250AGA - Amery Calvelli interviews Amy Franceschini and Lode Vranken

2021

Welcome to 250AGA, a weekly exploration into what architects should know. Responding to Michael Sorkin’s outline of 250 things, Amery Calvelli, Adjunct Curator of the Poole Centre of Design, explores “the effect of the design of your city on food miles for fresh produce.”

This week, Amery catches up with artist/designer Amy Franceschini and lead architect/philosopher Lode Vranken of Futurefarmers.

Explore #250AGA on our website: https://www.youraga.ca/support/our-sp…Welcome to 250AGA, a weekly exploration into what architects should know. Responding to Michael Sorkin’s outline of 250 things, Amery Calvelli, Adjunct Curator of the Poole Centre of Design, explores “the effect of the design of your city on food miles for fresh produce.” …

Chapters

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Introduction
Introduction
0:00

Introduction

0:00

flatbread society
flatbread society
2:22

flatbread society

2:22

soil procession
soil procession
7:11

soil procession

7:11

temporary big house
temporary big house
12:44

temporary big house

12:44

bake house
bake house
20:12

bake house

20:12

human settlements
human settlements
25:26

human settlements

25:26

urban planning
urban planning
30:01

urban planning

30:01

reverse planning
reverse planning
31:29

reverse planning

31:29

Autogenerated Transcript from YouTube (if available)

Use CTRL+F to find key words if it is a longer transcript​.

Introduction

0:09

it’s a delight to have you both here amy francischini who is an artist and designer

0:15

and founder of future farmers in the 1990s 1995 maybe for some time wonderful

0:22

wonderful program uh lodi vranken is a lead architect and philosopher at

0:28

future farmers which is an interesting title that you don’t often find in a in a design

0:34

and artistic practice so really nice to have you both here and uh just to kind of give a summary of

0:40

what we’re going to talk about today we’re exploring the 250 things that an

0:45

architect should know it’s an essay by michael sorkin by the late michael sorkin

0:51

and we’re taking one of those items which is item number 152

0:57

which states the effective design of your city on food miles for fresh fresh produce

1:04

so looking at through the lens of fresh produce and what immediately immediately comes to

1:10

mind often is this notion of food miles which calls them to question the relationship with local architecture

1:17

um but it also makes us wonder it’s not just about how far but is there a different relationship to

1:24

food perhaps and i think that’s where your project that you’ve been working on which is maybe a decade-long project now

1:30

the flatbread society and um as i understand it and you’ll have to correct me if i’m

1:36

wrong that it started as a public art project to kind of uh instigate maybe run a regeneration of a

1:42

container port on the oslo waterfront and i believe this started with the relationship of

1:48

grain somewhere around 2010 or 2011 and i really love that it brings

1:55

together farmers astronomists astronomers soil scientists bakers um so i guess the question would

2:03

be really what was the connection to growing and to ancient grains that you were

2:09

interested in exploring what’s the impetus behind this project

2:16

no what the connection of can you repeat the

flatbread society

2:22

question yes what’s the connection to growing and ancient grains that you’re interested in exploring with this

2:27

project what what was the impetus behind the flatbread society and in particular the connection to

2:34

growing

2:45

so the the interest in grains came from the fact that the site we were

2:50

um we chose we were we were asked to work in one of the common areas within this

2:57

new development so they had in norway the idea of commons is quite strong it’s part of

3:02

their constitution very different than the united states and

3:07

so we chose this common area near the waterfront but we were

3:14

trying to find some sort of way to connect to the different communities in oslo so there’s a very

3:19

diverse it’s one of the more diverse cities in scandinavia and one thing that was held in common

3:25

was flatbread some norwegian nationals are eating flatbread every morning and then there’s pakistani

3:31

communities and iranian communities somalian communities also eating flatbread

3:37

so we thought that that would be this kind of currency that we could use throughout the

