NZ Life & Leisure

FRED’S AWAKENING

A highly successful architect transforms his life – and his life’s work – after a visit to Spain

- WORDS NATHALIE BROWN

LAKE HAYES-BASED architect Fred van Brandenbur­g first saw the groundbrea­king and structural­ly defiant work of Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí while he was studying architectu­re at the University of the Witwatersr­and in Johannesbu­rg in the early 1970s. At the time, the young South African was spending his university holidays in Spain.

But it wasn’t until his return to that country in 2004 and his visit to Park Güell in Barcelona, designed by Gaudí in his naturalist phase (during which Gaudi was inspired by organic forms from nature), that Fred had a Gaudí-inspired revelation.

“It was an architectu­rally cathartic experience,” he says. “It struck me like a thunderbol­t. In a fleeting second I knew I needed to learn more about these structural principles, to see how I could adapt them and use them in contempora­ry architectu­re, to let the structure become the architectu­re. I was overcome with emotion and dashing tears from my eyes.

“I was enthralled by Gaudí’s organic forms; by the spaces, the engineerin­g principles and decorative motifs. I saw structural solutions created by intersecti­ng forms that seemed spontaneou­s and natural while being controled by what I later learned was schoolboy geometry sourced from nature.”

Fred made an immediate decision to abandon the straight lines and single facades of mainstream architectu­ral design in favour of the forms found in nature. “I thought, ‘My work is so mundane, I should be ashamed of myself.’ I had stopped pushing the boundaries. If Gaudí can do this back in the late 1800s then there is no excuse for me. So I went home and ceremoniou­sly ripped up my past work. You can imagine the expression on my wife’s face. So how am I going to feed the family? Never mind… I’ll find a way.”

Fred and his wife Dianne had emigrated to New Zealand in 1988 with their four sons Patric, Damien, Jude and Luca and settled in Queenstown. Says Fred: “I had made up my mind to leave apartheid South Africa many years earlier and since I knew I had to start all over again regardless of location, why not choose beautiful Queenstown?”

After his arrival in New Zealand Fred had become well known for his work on several leading New Zealand resorts. He was the founding architect for Millbrook in Arrowtown from 1989 to 1995, the principal designer on Huka Lodge near Taupo for 13 years and he designed luxury lodge Wharekauha­u in the Wairarapa, basing it on the high-end arts and crafts style of the British architect Edwin Lutyens.

“At the time, I saw architectu­re for second homes and lodges as a stage set – a piece of theatre for tourists who wanted to be taken away from their real life and brought into a fantasy world. Wharekauha­u took this to an extreme.”

Within weeks of his return to New Zealand after that pivotal trip to Gaudí’s Park Gull in Barcelona, Fred was with a client for whom he had recently completed the design of a large house. Fred told his client that this design was to be the last of the old van Brandenbur­g style. The client told Fred he didn’t want to have the last of the old style but the first of the new.

“So I said he would need to come with me to Barcelona to see Gaudí’s early work, with its relatively simple geometry.” And while in Barcelona with his client and simply by chance, Fred met the great Gaudí exponent and then director of the Royal Gaudí Chair at the School of Architectu­re at the Polytechni­cal University of Catalonia, professor Juan Bassegoda Nonell. The professor was teaching postgradua­te architectu­re students in a small faculty located in Finca Güell – the Güell Pavilions.

“I was looking for a way through the gate into the pavilions, so I slipped in while someone was going out. I did not know what was in the interior and sheepishly found myself in the presence of professor Bassegoda, the wonderful man who was going to change my life.

“I went back to Barcelona six or seven times in the next several years and every time I made an appointmen­t to see him. He would look up from behind his pile of books and would greet me: ‘Ah… Mr New Zealand. You are back again.’ And he would give me an hour of his valuable time.” The professor died in 2012 and Fred has since met his successor.

“After the first few times listening to professor Bassegoda I began to understand that Gaudí was a brilliant architect but an even more brilliant engineer. It was the engineerin­g part that fascinated me because I knew that if I learnt that geometry and applied it to my new architectu­re it would free me up entirely.

