The old Independence Visitor Center will soon be demolished
to clear the southeast corner of 3rd and Chestnut to make way for the new
Museum of the American Revolution.
The prospect of a new museum at the edge of Independence
National Historical Park is exciting, helping to tell the story of America’s
struggle for independence, creating a rich visitor experience, and giving this
quiet corner a more active use.
At a ceremonial kickoff Wednesday Museum President and CEO
Michael Quinn, former Governor Ed Rendell, and philanthropist H.F. “Gerry” Lenfest
enthusiastically trumpeted the possibilities of the new museum to tell the
story of America’s founding. Where better than in the heart of Philadelphia,
amid the resources of Independence NHP?
There is good reason to be excited about the museum project,
but the design still leaves much to be desired. Last month the Art Commission
pushed back against Robert A.M. Stern Architects phony-coloni design, a
knockoff version of the real historic architecture that’s within sight of this
spot, and aspects that create a poor street presence. Conversations between the
project team and the Art Commission are ongoing.
The Art Commission asked the architects to rethink the
cupola, which apes Independence Hall, and the lack of windows on the ground
floor along Chestnut. (For more on the Art Commission’s responses see Inquirer
architecture critic Inga Saffron's recent column.)
Perhaps worse than the deadening expanses of brick is the
reality that it’s not even real brick. So it’s faux Georgian with artificial
masonry panels.
During his remarks Monday Ed Rendell noted that this museum
will help visitors foster a greater appreciation for the founding, “what we have, what we built … because of the
ideals we stand for as the greatest nation in the world.”
This is going to be a museum dedicated to the founding
struggle for American independence and the loftiest ideals of our democracy. So
why’s the architecture so thin?
Should we be demonstrating those ideals through imitation
architecture and phony brick walls? Is the message prefab Americana? This
should be a museum built for the ages.
The founding generation of American architects also
struggled with how to express our democracy in architectural form, and several
important results surround the site of the future museum: William Strickland’s
stunning Second Bank, a Greek Revival temple on Chestnut Street, and First Bank
just across Third Street, Samuel Blodgett’s fussier take on Classical Revival.
At Wednesday’s event about a dozen members of the Bricklayers
and Allied Craftworkers Local 1 PA/DE stood in respectful protest in defense of
real masonry. They were there with a simple message: Brick on brick, not lick
and stick. They held signs reading “Keep the tradition alive” and “Please no
pre-fabricated panels of brick & stone.”
George Posner has been a bricklayer for 45 years and he
worked early in his career on the old Visitor Center that will be razed to make
way for the new museum. His only objection to the project is the design's
prefab masonry panels.
“We want to see the brick laid by hand … just like this was
built and probably everything else around here,” said Posner gesturing to the
1976 Visitor Center and the 1797 First Bank across the street. “We want our
guys to do the work one brick at a time, traditionally.”
The bricklayers do have a vested interest in seeing real
bricks used, because that would mean jobs for their craftsmen. But Posner said
it's also about quality, durability, and pride. And that, he said is important
given the significance of this new building and its setting. Plus, he contended
that give the cost of fabrication, shipping and installation the cost could be
comparable.
“They should want the real thing, not prefabricated
imitation, junk," he said.
The bricklayers have a point. Here, a brick is more than a
brick. The idea of prefabricated masonry panels rings hollow. If this museum is
to represent our “hallowed traditions” and even take the language of
traditional building, do us one better: Build traditionally.
Source: PlanPhilly.com
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