3:42

imaginary and and practical um uh aspects of

3:47

bringing people together and so we wanted to grow grains in this on this site um

3:54

to actually you know manifest the material of bread

4:01

and we thought it was very important to use seeds that were not um certified yet that were outside of

4:08

the industrialized certification process and we found a farmer um

4:14

very nearby who had gotten these ancient grains especially this rye grain back into

4:19

production that hadn’t been in production for almost 100 years and so the symbol of these grains that

4:27

you know are sitting outside of the industrial agricultural complex for us we’re a

4:32

really strong symbol of the commons and that these this this matter should remain in the hands of many not

4:39

in the hands of few and that to start this project with a field of of these ancient grains that had been

4:46

found in norway um would be a strong symbol of that and also a

4:52

kind of uh you know looking at um this is not a

4:58

cornfield project or that this is not a wheat field or no that was this is not a wheat field was in los angeles but um

5:05

i’m splanking on her name the great artist in new york who planted the wheat field yes um i know who you’re

5:12

talking about sorry friends but um just to think of the contrast of this

5:18

city that was developing really fast with this image of a corn a grain field

5:24

seemed like a great starting point um i mean there’s many layers to the

5:30

project but that was a beginning point to establish kind of an image and then we

5:35

we created this working group called flatbread society as a way to kind of

5:42

yeah establish a yeah a community or a society yeah it

5:52

starts with the community in a sense which is interesting

5:57

i don’t it’s i don’t know if it started with the community

6:02

[Music] there was nobody there

6:08

it was the beauty of emptiness that was present there ready to have all possible possibilities

6:18

but yeah yeah yeah i mean it didn’t even have soil so we didn’t even have a microbial community

6:25

right it was you know stone no one had lived there before so we weren’t dealing with a lot of issues

6:32

that happen in public space where it’s being gentrified people have been displaced it was a

6:38

fallow port for 20 years just ship containers on there that’s it

6:43

shipping containers cargo kind of situation

7:00

um farm of the king was gone the shipyard was gone there was it was

7:07

empty ready to be i don’t know change so amy you mentioned

soil procession

7:13

that there was not even soil there and there’s a video that happens a little bit later on maybe a few

7:19

years later a procession of farmers carrying soil to oslo um and i really love that there was a

7:26

declaration of land use as part of this uh procession if you will so how did that how did that soil did

7:34

that soil procession connect to the flatbread society or was it a separate project and and what was its role in

7:42

creating this um flatbread society or the baking the bake house even what

7:47

was the role of the soil procession well i think it started earlier

7:54

in the beginning we had this um shed it was the first big house we

8:02

built with three ovens for to make the it was a dome of a taque which is a traditional norwegian

8:09

oven it’s

8:15

to make more middle east kind red kind of bread so different kinds of

8:21

flatbread there was one place and there was another thing there was a walking

8:27

boat i was wandering around in the city with an oven making flat bread and so people got interested people came

8:34

because of the bird wandering around people came to the side saw this oven

8:41

joined in in uh things that were programmed there was a programming internal programming going on for a

8:47

month i think but then people also started to to

8:52

together and to say can we organize something about fermentation about i don’t know

8:59

it was a design group and people the university came and things like that so people started following the program

9:06

started to make their own program and that is where a first sort of community started to happen

9:14

but then with the sole procession i think another community other communities were at also the first

9:21

time the the beekeepers came and then the beast game and then of the grains game and

9:26

things like that so there was a sort of community going on that then the sole position

9:32

there was a next level extension to this earth to grow or cultivate this community i

9:39

mean we from that first fake house there was a strong enough desire by locals to want to continue

9:47

this and we got permission to do a a community farm but we had no soil and instead of

9:55

bringing in soil that the university offered to give us clean soil and

10:00

we thought that would be too easy in a way it would be great if we could in that

10:06

you know and uh kind of animate all the peri-urban farmers to bring their soil in

