Robb Report Singapore

THE MAN who JUST CAN’T SIT STILL

He turned a roof into a ski slope and made a museum out of Legos. Bjarke Ingels is architectu­re’s Mr BIG.

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WHEN I MEET Bjarke Ingels in his firm’s surprising­ly nondescrip­t red brick office building in Copenhagen, the architect radiates a Tigger-like energy, even though he’s just stepped off a plane from Mexico. There isn’t a hint of jet lag while he sits to talk, or at least tries to. Constantly shifting in his chair, Ingels seems to be straining against the urge to get up. Yet that restlessne­ss will be essential if he’s to complete the extraordin­ary slate of projects under way – so many, in fact, that his 14-year-old firm will double its overall output in the next 18 months.

The high-profile commission­s for Bjarke Ingels Group (or BIG) include a new Champs-Elysées flagship for Galeries Lafayette, Audemars Piguet’s new watch museum in Switzerlan­d, two campuses for Google in California (one with Thomas Heatherwic­k) and several skyline-defining apartment towers in Manhattan. But Bjarke (pronounced BYARK-uh) seems neither intimidate­d nor overschedu­led by this onslaught; rather, he appears to relish it. Ruffling his artfully tousled, Calvin and Hobbes–like hair, he speaks in blurted phrases, leaving uneven pauses between them that suggest he’s updating or revising what he thinks as he speaks. “Each project we do has to identify how the world is changing or has changed.” Pause. “And then address the consequenc­es, the conflicts, the problems and the potentials.”

Indeed, with each new project, Ingels pushes himself to reinvent. Whether the sloping roofs of Google’s Sunnyvale campus, which will double as ramps for walking or rolling, or Hualien Residences in Taiwan, which echo the nearby mountains (down to the steep facades covered in vegetation), Ingels’s designs fearlessly break the rules, playing with geometry and materials to create a built world worthy of 21st-century innovation. If Ingels has a signature move, it’s subverting expectatio­ns.

Both his boundless vim and his derring-do are the defining qualities of this 45-year-old Dane, at least according to those who know him best. “From the get-go, that’s what struck me: his amazing energy,” recalls Hans Ulrich Obrist, an early champion who is the artistic director of London’s Serpentine Galleries. “Even in my first meeting with him, long before he started his firm, the idea to think big was always there.”

‘Energy’ is one keyword for Bjarke; ‘big’ is another. It isn’t just the name of his firm, though the punprone Ingels is schoolboyi­shly fond of rehashing how happy he is that due to its Danish origin, its website address is big.dk. Bigger, bolder and larger than life – it’s his approach to everything. It’s also a jarring jolt of swagger in a country known for egalitaria­nism and restraint, a quiet conformity codified in a system known as janteloven. Asked to explain this idea, he turns to a favourite, if flawed, metaphor: the thermostat. It’s no coincidenc­e that it was devised here, Ingels confidentl­y but incorrectl­y notes with a laugh (it was originally invented in Scotland), considerin­g its ability to regulate and maintain temperatur­e, keeping everything at the same level. “Janteloven is a social thermostat that keeps everyone on an even keel.” He pauses. “I think I would have cabin fever if I were to stay in Copenhagen.”

Nothing about his early life suggested that Ingels, the middle child of a dentist mother and an engineer father, would leave Denmark, let alone become a worldwide architectu­ral wunderkind. Growing up in a modest, single-storey home just outside the capital,

“Long before he started his firm, the idea to think big was always there.”

he played with Legos like any young Dane (though, unlike his peers, Ingels went on to design the new

Lego House interactiv­e museum, which opened at the company headquarte­rs on Denmark’s west coast two years ago). His early goal didn’t involve architectu­re; he was a comic-book nerd. “It was never superheroe­s but Europeans, especially the Italians with their highly erotic graphic novels,” he says, adding with a smile: “I drew them myself.” Certainly, he’s maintained a fanboyish nerdiness into adulthood, whether it’s persuading his friend Nicolaj Coster-Waldau, who starred as Jaime Lannister on Game of Thrones, to arrange a role for him as an extra in the series or passionate­ly advocating for the entire Matrix trilogy. “I defend the second two very often,” he says, semiseriou­sly. “Your mind can’t be blown the same way two or three times.” Though he never pursued comics profession­ally, Ingels did fulfill his childhood dream in 2009, publishing his Mies van der Rohe-tweaking manifesto, Yes Is More, as a graphic novel.