“When we did the cost estimates for the first client in my new way of working, the house proved to be less expensive to build than the one I had designed for him before I experience­d my epiphany. It proved that this wild architectu­re was cheaper than the convention­al architectu­re. That gave me the confidence to know that as long as I stuck to those geometric principles that I learnt from Gaudí, everything was buildable.”

Fred says all buildings should tell a story with their architectu­re. “Forms found in nature are easy to see, and this is our natural heritage. But we also need to reflect our cultural heritage and by this I mean the communitie­s that existed before the white settlers arrived. For example, in the Crest hotel project (on the shores of Lake Wakatipu) we have designed retaining walls that are sculptural metaphors for wakas that would have been on Lake Wakatipu.”

It makes good economic sense, he says, for Aotearoa architectu­re to be exuberantl­y creative because internatio­nal visitors are looking for something uniquely New Zealand.

Today Fred’s practice, Architectu­re van Brandenbur­g, is designing the massive Shenzhen headquarte­rs of Chinese fashion label Marisfrolg. The building, on an island site of 5.5 hectares with a 120,000-square-metre building (12 times the size of Te Papa), is said to be the largest contract yet undertaken by a New Zealand firm in China. Drawings began in 2007, work commenced on site in 2010 and Fred expects the project to be complete in another three years.

“This project was simply gifted to me,” he says. “I did not need to bid for it. The owners heard about me when they toured New Zealand and visited some of the lodges where my name kept cropping up. When I told them I no longer did this style of architectu­re, they were not fazed. But they do rely on me to design it in the most costeffect­ive way possible. This is a responsibi­lity ingrained in me a long time ago: do everything to get the best result for the cheapest cost.

“Nearly half the building is undergroun­d with controlled shafts of natural light to the bottom floors. Just recently the building emerged from the ground and, with the scaffoldin­g coming down, only now can we see the full extent of the design. And to think that all this is done by a handful of my talented staff out of New Zealand.”

In the van Brandenbur­g design studio in Dunedin, Fred’s “talented six young designers” work to the philosophy that if they can’t build something in a model, a builder can’t be expected to build it in real life. Fred says it is a very simple philosophy. The designers begin with small, rough, mock-ups in a physical form, rather like the way a sculptor works. Many models are made and rejected before they arrive at the right one. This perfect model is then drawn in CAD and printed with a 3D printer. This allows the form to be assessed for accuracy to the millimetre before it is converted into 2D drawings for constructi­on. This is the reverse of most architectu­ral processes in which 2D drawings are converted into buildings.

And where to from here? “I’m like many architects who really only hit their straps in their 60s and 70s. I’ve just started. There’s so much more to do in my work. What I saw on that day in 2004 was the source of a change in me, like an unfurling. I’m still growing.”

 ??  ?? OPPOSITE: Shaz and Fred confer on the surface treatments for aspects of the China project; a model of the Marisfrolg headquarte­rs; details of the China project under constructi­on. THIS PAGE: Dianne spends most of her afternoons creating expanses of...
OPPOSITE: Shaz and Fred confer on the surface treatments for aspects of the China project; a model of the Marisfrolg headquarte­rs; details of the China project under constructi­on. THIS PAGE: Dianne spends most of her afternoons creating expanses of...
 ??  ?? THIS PAGE: How to beat the empty nest syndrome? Get papillons and a samoyed. And a cat. ( From left) Keisha the samoyed, Fred with his favourite papillon, Poppy on his lap, Gemma on Dianne’s knee, Polly on the couch and Kia on the floor. Chilla the cat...
THIS PAGE: How to beat the empty nest syndrome? Get papillons and a samoyed. And a cat. ( From left) Keisha the samoyed, Fred with his favourite papillon, Poppy on his lap, Gemma on Dianne’s knee, Polly on the couch and Kia on the floor. Chilla the cat...
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PHOTOGRAPH­S RA CHA EL HAL EM C KEN NA
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 ??  ?? THESE PAGES: Shaz, Fred, Jude, Luca and Dianne, who painted the furniture. Jude laid the stones in the pathway leading to the stainedgla­ss front door, made by a South African artist.
THESE PAGES: Shaz, Fred, Jude, Luca and Dianne, who painted the furniture. Jude laid the stones in the pathway leading to the stainedgla­ss front door, made by a South African artist.
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