10:12

and to highlight their practice that they are feeding the city and also to not

10:19

i think it’s i think urban farming can offset food production but i don’t think it’s a

10:24

it’s gonna i don’t think urban farms are going to feed cities yet and i think it’s important

10:30

to also you know make that part of the conversation that we need

10:35

these peri urban farmers they’re that they’re knowledgeable they have a practice that’s that’s valid so how do we create

10:41

this site as a stage for for all kinds of farmers so we made handwritten postcards and

10:49

sent them out to 50 or 60 farmers and asked if they would come on this day to

10:55

the edge of the city with a symbolic amount of soil and march through the city to the site

11:01

and lay out this this uh their soil on the site and 52 people responded

11:08

and we met at the edge of the city and we did this procession and in the days

11:14

before we started to think about okay this is real 52 farmers are coming we have to really

11:21

pay homage and and honor their practice let’s let’s um we’re also going to have the

11:27

minister of culture coming and the minister of agriculture and some important people let’s

11:33

establish this place as a kind of museum without walls a space that is a

11:39

cultural institution dedicated to art and agriculture because in this waterfront a lot of the

11:45

cultural institutions were moving from the city to the waterfront so there was the opera

11:50

the moonk museum the library and now there’s the space called los ceter our space and so

11:58

the farmers came together and we asked all the people in the procession to take a handful of each

12:04

farmer’s soil and mix it together into this new culture um which we then laid out on the

12:10

ground we named the site los ceter which means a common in the city um and um

12:18

everybody signed this document the farmers the cultural ministers and it was

12:24

it was felt like this was a moment of co-authorship of this space and that we weren’t

12:30

actually we were just making manifest what was kind of already there as luna would say yeah do you have

12:38

anything else about slow perception

temporary big house

12:44

it’s it’s interesting in the sense that it’s bringing community together in a you

12:49

know farmers don’t often get asked to participate in a public art project

12:54

and yet this is very much about the connection of the farm and the city in the sense of the urban

13:01

and the rural coming together and it’s beautiful way that you’ve actually instigated that

13:07

um i wonder if we could talk a bit more about the bake house um and loading you you mentioned a

13:13

little bit about the temporary big house which it’s an interesting juxtaposition we’ve talked a

13:18

bit about the site already and how all the museums were moving in and the um opera and ballet building in

13:24

particular is quite well known uh designed by snohetta and it’s i believe you could the roof is quite

13:30

actively used so it’s a fairly prominent building but um

13:35

in the middle of all of this growing architecture is a uh kind of a it’s a trapezoid of

13:43

two befores maybe and a structure that doesn’t really have walls and it’s very temporary what was the what was the impetus behind

13:50

that what were you interested in doing in the creation of that structure that first structure and then what

13:56

what came from that into the the more formal structure that you’ve developed

14:01

but a bit of the behind the scenes on what you were thinking with the with the design of the structure both the first one and the second one

14:14

i think it’s a sort of action to to to to

14:26

explore what is there and who is there and and and

14:34

it was definitely the combination of this big house and this wandering walking boat that made us sort of

14:42

the possibility to have a center with our walls that is our magnet but also to have a

14:48

sort of walking center that surprises people when it

14:53

walks by or it stops everything that attracts people and sort of

14:58

because of the of the weirdness sort of tries to

15:07

awaken the curiosity of people and in this awareness bring them together

15:12

and make them join you in whatever you don’t know you’re going

15:18

since there’s a surprise when a boat comes walking by you right

15:25

and starts breaking so in the in that way it’s a sort of uh if you i don’t know it’s needed to talk

15:32

about architecture if you want to talk about architecture it’s sort of a risomatic architecture

15:38

that has uh no walls but they’re only a center that works like an attraction and so you don’t make community in a

15:46

room where you gather but you make it as a as a sort of thing that blues i don’t

15:54

know what is coming there together and at the same time then moves away to other places some