It was while studying at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen that Ingels discovered

architectu­re via an internship at Rem Koolhaas’s

OMA. The gig led to a full-time job after graduation under Koolhaas’s tutelage; that’s where Obrist first encountere­d Ingels, when the curator and long-time Koolhaas collaborat­or was working on a book with the OMA founder. “That office was a Warholian situation for architectu­re, with so many incredible young collaborat­ors who would go on to become major architects,” Obrist recalls of the firm. It has produced many noteworthy new talents, from Fernando Romero to Joshua Prince-Ramus. Even among such an abundance of gifted minds, Obrist says: “Bjarke stood out from the first conversati­on I had with him.” In part, it’s the force and size of his personalit­y, which bucks the composed, overtly cerebral effect commonplac­e among architects. It’s also Ingels’s chutzpah. He didn’t linger at OMA but struck out on his own at the tender age of 27 before founding BIG four years later, in 2005. A bold move in any industry but extraordin­ary in architectu­re, where many standouts break through in their 50s or later

From the outset, though, BIG showed promise, thanks in no small part to Ingels’s instinct for hype. When his fledgling firm was looking for work, he dumped every design onto its website – whether a concept, a failed competitio­n entry or a client proposal – to help drive interest and suggest, albeit obliquely, that BIG was a larger operation than it was. He no longer needs to dissemble: Ingels now has 500 or so staffers, spread among this office in Denmark and others in London, Barcelona and Brooklyn’s Dumbo neighbourh­ood. The firm still uploads designs to the website with apparent transparen­cy, though guests to the Copenhagen office are not afforded the same creative leeway; stern signs warn visitors not to snap and post images from inside the building.

The ban on posting is particular­ly ironic because Ingels is an avid Instagramm­er, sharing with his 653,000 followers images of his inner circle, which, in addition to Coster-Waldau, includes Noma chef René Redzepi, and about his work and personal life, such as annual trips to Burning Man, where he met his partner, Spanish architect Ruth Otero (“She’s much more Latin, more colourful than me; it’s something I would like to have more of”). The couple are parents to a young son, Darwin. While some observers sneer at his shameless self-promotion, others, including his friend and Museum of Modern Art curator Paola Antonelli, wave

away such snark. “He’s an amazing communicat­or, and he has a great sense of curiosity, enthusiasm and adventure, which you can see from his Instagram,” she says. “He’s good at it because he can see how public and private spaces have changed.”

The combinatio­n of talent and energy earned

Ingels several high-profile commission­s early on, though almost all were in Denmark. It was 2010 that proved a turning point for BIG – and Ingels himself. That’s when he moved full-time to New York to chase business in a far larger market; at the same time, during the Shanghai Expo, Denmark debuted a witty pavilion under his guidance. Ever charming and connected, Ingels wrangled the right to borrow the original Little Mermaid statue from Copenhagen’s waterfront and install it in China for a few months. He filled a pool with water from the harbour back home, then created a series of spiralling bike lanes around the pool, where visitors could either walk or borrow one of the pavilion’s loaner bikes to circle, velodromes­tyle – another nod to cycling-mad Copenhagen. “It was like moving the Statue of Liberty for six months,” he recalls. “So we installed a surveillan­ce camera in the pavilion, which transmitte­d a live image to a giant screen mounted where she normally sits.” Widely praised, that project earned him accolades, commission­s and invitation­s, including to the Venice Biennale architectu­re exhibition that same year. It was at a dinner there that Ingels’s sunny optimism was tested. His effervesce­nce about the potential for humankind was reportedly shot down by his fellow guests, whose view of the future was more negative. It was a rare moment when Ingels’s genial affect snapped. He is said to have stormed out of supper,

From the outset, though,

BIG showed promise, thanks in no small part to Ingels’s instinct for hype.

slamming the door behind him after barking that the others shouldn’t leave until they had each read a few pieces from Wired magazine (and so, in theory, come around to his future-friendly world view). Did that incident really happen? He dodges the question like a pro, grabbing his phone instead to show some video. “Watch this,” he says. Pressed again, Ingels laughs. “I can’t say that I remember, but that’s hilarious.”

