缅北强奸

Lucien Lagrange

B.Arch. 1972 Chicago, IL

Well how- the question, you know, how did I get started with architecture, yes, it鈥檚 a very long story but I left France on my own when I was eighteen years old in 1959 and came to Montreal because they would speak French, so it would make it easier to come across to see- to get on a boat with a suitcase. And I started to- I was a dropout of high school in France. And I came to Montreal, got jobs, got jobs. There are some interesting stories about that. I won鈥檛 tell you what they are. But I got jobs and at one point in life, and I鈥檓 not quite sure what made me do it, but I wanted to go into architecture. To know exactly why it came on me when I was twenty, I don鈥檛 quite understand myself why, but suddenly, I had a desire really very strong to go into architecture. But it was hard to get back to a university because I never finished my high school. So I had to finish high school by taking a night class and night courses in Montreal. And then I finally got accepted at Sherbrooke University for the first year of engineering. And Sherbrooke was a very progressive school. After my first year of engineering, then I got accepted at 缅北强奸, which was my first choice, to go- to get to 缅北强奸 to learn architecture. And therefore, being born 1940, I left France in the spring of 鈥59 when I was eighteen and I went back to school, I was twenty-five. And I was an older student at the time because most of the students would be finished with school at that, twenty-five, twenty-six. So I was an older student and I was a student with experience being worked.

[1:53:23]

Why architecture? My father- I was raised on a farm in the South of France, in Provence. But my father was really a mason. He went back to be a mason and maybe that was, being raised in France and a mason father might have been an influence why I went into architecture. It was very thoroughly difficult to get back to school and I鈥檇 been supporting myself from the time I was eighteen, I went back and started school, so-. And then, because I worked before, I could draw, I was a draughtsman, it was easy for me to get jobs with an architect鈥檚 office. And in 1968, and this guy Derek- no, not Derek, Wilson, Stu Wilson pushed me to get a job with an architect and go to the big-time architects and get a job. And then I decided to come down to Chicago. I wanted to see Chicago.

[2:56:08]

Well Stuart Wilson was very involved with the students, talking about all the star architects. And it dawned on me that what I might do instead of getting odd jobs I should really work for the good firms. And it鈥檚 really, it鈥檚 Peter Collins. The story is interesting because it involves Peter Collins. And I did something very interesting in Peter Collins鈥檚 class and he liked what I was doing. And he gave me a book and on the book, there were three initials: S.O.M. And at the same time, I made some connections with Mies van der Rohe鈥檚 office that was doing the Westmount Square in Montreal, because we were doing some shop drawings for a curtain wall company and had the chance to meet some of the people from Mies鈥檚 office. So that spring, being told by Stu, I called the office of Mies van der Rohe and said, 鈥 I want a job and I want it for you guys, in your office鈥. Well, they said, 鈥淲e鈥檙e really busy but we don鈥檛 have enough work really to take a student on and we鈥檙e committed to take other students we can take from AIT in the summer, but we could help you to get a job either with C.F. Murphy or SOM. And right away, I said, well, I decided to go with SOM because there was a book published about SOM that Peter had given to me. So I went to work for- I said, 鈥淚鈥檒l work for SOM!鈥 And the only reason was that book that Peter had given me, so he had changed my whole life! And- but the office of Mies van der Rohe made a strong recommendation for me to get some work in the summer of 鈥68 with Skidmore, Owens and Merrill. And from the beginning, because I was older, because I was a very quick draughtsman, I moved up very quickly when I was a student. I could take jobs and do them so I was put as a designer right away and I started a relationship with Bruce Graham, which was a great mind, great architect.

[5:04:28]

But going back to my education, I can come back to it, so- going back to my education, the way I see it, Peter Collins was very important, absolutely important in my education. And I see three ways: Peter gave me something, the school also as a whole gave me something else, and the third part of my education, because I had to complete my education, I mean SOM gave me, and Bruce Graham, I learned how to put buildings together, the art of putting buildings together, which is not quite- it鈥檚 part of architecture but it鈥檚 not architecture. Peter Collins told me how to think about architecture and that鈥檚 really what- for the rest of my life, I will have great respect for Peter because he really- that鈥檚 what he was teaching, how we should think about architecture. He was the only one who really- and then the other part I got from 缅北强奸 was, at the time, in the late sixties, early seventies, there was a great push about housing in the world, in Canada, in the States. There was Norbert Schoenauer, very involved, mostly, the most involved, teaching, learning, studying housing. And that鈥檚 something I have kept all the time. I have a great interest in it. I鈥檓 using it today in some of the major projects that I鈥檓 doing in 1997. I have a lot to do in Chicago with residential, prop-residential, multi-family residential projects; I鈥檓 talking three thousand, two thousand units. But Peter was the one who guided me to a more- the logic about thinking, working architecture.

[6:58:12]

You mentioned Stuart Wilson. Did he play a continuing role in your career, I mean, your student days?