16:00

people move and so you start to make a sort of

16:05

rhythmic structure that is the basis of a community that is not based on

16:13

specific places or a specific program but more about the wandering around

16:20

and and and see what happens and trying to find out what is manifest and

16:26

invisible and make the the thing that is invisible visible or

16:31

manifest so that’s one thing but then at the same time the programming was going on

16:37

under the roof of the and near the

16:42

oven the oven videos and so these two together made this

16:49

this community as a

16:54

mixture of all kinds of people from all kinds of places and ideas

17:02

so brought them together to to make this community i think and then you see what

17:08

happens um then we did um i think it was the last programming we

17:14

did it was called the

17:20

so how do you think this community so you you sort of create a community and it happens and

17:27

then does this community what is this community how does this community function and what kind of

17:38

social structure comes with this community which is typical for that community that

17:43

just arised and then within this social structure what kind of form physical form does that need and so

17:50

there was a virtual video on

17:56

how does this new big house attempt

18:01

because we were allowed later they said like oh this is too beautiful and we got um

18:07

support of the govern the community the government the city the city

18:15

and so suddenly the temporary bakers could become a permanent baker so

18:22

we saw this in fact this temporary or new command of community could become

18:30

a permanent community so how does this permanent community needs to do to organize itself

18:36

and then what kind of forum do you need and there was a sort of this idea in the workshop

18:43

form and function and it was something else it was form and function and alternative economies like how

18:49

how can we um because the site is as a commons could not host any businesses

18:54

and so many people in the first big house were like can i work here can i start a business here

18:59

can i sell flat bread can i uh do fermentation workshops for money and

19:04

and we’re like we need to find an alternative economy and that was really interesting we brought bankers

19:11

there and librarians and young school educators to talk about

19:18

different modes of exchange that could happen on the site and um there also we baked we actually

19:25

had people mold their ideas of a permanent bakehouse and bake them in the oven and then we talked about them we had

19:31

this table that was a continuum that they could lay them on and at one

19:36

end was completely open everybody has keys and the other was closed only one key holder to think

19:43

about how do you have access to the site how does the form lend itself to that that is also of course the idea of the

19:50

community is that an open community or become our community and the rest is outsiders

19:56

or how do you keep this community open and so there are start in these baked models of uh

20:04

different kinds like solid structures or balls that wander around the otherwise

20:10

nice nice bakings it’s really interesting to hear how you’ve taken something that’s a

bake house

20:17

simple strike and not a simple structure but a bake house is something that has allowed all of this engagement all

20:24

this exploration around economies um political

20:29

you know power structures and power dynamics all of these things that make community exist is explored within the realm of a

20:37

place where you’re big bread that’s really beautiful and i’d love to ask kind of a follow-up

20:44

question which is around um we’ve been talking about community and you’d mentioned that there were

20:50

different kinds of flatbreads because it’s a very diverse um city and there are all kinds of you

20:56

know there’s from eritrea afghanistan whatever all these different types of breads um and

21:02

i found a quote uh amy that that you had said that the bake house is not where communities meet but where

21:10

difference can meet and i’m very interested that was slowed

21:19

that concept is is very interesting because we don’t often think about how difference comes together we think of

21:25

community as homogeneous and so i’m curious

21:31

i think it’s a combination of sort of having a program and going for your program but at the

21:37

same time especially um losing your program

21:44

the the the and that’s why i go back to the walking structure in city it is a weird thing

21:52

where you sort more or less lose it like what is this it’s not

21:59

like oh i joined this because i have the same ideology or i have the same ideas or i

22:05

have the same revolution going on i think it’s not like that it’s a bird that walks by and there’s baking bread so

22:12

you sort of tips in something you don’t know and you lose it a little bit and there

22:18

is i think an openness for coming together

22:24

and have a small moment of of of pushing aside your beliefs your convictions your

22:32

politic um interest and things like that at the moment it’s gone and so at the moment you can talk openly

