P.S.1 Newspaper

2009 Fall

Q&A with Young Architects: 2003 Tom Wiscombe

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

Tom Wiscombe of EMERGENT was one of the lucky competitors who waschosen to build his envisioned design. Tom Wiscombe of EMERGENT was the winner of YAP 2003 with his entry, Light-Wing, which was inspired by tension-structures traditionally found at the beach as well as in natural formations. It was defined by two elements: a translucent, permeable roof of interconnected canoe-shapes and a leisure landscape of two large pools. P.S.1 Newspaper asked the firms for their impressions of the competition, of winning, and what they might have done differently.

Question 1: What impact did winning have on your career?

Tom Wiscombe: Winning YAP has been huge for two reasons. One is clearly the overwhelming press coverage, which is still going on even six years later, and the other is more subtle. YAP forces you to design, build, lobby, motivate, fundraise, and keep smiling all at once; it’s a serious life lesson in multi-tasking and serendipity. I would also say that P.S.1 taught me to always conceptualize projects in terms of construction logic rather than simply formal or organizational logic. On another level, P.S.1 is also a right-of-passage project. It has allowed me access to other things that I may not even be aware of: I’m thankful for that.

Question 2: What design aspects of your installation did you keep for your future processes and why?

I am still interested in flattening structural hierarchies and in performative surface articulation, no question. I’m also interested in the dual ontology of operating conceptually but in terms of affect. People have talked about our structural approach, we even won awards for this, but the affect of a swarm of glowing cells nested inside a crenellated skin is just as important to me.

Question 3: Is there anything you would do differently?

What many people don’t realize is that, when you win YAP, you really only have two or three months to design and build it. You get into such a frenzy that it becomes very hard to allow any kind of design evolution. For instance, I was concerned about the number of connections of the roof to the outer wall and how the columns began to produce an unseemly structural hierarchy. I should have gone with three connections instead of two! And I should have tried to integrate the columns with the cellular logic of the roof more. That’s hindsight, and the reality is that if I had done either of those things, we might not have made the deadline, which, in my case, was even moved up a week.

 

 
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