Stuart was for all of us, Stuart was very important for all of us because he鈥 s the one who鈥檇 make us work hard, stay up at night. He was a slave driver. But he did teach us really what it was to work in an office, an architectural office, and more technically-oriented for the students. But I think it was more on the technical side of architecture than design. Bruce Anderson was totally at the other end of design, the design spectrum. That鈥檚 why I ended up by being- and I thought it was very important for me my summers with SOM and Bruce Graham, because that鈥檚 really how I learned how to put buildings together. And right away, I started to work with forty-storey projects. And if you know how to go about design, the process of designing a forty-storey tower, then you know how to do any other project because all the architectural systems or the structural systems to make the building are there. You have to work with that. The process of design, I learned with SOM. The thinking came from 缅北强奸.

[8:24:20]

And with Peter Collins, I was fascinated by his lectures. And Peter Collins was very, very knowledgeable about the French renaissance. And then I also read all his books, which are fascinating books too. But I was fascinated by his teaching, which really wasn鈥檛 teaching as such, but-. And he had exams, and I wasn鈥檛 doing too well on his exams at the very beginning. So in the second year, he was showing problems on slides and we had to write about the problem. And suddenly, I took my pen, I wrote everything I knew about what he was showing us. And part of it was Westmount Square. And some of the details- Peter didn鈥檛 know that Westmount Square was concrete structure. He thought it was a steel structure because it was clad in aluminum or metal. I had to tell him. And he lives a few blocks away. But I wrote everything I could, because I would read a lot about architecture. It was [unclear]. And the way Peter would grade the exam was he would take how many facts we鈥檇 give about the problem and then- and would compile all the possible facts about the problem. And let鈥檚 say there鈥 s ten facts, ten you can say about. Anybody who has three, four or five would have made three or four or five points. So he would grade against each other. Well, in that exam, suddenly, I jumped over everybody, I got like 85%, but the problem was everybody went down to 65. So all the big brains in school, because there鈥檚 always a few that are really more intelligent; they do better, better marks and you know. And they were really much younger so a grade to them was very important. To me, grades were totally meaningless. Knowledge of what I wanted to do was beyond grades. So suddenly, I got those high marks and everybody鈥檚 got low marks. The difference was just about twenty points. And there was almost a revolution because everybody was upset about it, how come I got high marks and he didn鈥檛 get high marks? It鈥檚 because I knew more about it. And Peter had a hard time convincing, telling everybody what I did and how I did it. I was fascinated by architecture. I would travel, read, look, analyze, which I still do, and that鈥檚 what happened. And that鈥檚 when it became a very- an issue in the school with- a lot of students went to protest to Peter that, 鈥淚 should get a high mark鈥... They should get a high mark because, you know. And that鈥檚 really what happened with Peter.

[11:13:05]

Well, when I graduated in 鈥72, before I went to work, I went back to France. I was done with my schooling, my degree. And meanwhile, I managed in the first twelve years to be a draft dodger from the French government, because I didn鈥檛 want to go and fight in Algeria and shoot some Algerian with some guns and stuff. So I went back to France. I went to court and I fought the French government and I did win so I was let go, which is a vastly- it鈥檚 an interesting story. But I went back to France to fight and then I was allowed to go back to France at my will and not to be bothered by the French army. And then I came back to Montreal and I started to work with Norbert Schoenauer. He was doing a new city in Northern Quebec because of again a passion somehow for multi-family residential housing, which I think is a great- it鈥檚 a very complex issue to work. It goes beyond architecture. So I worked with Norbert for about a year. And then, my heart wasn鈥檛 in my assignment. It had always been with Chicago. Once you come to Chicago, I thought I could never get away from Chicago. So, there was a large project that SOM was commissioned to do in Montreal, which was Canadian Pacific and Bank of Montreal together. So I joined SOM one more time and went to work with them on this project. And then a year later, came back, came to Chicago, stayed a while, went back to Montreal, opened an office under my name to work on a large project where SOM again was the planner, the urban planner. And in 鈥76, no in 鈥78, we closed the office and I came to, I came to work and stay in Chicago. There鈥檚 too much excitement, there鈥檚 too much architecture. It鈥檚 always very difficult just for what I wanted to do to stay away from Chicago. I mean that鈥檚 what鈥檚 happening. It has always been an exciting city spatially. The first time I was here in 鈥68, 鈥69, the Hancock was under construction. A lot of very outstanding buildings were designed in Chicago at the time. So finally I decided in 鈥78 I鈥檓 going to come to Chicago and stay. And then I worked with SOM from 鈥78 鈥榯ill 1985, when I decided to open my own office in 鈥85. Licensed in the States, member of the AIA. And the transition from school to work was very easy because, although school took me, from the first time I went back to the time I finished was seven years. I went into school at twenty-five, I took a year off in 1970, graduated in 1972. So it took me seven years to go from the beginning to the end. And then from 鈥72 to 鈥78, I worked between Montreal and Chicago. 鈥78, I decided to come and stay in Chicago. Worked with SOM. I did some major projects from five million square feet to forty-storey towers. I did the one- I was the designer of the building we are in. Five million square feet in LA, a building with six hundred apartments in Europe, a transportation centre, hotels, a very diversified hotel with motel, hotel, apartment building, parking structure, office building, retail.