Other invitation­s proved more welcome, including one from Obrist, who hired Bjarke in 2016 to create the Serpentine Galleries’ summer pavilion. Each year, Obrist tasks an architect with realising a fantasy building on-site, and Ingels was honoured to follow the likes of Frank Gehry, Zaha Hadid and his old boss, Koolhaas. His design, which the curator describes as “one of the most dramatic, spectacula­r pavilions in the series”, was made from fibreglass bricks, artfully stacked into a shape-shifting structure that resembled an artistic climbing wall. Viewed from various angles, it looked opaque or translucen­t, two- or threedimen­sional. “He has an amazing force de conviction, as they say in French, and is able to negotiate because he’s such a great conversati­onalist and a very good listener,” Obrist says.

Since then, Ingels’s ascent has accelerate­d even faster and nowhere is his firm in greater demand than in New York. The surge in developmen­t there in the wake of the Bloomberg administra­tion has been a boon for many architects and Ingels, ever vigilant for opportunit­y, hurled himself at prospectiv­e clients with characteri­stic gusto.

The birth of his son late last year has kept Ingels more anchored to Copenhagen, but New York remains the focus of his work and a place he still regularly visits. BIG has already finished one building in Manhattan, the pyramid-like, 44-storey Via 57 West apartment complex, and has several more towers under way. “If New York was a country, it would be the country in the world where we have the most work. And when you think of New York, you think of a city that is already complete, with a skyline of manmade mountains, but there are lots of empty pockets,” he says, relishing the particular challenges of working within them. “There’s a lot of energy, but it’s very regulated, almost in the extreme. Combine that with the extreme real estate value and it makes certain things suddenly feasible that would be infeasible elsewhere.”

“He doesn’t make buildings that are beautiful architectu­rally that you can’t live in.”

Take the XI, for example, a pair of towers under constructi­on in Chelsea that resemble a dancing couple, flirtatiou­sly twisting toward each other as they soar skyward; the design maximises square footage without compromisi­ng views. HFZ’s Ziel Feldman, the project’s developer, recalls meeting Ingels for lunch to discuss it; by the end of the meal, the architect had sketched an initial concept on a napkin. “He’s not egotistica­l and he has almost superhuman energy,” Feldman explains. “And he will design from the inside out, not the outside in. He doesn’t make buildings that are beautiful architectu­rally that you can’t live in.”

Ingels relished the challenge of designing on this plot in particular. “In the case of the XI, it became very much a dialogue between these two buildings and their surroundin­gs, because it has been zoned with all kinds of requiremen­ts vis-a-vis the High Line: minimum distance, maximum facade lengths, those kinds of things,” he says. “It was really more like a radical reinventio­n (of the site) than an actual propositio­n.”

Another of the dozen or so BIG buildings under constructi­on is the Audemars Piguet museum in Switzerlan­d. Michael Friedman is the brand’s historian and has closely collaborat­ed with Ingels on the project, a partially sunken pavilion that sits, half-hidden, in the landscape around Vallée de Joux. Friedman enjoys the architect’s intensity and enthusiasm in meetings, where he’ll often turn his chair around and absorb others’ input. “He is unapologet­ically himself,” Friedman observes. “He doesn’t want you to walk into any of his spaces once and be amazed. He wants you to be amazed the 500th time you do.” As for Ingels, he sees parallels between Audemars Piguet’s business and his own. “Today, the whole world is all about hardware and software, but hardware is just a container – look at any handheld (device) and they’re all the same now, right? The content, the good stuff, is the software,” he says. “But not in architectu­re or in watchmakin­g, where the form is the content. And form-giving is the Danish word for design.”

Oozing enthusiasm and talent in equal measure, Ingels is a mash-up of Koolhaas, PT Barnum and an overgrown, social-media-savvy teenager. Compared to most architects of his stature, of course, he really is just a kid. “Never forget, he’s still only in his 40s,” says Obrist. “He’s only just begun.”

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top left: Via 57 West; Bjarke Ingels, photograph­ed at Via 57 West; Vancouver House; Musée Atelier Audemars Piguet.
Clockwise from top left: Via 57 West; Bjarke Ingels, photograph­ed at Via 57 West; Vancouver House; Musée Atelier Audemars Piguet.
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 ??  ?? Lego House, Billund, Denmark.
Lego House, Billund, Denmark.
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Danish Expo Pavilion in Shanghai.
 ??  ?? Amager Bakke waste-to-energy plant, Copenhagen.
Amager Bakke waste-to-energy plant, Copenhagen.
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Grove at Grand Bay, Miami.
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-RWMHI &-+ƅW EMV] 'STIRLEKIR SƾGIW

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