5 principles of great architecture – according to Pritzker Prize-winner Francis Kéré
Photography: Iwan Baan
Diébédo Francis Kéré won the 2022 Pritzker Architecture Prize – often called ‘architecture’s Nobel’ – making history as the first African architect to be recognised in the award’s 43-year history.
The Burkinabe architect – who grew up in a rural village in the Boulgou province of Burkina Faso – is celebrated for his innovative designs that blend indigenous vernacular with modern engineering. Kéré’s uplifting, socially responsible works draw on tradition and span Africa and beyond.
The Pritzker jury, chaired by Chilean architect Alejandro Aravena, said: ‘In a world where architects are building projects in the most diverse contexts – not without controversies – Kéré contributes to the debate by incorporating local, national, regional and global dimensions in a very personal balance of grassroots experience, academic quality, low tech, high tech, and truly sophisticated multiculturalism.’
Here are five core principles connecting Kere’s ground-breaking Afrofuturist architecture – in his own words.
1. Involve the community
Kéré’s first-ever building was a primary school in his home village of Gando in southeast Burkina Faso. He designed the building while still studying at the Technical University of Berlin, and built it with the help of the whole community.
‘This is what I have learned: to believe in order to innovate, and then people become part of it. I just wanted my community to be part of a process,’ Kéré told ArchDaily.
The 56-year-old architect said that although people were familiar with materials such as clay, which is used locally, it took a while to convince them it was the right choice. ‘It was not easy. I had to spend time talking, explaining, but this alone was not enough. We needed to make some samples, mockups…’
2. Innovate with local knowledge and materials
‘Architecture can bring a lot to a local society like mine,’ Kéré told Dream Idea Machine. ‘The more local materials you use, the better you can promote the local economy and (build) local knowledge, which also makes people proud.’
Gando Primary School (which won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 2004 and has since been expanded) was constructed using bricks made out of clay improved with cement. Easy to manufacture, the bricks can tolerate intense temperatures – a design solution tailored for the semi-arid local climate.
The school building also has a perforated, curved brick roof, so the hot air can escape. It sits under a raised, overhanging corrugated metal roof that protects it from the sun and heavy rain.
3. Use minimal resources
Kéré creates structures that are naturally light-filled and ventilated, which don’t require mechanical climate control systems thus reducing running costs and carbon consumption.
‘I try to use the material in the most efficient way, I try to see what is available on site, to discuss and look together with the client for the best material for the project. Then of course we think about designing in a way that doesn’t consume a lot of energy, for heating and cooling,’ Kéré told critic Shumi Bose.
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SOURCE : THE SPACES