P.S.1 Newspaper

2009 Fall

Q&A with Young Architects: su11 architecture+design 2008

This article refers to the P.S.1 exhibition YAP 10th Anniversary Review

In celebration of YAP’s tenth anniversary, P.S.1 newspaper reached out to the nearly fifty participating firms to share their experiences as both finalists and winners.

New York-based su11 architechture+design, founded in 1999 by Ferda Kolatan and Erich Schoenenberger, was a YAP finalist in 2008 for their project Chromazon, a multifaceted installation inspired by the rhythms and colors in nature.

Question 1: How did you position yourself to get nominated?

Ferda Kolatan, su11 architecture+design: We were always interested in challenging conventional notions of design particularly through a convergence of digital technique, materiality, and novel forms of fabrication and assembly. For the past few years we have been experimenting with pluripotent structures, which have the ability to express different design potentialities while maintaining their overall organizational principles intact. Many of our projects engage this topic on different scales ranging from buildings to installations and objects. To us these methods open up new avenues to explore design effects, which are unprecedented in their atmospheric, material, and programmatic qualities but also reflect on larger tendencies in current design culture. This approach fits well with many of the ambitions YAP has put forward in their own design philosophy.

Question 2: Did YAP change anything for you or your firm? When did you recognize the full potential of the competition?

Becoming a finalist for YAP certainly increased our profile. Being associated with such acclaimed institutions as MoMA and P.S.1 is both rewarding and inspiring for a young architecture firm. Since the competition we have been approached to participate in a number of local competitions, whose organizers noticed Chromazon. In addition, having been chosen as a finalist added to our confidence that our way of thinking and producing design is relevant to contemporary culture.

Question 3: How was your design shaped by the history of YAP?

We were very familiar with YAP from its beginning since we had just started our practice in New York in 1999. Many of the winners and finalists throughout the years have been our colleagues and friends with whom we meet and exchange regularly. YAP has generated a culture for young experimental practices that reaches far beyond the actual competition and installation. When we were nominated to participate in the competition, we had a keen awareness of YAP’s history both in terms of the successful entries as well as the overarching dialog it had created. Given our own approach to design, we always felt a strong affinity to the site, theme, and experimental nature of YAP.

 

 
also in this issue:

A History of YAP: If These Walls Could Talk

Ellinger/Yehia Design: Making it Real

nArchitects: Walking in a Bamboo Wonderland

Q&A with Young Architects: MOS 2009

Gage/Clemenceau Architects: The Golden Rule

Roy: Showing Her Best Moves

Cho Slade: Falling from the Skies

SHoP: Lost in Translation

Q&A with Young Architects: Gnuform 2006

Q&A with Young Architects: KDLAB 2002

Q&A with Young Architects: L.E.FT 2009

Q&A with the YAP Jury: Barry Bergdoll

Q&A with the YAP Jury: Terence Riley

Q&A with the YAP Jury: Antoine Guerrero

Q&A with the YAP Jury: Andres Lepik

Q&A with the YAP Jury: Klaus Biesenbach

Q&A with the YAP Jury: Peter Reed

Q&A with Young Architects: MONAD 2008

Q&A with Young Architects: LOT-EK 2000

Q&A with Young Architects: SYSTEMArchitects 2001/2003

WW: Spiral Settee

THEM (Lynch + Crembil): Building a Structure, Building a Network

Graftworks: Hothouse Lily

Q&A with Young Architects: IWAMOTOSCOTT 2006

Q&A with Young Architects: Studio SUMO 2001

Q&A with Young Architects: Taeg Nishimoto 2000

Matter Practice: Earthly Delights

Aranda \ Lasch: Urban Cave

OBRA: Beatfuse!

PARA-Project: Excess as a Resource

Q&A with Young Architects: !ndie Architecture 2009

Q&A with Young Architects: Griffin Enright Architects 2004

Q&A with Young Architects: su11 architecture+design 2008

Forsythe + MacAllen Design / molo: Winning Isn't Everything

Material Lab: Changing Conditions

Bade Stageberg Cox: Beyond the Usual Approach

Spotlight On Carlos Motta

Q&A with Young Architects: Ball-Nogues

Q&A with Young Architects: 2003 Tom Wiscombe