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| Santiago Calatrava | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Designing Structures That Move By DANIEL S. LEVY
Calatrava developed his passion for movement and form growing up in Valencia, where he sketched the pigeons his parents raised. He earned degrees in engineering and architecture and has spent more than two decades perfecting an approachable style noted for biomorphic frames and expanses of glass that conjure up the exoskeletons of ancient behemoths and the windows of Gothic cathedrals. "People recognize the natural sense of harmony and peace and can then see themselves reflected in the architecture," he says.
All of Calatrava's structures appear as if they are about to move. Many do. The roof of his Milwaukee Art Museum flaps up and down like a gull's wings. His Nations Wall, a kinetic sculpture at the Athens Olympics, undulates like soccer fans performing a wave. And even buildings that don't movesuch as the planned World Trade Center transportation hub, which looks like a crystalline dove resting on ground zeroseem poised to soar. Calatrava thus accomplishes what only great architects can: he creates transcendent spaces that uplift the human spirit.
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FROM THE APRIL 18, 2005 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2005
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