[15:11:15]

I wanted to ask you, Lucien, what was the decision that you processed to go on your own, having worked on all that? I鈥檓 sure you could have stayed with SOM and made a nice living, but it was a-.

I could have stayed with SOM but SOM became- as I was saying, the late sixties, early seventies was an exciting time. But architecture had changed. We don鈥檛 do architecture the same way today that we did twenty, thirty years ago and ten years ago. And architects or large architectural offices are very bureaucratic; they do 鈥渏obs鈥. And it鈥檚 managed in a way that the architecture becomes a very small part of what we do. I don鈥檛 believe an architectural office can be a hundred people, hundred and fifty, seven hundred, seventeen hundred like RTKL. You don鈥檛 do architecture anymore. You do jobs. You get a flat fee or, you know. And the architect is beat, he doesn鈥檛 have so much time to spend in the office or on any file. So it was never my goal to make a career in a large office. But I did work in a large office to learn really about architecture. When I left in 鈥85, at the time I was forty-five, although I only had thirteen years of experience because I got out in 鈥72, I mean, from the time I finished school. So I started in 鈥85 just on one drafting table and sat back to- I went back to the drafting table. At SOM, I had a studio of eighty people. And slowly, starting smaller projects, I built up an organization, a team of architects, where we work together. By chance, I have them much younger than me so the age difference makes everything a lot easier since there鈥檚 no battle inside for power, which is also what large offices are. The politics of large offices are incredible and, you know, interfere; it does interfere with the architectural design. And I鈥檓 lucky today that we鈥檙e an office of about thirty people and we do some very large- not- the point is not that they鈥檙e large. They鈥檙e very interesting projects of a good size. And that鈥檚 what makes what I鈥 m doing exciting and more and more interesting. The diversification, which- we can do hotel, multi-family residential, townhouse, retail, tall buildings, short buildings. We can do- and in a small office, thirty is about- up to forty, I think, you can keep your hands on the project. After that, you become director of design.

[18:05:06]

The big change, several changes have happened in architecture. And we鈥檙e going through one change, and I don鈥檛 quite- I don鈥檛 think we quite understand the impact of the computer. Let me go over that, the computer. Five years ago, we had only three computers in the office. Today, well, forty of them really, everybody has to have a computer on their desk and we鈥檙e producing most of our work on computer, which means we don鈥檛 have to-. The good point, we don鈥檛 have to work late at night. We don鈥檛 use Zipatone, for those who understand what Zipatone is. Our colour drawings are printed, done on printer. For example, I鈥 ve come back- I鈥檝e been spending weekends and nights in my early years putting Zipatone, doing drawing in ink. One day, we had a big presentation on a Monday. I came in the office, there was nobody in the office on Saturday, nobody on Sunday. I was getting really nervous about that presentation. We had ten boards to do. And at two o鈥檆lock on Sunday afternoon, one architect came in, plotted some numbers in a computer and the printer started to print ten boards, beautiful colour and all [snaps fingers]. And he went home because the computer was going to just print what was needed and then Monday morning, we went to a meeting. The information is the same except everything is done a lot more quickly. It鈥檚 more accurate. We can- we鈥檒l have two architects and a manager with me working on a six-million-square-feet project. And we鈥檝e been working for three months putting it together. So we can do a lot more, quicker, faster, more accurate with a computer. Does this- does it impact the design or does it just make it faster and quicker? Do we become better designers? You can do a lot of bad design with a computer as well. I don鈥檛 think the computer- it does facilitate our life. We can go home and see our wife and children, which, when I went to 缅北强奸, we spent nights doing drawings which can be done in ten minutes on a computer. The whole impact on all of us architects, I don鈥檛 know. Hopefully- I think for now, it鈥檚 getting better.

[20:30:15]

The other thing that has changed in the last thirty years in architecture, if you think of architecture as part of a real estate industry, the world has changed. Projects are financed in a very different way, very different way. It does impact how we work, what we do. The industry has changed. We don鈥檛 custom design everything. We use components, which are pre-designed, curtain walls, ceiling tiles. All the systems exist and we just integrate them in the architecture, which also means we can do a set of working drawings a lot faster today. It doesn鈥檛 take more than four, three months sometimes, four months, six months. Thirty years ago, when I was interviewed the first time at 缅北强奸 by Professor Bland, he was working on some project for Expo 鈥67, and it would take a year to produce documents for construction, because everything had to be drawn and designed, like windows and doors. Today, the industry has changed. The construction industry, the supplier materials is a different world. And for that, we do work in a different way from thirty years ago and it affects us in our documentation of the design. It affects the design as well. We get a lot more input from the engineering aspect, the structure, in all the materials we use. That鈥檚, I think that鈥檚 a big difference. And the computer, we can debate if we get better design. I鈥檓 a believer that it鈥檚 what we design not what the-. The computer is still a tool.

It鈥檚 a tool for us to be- that鈥檚 right.

It鈥檚 a tool, it鈥檚 not-. I mean you see a lot of bad design being produced, I mean ugly and whatever, and they鈥檙e all done on a computer. So it鈥檚 not- it doesn鈥檛 make a difference. But it does make a difference to our life.

[22:47:27]

Back to top