22:38

and so you at the moment and in a short moment you can make it maybe become friends or community or whatever and if

22:45

they’re lost you get this difference that is going on and if that lasts

22:51

you get this difference that is that is

22:57

get established and so when we baked these different models it was also

23:04

trying to find out how can you keep this

23:10

sphere of of openness because yeah soon you become a group

23:18

you become friends and those are the good ones and those are the bad ones or those are

23:23

insiders and those are the outsiders and then someone wants to join but that doesn’t really fit and things

23:29

like that and so it becomes a little bit problematic it happens like that of course but it’s

23:35

it’s it’s it’s trying to find a way

23:43

to create openness [Music]

23:49

i in know yeah and i think there’s something about the the site really has no leader

23:58

there is i mean we were fortunate to be able to hire a full-time farmer who is i would

24:04

say kind of the pillar but in a way it’s too much work for one person and there’s been

24:11

this way that different projects have rooted themselves at the site and so there it there are

24:18

different things going on there’s different facebook pages for each group um there’s hidden communities that said

24:25

oh it got too popular there so we made our little subgroup at the site we meet secretly um but there’s enough like there’s some

24:33

strange balance with the place kind of having a life of its own that can’t really be named or controlled that

24:40

allows a lot of different types of projects and people to be there and it’s still a strange place it’s

24:46

still uh it’s like in the middle of these freeways there’s these

24:51

towers coming out of the center which are exhaust towers for the freeway it’s at the water so when people come

24:58

there for the first time they’re really like how did this happen how did i end up here and and i think when people enter a place

25:04

where a question like that begins then there’s an openness

25:10

and i hope we can do that in future projects to keep the surprise

25:17

always surprising people and ourselves we have time we had a lot of time in that project

25:22

yeah yeah it was about a decade is that right yeah yeah i want to ask one last

human settlements

25:29

question which um load i i noticed that you had uh studied your

25:35

masters was uh through a un course on human settlements and architecture and philosophy

25:41

and i’m i’m curious about if there’s a connection with the un global report on human human settlements

25:48

that came out where there was a discussion of uh we planning must change we need to adapt and i don’t

25:56

know if you have any thoughts on how this part this is this is going to feel like a really heavy

26:01

large big question and i’m sorry i don’t mean it to be that way but i’m curious to know what your

26:07

thinking is on how what the relationship is with the work of the flatbed society and

26:13

the future of what we should be do you know what should we be doing with our communities how should we be thinking about urbanism and urban

26:20

planning differently and does this shine a light in any way from your view well that was a long time ago that was

26:26

in 93 i did you and said i think a lot has changed because

26:34

a lot has changed about the ideas of things but i think i like to speak

26:42

about flabbridge society as [Music]

26:48

an exercise a small maybe a topic a topic

26:54

exercise in reverse planning because normally you have

27:02

the great lines like what should the region be there is it is

27:08

industrial there is like agriculture there is the city in the city and some suburbs the great lines and then you have more

27:14

specific regulations of the city about urban

27:19

planning and things like that um like the slope of europe for example here in belgium are

27:24

the the windows the material use the colors even i don’t know and then you have the

27:30

architect who knows everything comes to the people and then you say i would like to have a house

27:37

and the architect’s like i know what you need so then the architect makes the design trying to understand

27:43

what you need if he does that and then in the end you you have to live in it so it’s it’s

27:51

and what we tried to do there was first start to gather these people let them come

27:58

together and see what happens and then out of that how does that function how should that function and

28:05

how sweet and so what we did was in the end we were not allowed to build there so we

28:12

had to change sort of building regulations to to to to allow that to do that

28:18

and in the end um it becomes a sort of an example

28:23

of how things could happen so you you really work in in changing

28:30

habits and regulations um although that’s not the aim or maybe

28:36

it is but yeah and and it starts from the idea start with your community first

28:42

because they know they know that maybe they don’t know but they they they organize themselves in a

