Submitted by Spacesmith
How can architects and designers reference the past to create stability and a sense of safety and community in unstable times? According to Katy Flammia AIA, IIDA, LEED AP, design director at the architecture firm Spacesmith’s Hudson, N.Y. office, “Often as a response to tragedy and turmoil, people feel a need to retreat; to find security in the familiar, traditional, and recognizable.”
As Flammia writes, architects and designers today are being asked to react to the emotional landscape in order to provide uplifting places that will nurture safe, strong, resilient communities.
“In times of rampant change – be it technological, political, or social – there is often a call to simpler times of safety and authenticity,” she says. This moment in time raises interesting questions, such as: What is the most appropriate and authentic response to the current crisis in terms of form, function, and style,” she says.

Proliferating technology allows design professionals to work at greater speeds, which according to Flammia may be the reason the architecture world sees so much stylistic montage without careful thought to its relevancy. But the architecture and design professions are able to offer novel aesthetic, logistical, and spatial solutions that are appropriate to this moment’s unprecedented challenges, she notes. “Designers and architects are as imaginative today as we have ever been, but we have to double down on our creative resources to provide truly sensitive, precisely tailored environments that satisfy real human needs – without directly copying aesthetic expressions from history.”

Flammia points to renowned architectural works that, in her opinion, got it right – they go back to basics, seek meaning in history, and feel both solid and authentic. Among the examples she extolls are Saint Benedict Chapel by Peter Zumthor, Ekouin Nenbutsudo-temple by Yutaka Kawahara, and Säynätsalo City Hall by Alvar Aalto.

Flammia concludes with the hope that in the coming years, “when we look to design spaces that heal and nurture, we will look into our past, but with a creative energy that pulls tradition forward, is thoughtful, inventive, and above all optimistic and forward-looking.”