While Mr. Renzo Piano’s architecture lies on an extension of the analysis of functionalism and functional expression of modern architecture, it successfully departs from the classic holistic expression. In this manner, he cleared the path for new architectural possibilities as we proceed from the 20th to the 21st century.
Mr. Piano is one of the leaders of modern high-tech architecture. The distinctiveness of his architectural style lies not in purely logical and mechanical expression, but in that of raising technology to an allegoric and aesthetically impressive form.
IBM Traveling Pavilion by Renzo Piano The traveling pavilion was commissioned for a traveling exhibition of IBM computers to the populace of Europe. The pavilion's design constra. In part, the IBM pavilion was a descendant of both the greenhouse as it was developed in the nineteenth century and of the contemporaneous and demountable exhibition pavilion, the Crystal Palace. But it also continued Piano’s earliest explorations into lightness, transparency and construction with repetitive units.
It is commonly held that the origin of “modern” architecture can be traced to the period of 1920 to 1930. However, the architectural concepts established at that time did not begin to be employed in construction practice until the 1950 to 1960 period. Mr. Piano belongs to the generation which appeared after this age of “modern” architecture. In an era of confusion of various architectural concepts, he consistently combined architectural styles with developing technology to achieve higher levels of humanistic expression.
The word “architecture” is made up of the combination of “archi” and “techne.” The word “techne” has been changed to “technique” and then to “technology,” which is the term used today. Mr. Piano has researched the root of the term “technology,” and consequently has started rethinking the relationship between “technology” and “architecture” resulting in his theory that the two disciplines must be molded together. As an architect, he developed his thinking by examining the root of the Italian traditional word “techne” and its meaning which has continued from the time of the Renaissance. His work includes maximum architectural variability and suggests the direction of future architecture.
Mr. Piano is well known for his designs of the Pompidou Culture Centre in Paris, the IBM Traveling Pavilion, and the Menil Collection Museum in Houston, Texas. In addition, he has earned a reputation for the design of several local revitalization projects in which he focused on the harmony between nature and the cultural environment where they are located.
Among contemporary architects, his architecture has made a clear footprint on the history of architecture in the last half of the 20th century. Mr. Piano continues to create the most remarkable architectural work which is also said to be the most humane. Mr. Renzo Piano is a most suitable laureate for the 1990 Kyoto Prize in Creative Arts and Moral Sciences.
Renzo Piano, a high-tech architect, was born in a family of builders in Italy, in 1937. At a very young age he got the chance to get familiar to the art of “doing” by visiting construction sites with his father. He got architectural education at the Milan Politecnico (1959-1964), where he taught until 1968 as well. After graduation he worked in his father’s construction company for some time and later on joined a few firms to gain more experience.
Renzo Piano shared his early fame with a fellow architect Richard Rogers. They both worked together from 1971 to 1977. Their most famous joint project was the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris (1971) about which New York Times declared that it had turned the architectural world upside down.
Piano has also revitalized many urban plans. After splitting up with Rogers in 1977, Piano started working with a structural engineer, Peter Rice. During this period of time the areas addressed by Piano were lighting, climate control, integration of function with design and communications. In association with Rice, Piano set up a number of projects that included a mobile workshop established in the Otranto square (an experiment in urban reconstruction). The main aim of this workshop was to revive the craft skills of locals by supplying them a constant source of income through continuous maintenance of the town.
Throughout his career Renzo Piano has been in a constant struggle to surpass the clashes between creativity and scientific constraints. He kept on learning technological knowledge and used it to overcome architectural problems in more productive and modern way. He had a strong faith in amalgamation of craftsmanship and the latest technology. According to Piano, materials are the best tools of an architect of all times and he must identify their power to use them to a far off extent. Piano acquired the competence of controlling the technology with an extensive research. He encouraged the young lot to look at his work for its methodology rather than for its architectural forms. He has this skill with designing where every single design has its own peculiar solution only specific to it. This is the reason that each and every design of piano is different from every other design, thus leaving no space for consistency in his work.
His provided architectural world with more than 40 major projects that include:
- 1977: Centre Pompidou, Paris, France (with Richard Rogers)
- 1994: Kansai Airport Terminal, Osaka, Japan
- 2002: Parco della Musica Auditorium, Rome, Italy
- 2007: New York Times Building, New York City
- 2015: Whitney Museum of American Art, Meatpacking District, NYC
One of the latest projects of Renzo Piano is an airport in Osaka, Japan. Kansai terminal is one of the largest buildings Piano has ever designed and the structure of this terminal comprises of swinging and asymmetrical lines. It can accommodate 100,000 passengers a day. In 1995 Kansai faced a devastating earthquake but Renzo Piano reported that terminal did not suffer any damage, not even a broken glass.
From 1978 to 2000 Renzo Piano has won about 30 awards, the most prestigious one of which is Pritzker Architecture Award, received in 1998.