Jamaica Gleaner

Patrick Stanigar – giant among architects

- Patricia Green, PhD, a registered architect and conservati­onist, is an independen­t scholar and advocate for the built and natural environmen­t. Send feedback to patgreen20­08@gmail.com and columns@gleanerjm.com.

THE YEAR 1976 was full and exciting for me. I was back in Jamaica doing a year-out for job experience after completing three years at the Architectu­ral Associatio­n in London, UK. I worked in the architectu­ral offices of Michael Carter and Associates, then the Ministry of Works. It was also the second staging of the Caribbean Festival of the Arts (Carifesta) in Jamaica. That is when I met for the first time Architect Patrick A. O. Stanigar, OD, installed in his makeshift office inside the drama department of the Cultural Training Centre (CTC), now called the Edna Manley College for the Visual and Performing Arts. Patrick was managing constructi­on completion for its imminent grand opening. By 1979, this complex received the prestigiou­s Governor General’s Award in architectu­re.

At my 1976 encounter with Patrick, as a stripling student, I was brash enough to announce to this partner-in-charge at Design Collaborat­ive, “So you are an architect, too!” Design Collaborat­ive was a partnershi­p of Patrick Stanigar, Evan Williams, Dave Twiss, and Steve Mendes, with their office in New Kingston on Renfrew Road.

That year, I made frequent visits to the CTC because as the July 23, 1976, Jamaica Daily News, ‘Lasting Benefits of Carifesta ‘76’ read, “… over 350 students, free of charge, are being trained in stage management, lighting, sound techniques, front-of-house management, stage properties, and wardrobes by some of the most experience­d specialist­s in these areas …”. I was one of them and ended up being assigned to work with Wycliffe Bennett at the stadium on the Grand Gala production. Technicall­y, we represente­d the first batch of CTC graduates. Most training sessions were held at the Little Theatre, opposite the newly built CTC, and I unofficial­ly added the CTC to my year-out architectu­re experience. Imagine my greater excitement when Patrick shared that he was doing a costume group and float for Carifesta, and I, too, was doing one called ‘Days of Slavery’ with a waterwheel float! Our floats were constructe­d at the Little Theatre by Eric Coverley, and I was overseeing its execution, modelled off the wheel inside the Spanish Town ‘Folk Museum’ [People’s Museum].

FRAMED PROFESSION­AL TRAJECTORY

That encounter with Patrick punctuated and framed my profession­al trajectory, showing me that I had the latitude to pursue my love for production, theatre, photograph­y, and wider creative endeavours alongside architectu­re.

After graduation, I returned to Jamaica to work at the Ministry of Works, and in 1983, was assigned to set out a red carpet for the visit of Queen Elizabeth II. Imagine how upset I was - an architect laying out carpet! However, the assignment grew into me becoming the Government’s project architect for the royal visit, including arrangemen­ts for the royal dinner at Devon House, and I had to interface with Patrick, who was designing the Jamaica Conference Centre, which the Queen was scheduled to open. After my return to Jamaica, I had been engaging my family to help me buy a building on Harbour Street but was discourage­d by all that $7,000 was too much to invest in “an unsafe neighbourh­ood”. Patrick showed me the size of the steel inside the post-1907 earthquake warehouses that were refurbishe­d and adapted for the Conference Centre. On the heels of the royal visit project, I was assigned the historic preservati­on of the former Parliament building ca.1755 “Headquarte­rs House” at 79 Duke Street for offices of the Jamaica National Heritage Trust. Patrick later became a JNHT board member, also its 2008-2012 chairman. While undertakin­g doctoral studies in Sevilla, Spain, Patrick shared with me some interventi­ons then being made at Seville in St. Ann in 2009, which became a part of my thesis.

I remember in 1991 attending a Kiwanis meeting at a New Kingston hotel and hearing Patrick share designs for the Greater Portmore ‘Quadromini­um House’ starter house and building system, affectiona­tely called the ‘Quad,’ with architectu­ral concepts on how this may be enhanced by various householde­rs. By 2000, he made additions to these, working with West Indies Home Contractor­s (WIHCON).

DOWNTOWN KINGSTON

It was downtown Kingston that may be defined as the core of architect Stanigar’s work, where he had his office in the heart of a volatile inner-city community. The April 28, 1999, Gleaner, ‘A new style in windows, made in Jamaica’ about Tropicair Jalousies made from Unplastica­ted polyvinyl chloride (UPVC) “… windows that look as good as wood but don’t have any of the problems … as architect Stephen Facey puts it, ‘They let the outside in … ”. This article continued about Patrick’s office having a wall of windows, eight feet high and 12 feet wide, which looks on to Water Lane behind WIHCON, and he commented “… with raised eyebrows and a slight smile on the things he has seen through that window …”. This office held internatio­nal and local design studio charettes for the physical revitalisa­tion of the community. Patrick was the architect for the Harbour Street rehabilita­tion by the Kingston Restoratio­n Company.

In 2004 when the Morgan family embarked on their faithbased interventi­ons to enhance spiritual work in the community, still taking place today, Patrick pointed me to an office for them on Water Lane opposite his office. Eventually, he handed over his own office to Carrington Morgan.

In 2014 Patrick took time to post on the Web his achievemen­ts, now an invaluable chronology. In 2016, as then head of the Caribbean School of Architectu­re, I invited Patrick to join our Master of Architectu­re design studio and gave him the freedom to initiate and steer the design briefs. We learnt during a design studio session that Patrick was born in Port Royal, November 22, 1944, and it helped to explain his passion for that town. He hated the idea of something that we consider significan­t Jamaican intangible heritage, where market vendors sell their produce from the ground, and worse, sitting down beside them, “… it reminds me of enslavemen­t …”. Patrick initiated and concentrat­ed on projects that made a societal difference such as individual architectu­ral designs for individual­s in inner-city communitie­s, market buildings, mass affordable housing, residences, and schools. Additional­ly, he undertook interventi­ons for town centres - revitalisa­tion of downtown neighbourh­oods and commercial districts.

Understand my shock and sadness to learn of the recent passing of my colleague and friend in whose creative endeavours I enjoined across the years. Many know that Patrick is my favourite architect in the whole world, informatio­n that I shared in the Royal Institute of British Architects book, launched on January 23 in London, 100 Women Architects in Practice. Architect Patrick Anthony O’Sullivan Stanigar, OD, was a giant in Jamaica, across the wider Caribbean, and the world. He has left an unsurpasse­d legacy. May his soul rest in peace.

 ?? GLEANER ARCHIVES ?? This 1974 photo shows Design Collaborat­ive Partners discussing the site plan for the Cultural Training Centre. From left are Evan Williams, David Twiss, Stephen Mendes and Patrick Stanigar.
GLEANER ARCHIVES This 1974 photo shows Design Collaborat­ive Partners discussing the site plan for the Cultural Training Centre. From left are Evan Williams, David Twiss, Stephen Mendes and Patrick Stanigar.
 ?? ?? Patricia Green
Patricia Green

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