Review of Arctic Perspective Cahier No.1: Architecture.

http://regardingplace.com/?p=9660

Arctic Perspective Cahier No.1: Architecture
re:place magazine, August 31, 2010

“The Arctic Perspective Initiative (API) is a non-profit, international 
group of individuals and organizations whose goal is to promote the 
creation of open authoring, communication, and dissemination 
infrastructures for the circumpolar region… it is a transnational art, 
science, and culture work group consisting of partner organizations from 
five different countries – Germany, Slovenia, UK, Iceland, and Canada. 
Arctic Perspective uses media art and the research of artists to 
investigate the complicated, global, cultural, and ecological 
interrelations in the Arctic, and to develop concepts for constructing 
tactical communications systems and a mobile, eco-friendly research 
station, which will support interdisciplinary and intercultural 
collaborations.”

- from the API mission statement

Edited by Andreas Müller – Published by Hatje Cantz Press (2010)
Review by Sean Ruthen, re:place magazine

There is and always has been an unexplainable attraction to the north, 
like some shared human lodestone. Whether for its great expanses of 
pristine and breathtaking sparseness, or the cultural richness of the 
different indigenous nations that live there, there is something about 
it which has long fascinated us. Like the unexplored depths of the 
planet’s oceans, the North represents one of the few remaining places 
where Nature still reigns supreme, where at best we can try to adapt our 
warm-blooded bodies to the microclimates of the temporary shelters we 
erect there. On two previous occasions, re:place has reviewed 
architecture books on the Arctic – Extreme Architecture and Modern North 
- but none have demonstrated the breadth of enterprise that is at the 
heart of the Arctic Perspective Initiative (API).

Begun in 2006 when three of the group’s founding members sat down with 
the elders of Igloolik, Nunavut, the API has since become a sanctioned 
research body by the European Commission. This ongoing project will end 
in 2013, from which will be presented the outcome of Arctic Perspective 
– Third Culture, with the goal of providing the template for a two-way 
communication between the existing indigenous nations of the north and 
the developed nations to the south. At its core is the intent to not 
make the mistakes that have been made in the past, and to create an 
awareness and respect of the Arctic that just may save it and the people 
living there from complete catastrophe due to changes to their ecosystem.

The first of four volumes, or cahiers, to be released, “Arctic 
Perspective: Architecture” focuses solely on the enterprise of 
habitation in the Arctic, and includes a design competition to the same 
end, as well as four critical essays related to architecture and the 
North, giving the volume its theoretical breadth. Three planned future 
volumes/cahiers will look at the politics of the Arctic, its 
relationship to technology, and of course its natural landscape.

As it happens, the timing for the book’s release couldn’t be more apt, 
as just recently the media (and even our own federal government) have 
demonstrated an increasing interest in it, certainly while Canadian 
F-15’s are being called to our northern borders to disembark Russian 
planes which have curiously appeared on the horizon. Whether a gold rush 
or the relentless pursuit of oil, the developed nations of our world 
have often had their wrists slapped for trying to exploit its resources, 
and so does API arrive as a new steward for the Arctic, hoping to use 
new and old media alike to communicate the critical mass that we could 
shortly find ourselves faced with in the North, if governments and their 
corporate cronies are allowed to have their way.

Most importantly though, and not unlike other humanitarian organizations 
such as Greenpeace and the UN, the API has as its mandate a bottom-up 
methodology, in that they are not interested in seeing the North solely 
on their own terms, but through the eyes of the indigenous nations that 
already call it home. This is an important focus of this first volume, 
and sure to be a recurring theme running in the volumes to come.

Presented in a sparse and no-nonsense format, the pages of text allow 
the sixteen colour pages in the center of the book to pop out, 
themselves a collage of images culled from the competition entries. 
While the essays in the volume, including one on ‘Arctic Architect’ 
Ralph Erskine and another on Buckminster Fuller, provide effective 
counterpoint for the book, it is the design competition itself which is 
its raison d’etre.

Conducted in 2009, the competition as put on by API called simply 
“Mobile Media-centric Habitation and Work Unit,” asked entrants to 
design a habitation with life support and work station for use in the 
Arctic, with the adjunct of it having to be mobile. The design brief as 
well required that the solution be a sustainable one, providing 
renewable energy and waste recycling along with its communication 
systems. Pending available funding, there was also built into the 
competition the possibility that the winning prototype could be built 
and tested in the North. With cash prizes for first, second, and third 
place, the book presents in some detail these three schemes, while a 
handful of others are presented in brief summary, accompanied by 
selected images from their presentations.

As would be expected, the 103 entries from thirty countries ranged from 
the serious to the whimsical, with the three winners demonstrating a 
critical understanding of the terrain as realized through the indigenous 
traditions of building (and surviving) there. While one of the winning 
entrants appropriated forms of architecture and responses typical to the 
terrain, the two others went one step further and realized a habitation 
that could be collapsed to the footprint of a dogsled. A more whimsical, 
Archigram inspired entry made the media centre out of a VW camper van.

Each of the essays featured, as introduced in the editor’s foreword, are 
excellent companions to the design competition visuals and text. The 
first by Marilyn Walker provides the anthropological perspective, 
complete with photographs of typical indigenous dwellings such as yurts 
or iglus. She points out that the Igloolik dialect, along with many 
others have 100 words for snow, of which many relate specifically to 
snow as a construction material.

Two essays on Buckminster Fuller and Ralph Erskine, by Carsten Kohn and 
Jeremie Michael McGowan respectively, provide the book with both the 
architectural primer for the mobile house, as well as the first true 
modern architect of the North. The essays are then themselves bookended 
between the competition, and two documented accounts of travels through 
the Arctic, the first a rather empirical account of a voyage through the 
Northwest Passage, the other a more recent journey taken by members of 
the API to visit an ancestral ground along with several Inuit families 
in Nunavut.

Arctic Perspective is without question a timely publication from Hatje 
Cantz, with future volumes bound to be as invaluable resource as this. 
And as sure as the magnetism of the North, like its Aurora Borealis, 
continues to draw our gaze to its horizon, the API looks there also as a 
chance to set things right between Nature and our old-fashioned ways, 
for better and for worse.

***

For more information on the Arctic Perspective Initiative, go to 
www.arcticperspective.org.

For more information on the Arctic Perspective book series, go to 
www.hatjecantz.de.

**
Sean Ruthen is an architect working, living, and writing in Vancouver.

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