28:49

special way and it’s from that you have to start and not from the opposite thing and of course you can do your research

28:56

as an architect and things like that but i think it’s more interesting not to do your research

29:01

and then build something for the community that is coming but first build your community

29:06

and then see what happens so maybe it’s an impossible strategy

29:13

although something is happening that’s going away

29:19

oh it’s going away there’s a picture on lotus oh screen of the early days of

29:24

flatbread society that was perfect just these mounds of cement and

29:31

some grain and yeah but if it’s if it’s just an art project or

29:36

just an idea that we tried there it was more than an idea still maybe it can contaminate something

29:45

and make people think about how urban planning should change

29:52

or can change not should change but can change so yeah there is maybe something

29:58

interesting here yeah that’s a nice concept to think about into

urban planning

30:04

amy i don’t know if you have anything you want to add i didn’t mean to jump in no no i i think it’s

30:11

i mean i don’t i don’t know anything about urban planning really formally but i think um within brv

30:19

puerto rico was the name of this redevelopment area and i think um

30:27

it was maybe bigger and more ambitious than they thought and i think we kind of inserted

30:32

ourselves into a little area that they didn’t really know like oh that’s going to happen in 20 years but i think

30:37

maybe it’s interesting for development projects to leave space for the unknown or to leave a

30:44

space that people can try things out and before

30:49

they make the master plans even yes because we were inside of a master plan

30:54

and we even asked you know can we not meet around these 3d models of the future can we meet in the site itself

31:01

with the people who are going to be there right and um and they said oh that’s messy

31:07

and that’s gonna take longer and we’re like well we’re okay with that we have time um

31:16

but it’s yeah i think it takes a particular situation to have the openness to an organic process and

31:24

something that doesn’t really make sense and that can be a staging area for new ideas yeah

reverse planning

31:30

well and to give the the space for it to evolve and to iterate on its

31:37

own with the people and with the community that comes together as they so choose that’s you’re right it’s very messy and yet

31:43

what comes out of it is so beautiful and resonates with people in a very different way than something

31:49

that was planned for my 3d model for a vision for the future might have might have been able to achieve

31:56

yeah and and i think every sort of planning and of course you need to planning but

32:01

still every sort of planning starts with an ideology with a concept how the world should be and

32:09

i don’t say that those constant concepts are always bad there are bad concepts but also good

32:14

concepts but you think the world and then you implement that in your architecture or something

32:19

well there should be

32:25

a start of thinking about an inverse way of doing that so that that that you change your social

32:31

interaction and out of that you you built your environment or the the place you live in

32:36

it’s sort of a discussion between hegel and marx something going on and one is turning

32:42

the one on on top of it yeah so that is i think

32:48

what is happening i think the boats are going together you can’t live without planning

32:54

but still um we have enough planning so maybe we can focus on on the

33:01

university like how can we see how we can change and rethink social

33:07

interaction and that is not only humans because the site is full of other stuff plants

33:14

bees and then let the out of that grow the the the

33:21

formal result of your of your

33:27

interaction yeah this has been a really enchanting

33:32

conversation and when we thought we were going to talk about food miles on fresh produce we did

33:38

actually talk about it in a very interesting way because i think we were able to bring not only the idea

33:43

of reverse planning and not doing a pre-meditated activity but also the idea of the

33:49

connection between people and the food that’s grown the food that’s baked

33:54

all of those things it’s about the people that live there and the intermingling in the mix of the communities and the differences

34:01

as you pointed out when describing the community um aspects so i think this has been really

34:07

wonderful and if we wanted to think think about the antithesis to industrial food production

34:12

this definitely points away away from the industrial food production that we rely on it’s not just about measuring

34:19

distance of transportation miles that food is on a truck but there are other things that are involved

34:25

so i want to thank you both for this i don’t know if you have any last words but um no i thank you for having such good

34:33

questions and picking up on things as we went along

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