring voids, “allowing light and
transparency to evoke feelings of trust from its students,” the prize said.
The walls of his Center for Health and Social
Welfare (2014) feature a pattern of framed windows at varying heights, offering
picturesque views of the landscape “for everyone,” the Pritzker jury said,
“from a standing doctor to a sitting visitor” to a patient lying down.
Kéré’s strong affinity for his native land informs
his practice — he references local symbols like the baobab or palaver tree; a
traditional blue boubou garment he wore as a child.
He not only wants the community to participate in
the creation of architecture, Kéré said, but to connect with it and feel
transported.
“They get more than a building,” Kéré added. “They get
inspiration.”
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