The metaphor that connects all the roles
of the passage is the script writer; the ‘script’
is written using the tools of surface, space and
time. This fictional structure reads as a palimpsest,
integral to the city.
The script makes a series of continuous
connections from the urban fabric to the waterfront,
using the streetscape as a sequence of temporal
events. A reinvented subway creates new connections
to existing major points of interest.
The juxtaposition of spatial movement and temporal
networks redirects experience through the surface
of the city. By creating hybrid connections within
its local moments, informal and chance encounters
are encouraged, temporary events and displacement
of fixed programs constitute an irregular and
unique journey.
The majority of public space in Lower Manhattan
is streetscape; public spaces of passage. The
intention is to create points in these passages
for the possibility of displacement from the context
of the surroundings, for reflection. More specifically,
the intention is to be made aware of an alternative
passage of movement to the grid, thereby undermining
the grid.
Each intervention performs this function, individually
at a local scale, cumulatively at an urban scale.
The surface, spatial and temporal tools I use
to create these interventions are extracted as
frozen moments from initial analyses of certain
passages through time and space. These tools are
then interpreted into an architectural language,
observed within the context of the city, and applied
as hybrids to create new moments within a narrative
on the streetscape.
The points are displaced in layers both above
and below the orthogonal grid, transforming thestreetscape
into a palimpsest; the ground having two successive
‘texts’ written onto it, the former
grid inscription being erased to allow for the
new armature of spaces to embed in its surface.