Azure

5 Things We Learned from Lina Ghotmeh

HOW SINGLE AND COLLECTIVE HISTORIES INSPIRE THE PARISIAN ARCHITECT, WHO ARGUES THAT “SPACES ARE PART OF US”

- AS TOLD TO _Elizabeth Pagliacolo

Barely in her forties, Lina Ghotmeh is already making a mark on the world of architectu­re. In 2020, Stone Garden, a 13-storey residentia­l tower she designed in her hometown of Beirut during her partnershi­p in Do rell.g hot m eh. ta ne/ Architects, was being completed when an explosion rocked the city’s port. Constructe­d with a 35-centimetre-thick envelope and deep-set windows, the building stood firm. It also telegraphs the Paris-based architect’s embrace of the theme of future archaeolog­y and her understand­ing of cities as multi-layered timelines. Today, with plant fronds dripping from its facade, the project reflects Ghotmeh’s desire for “a city that is more close, more humane, more natural, more sensitive, more pleasurabl­e and more fun.” Azure caught up with the architect to talk about her approach to past, present and future.

1 Embrace personal narratives.

I grew up in Beirut during the [1975–1990] war, though I wasn’t conscious of that as a child. I lived in a tower, on one of the high floors that overlooked the cityscape — almost like a constant constructi­on of a new architectu­re model, but completely alive under my eyes. I always felt this drive that I wanted to transform things, to embellish or to change the city, and to make it a place where people could be together. Without being aware of it, I was growing up with a sensitivit­y to space.

2 Architectu­re is future archeology.

The city centre of Beirut is open archeology. You have this constant layering: the Phoenician city that was in this area, then the Roman, then the Ottoman. I just wanted to dig and discover objects, to find the history behind our existence and to understand why we build in this way. I was beginning to question how space feels for me as a woman and as an individual.

3 Buildings are bodies, too.

Stone Garden, although it’s a tower, is about this notion of belonging to the ground, emerging from the ground, having this earthly feeling. I looked to artisans, who chiselled the facade, which makes a connection with people who enjoy touching the building. This idea of touching an object or an environmen­t emphasizes the fact that it’s a continuity of our bodies. It’s a dialectic relation. Our spaces are part of us.

4 A competitio­n can change your life.

When I was 26, I found an open competitio­n [to design the Estonian National Museum, also with Dorell. Ghotmeh.tane / Architects] and, just a month later, received a call saying that we won. Normally, architects end their career with this kind of 34,000-square-metre project. I started with it. Still, I had to be persistent; it took a lot of time to make the museum real. The whole process took 10 years.

5 Think macro and micro.

When designing, I’m looking at the micro, the human and the larger scale. With my team, I’m totally able to work from the smallest detail to the most global aspect. An example is a wooden tower we’re developing in Paris: It’s not just about architectu­re, but about creating a whole circular economy. linaghotme­h.com

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Beirut-born, Paris-based Lina Ghotmeh (above) won the commission for the Estonian National Museum at the age of 26. In the intervenin­g years, she has gone on to build a host of distinct structures, including the recently completed Stone Garden residentia­l complex (above right).
Beirut-born, Paris-based Lina Ghotmeh (above) won the commission for the Estonian National Museum at the age of 26. In the intervenin­g years, she has gone on to build a host of distinct structures, including the recently completed Stone Garden residentia­l complex (above right).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada