Confiné.e.s

Confiné.e.s : Atelier FCJZ

Face au confinement imposé à tous pour contrer la propagation du virus Covid-19, nombre d’architectes ont dû adapter leur pratique et leur méthode de travail à ce nouveau rythme de vie. La série « Confiné.e.s » leur donne la parole, en interrogeant leur vision de la situation — mais aussi leurs recommandations culturelles.
Aujourd’hui, au tour de l’architecte chinois Yung Ho Chang, fondateur de l’agence FCJZ, qui a livré en 2019 le Jishou Art Museum dans la province du Hunan, publié dans le numéro spécial « Chine » d’AA.

[L’entretien suivant a été conduit en anglais, le voici en attendant sa version française.]

FCJZ Beijing Office Staffs
FCJZ Beijing Office Staffs

L’Architecture d’Aujourd’hui: Where were you locked down and how did you get organised to continue working?
Yung Ho Chang (Atelier FCJZ): My partner and I were locked down at home in Beijing. All of us at Atelier FCJZ are connected via WeChat (for texts, voice, and images) and QQ (for sharing computer screens) and we set up project-based groups and communicate frequently.

Are containment and architecture opposites?
Yes to some extent. While we can maintain team-working on the Internet, architects’ office is about face-to-face interaction. And there is no way for architects not to visit the construction sites.

What lessons do you think you will learn from the ecological impact of this crisis ?
Our generation leads an excessive life: consume too much, waste too much, move around too much… We have to stop doing that.

A film to see / a book to read during lockdown?
I read quite a few books during the self-isolation period and like to recommend two: Vermeer’s Camera by Philip Steadman and My Name is Red by Orhan Pamuk. Interestingly, both books are by authors with architectural backgrounds and both read like detective stories although they aren’t. And for a movie, the most memorable one was I Am Cuba (Soy Cuba in Spanish), a black and white Soviet propaganda film made in 1964 directed by Mikhail Kalatozov, beautiful.

What do you expect from this experience?
To slow down a bit. Too much rushing before.

What impact does this containment have on the perception of both your workspace and domestic space?
It will perhaps take more time to find out. So far, the containment has taught me to appreciate city more.

Le site de l’Atelier FCJZ.

FCJZ

Trois projets en cours de l’Atelier FCJZ (de gauche à droite) : China Academy of Art Liangzhu Campus, Wu Dayu Art Museum, Yaying Fashion and Art Center.

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