Spaces Inspired by Nature Shirish Beri
Produktform: Buch
Husain Lehri, the director of Super Book House, approached Yashwant
Pitkar, teaching at the Sir J. J. College of Architecture in Mumbai,
to bring out a book on a contemporary Indian architect whose
approach is different from the run of the mill. Pitkar had no hesitation
in choosing Shirish Beri who in a career spanning almost forty years
has built works ranging from private residences to educational complexes
and large public projects across India. As it turned out, this
book is the result of an extensive collaboration between Lehri, Piktar
and Beri – Pitkar describes the process of making the book as one
of slow and deep unfolding.
What is most interesting about this book is its structure. Interspersed
with the projects are Beri’s written and sketched expressions.
Each set of two projects is bookended by his illustrated essays
and poetry. The essays are more like collections of rambling
thoughts, posers and anecdotes – seeking connections between
nature, art, architecture, and life. There is a seamless rhythm set up
in the book that constantly keeps the reader acquainted with the architect’s
outer manifestations in form of his buildings and his inner
thought processes, integral to that creation. The opening essay,
'Working with nature. towards sustainability' sets a tone towards
not just architecture but life in general. Beri asks whether man’s relationship
with nature could become a universal archetype for a sustainable
future. He advocates an approach towards architecture that
grows out from the place and its spirit rather than imposed technocratic
solutions.
The book features about a dozen projects in greater detail, well
illustrated with clear drawings, evocative sketches and excellent
photographs – accompanied by the architect’s own analysis of the
design process and governing concerns in each project. The opening
section of the book contains a note by B. V. Doshi and a foreword
by Christopher Charles Benninger who was Beri’s mentor
when he was a student at the CEPT in Ahmedabad. The Hirwai
Farmhouse in Nathawade for himself, one of his earliest projects,
is perhaps the best example of his avowed philosophy: spaces inspired
by nature. The Sanjeevan Primary School and the Laboratory
for the Conservation of Endangered Species at Hyderabad display
Beri’s playful and unconventional approach towards space organisation
which is at once in harmony with the site’s topography and natural
features. Projects such as the Dharwad Engineering College or
the Computational Mathematics Laboratory in Pune display a nuanced
sense of structure, construction and meticulousness towards
detail. In the closing section of the book there is an exhaustive list of
projects with thumbnails giving a good idea of the full range of the
architect’s work. Accompanying the book is a CD titled 'The Unfolding
White: Shirish Beri’s search for wholeness'weiterlesen